I wonder what this flashback was for five hundred years ago? I hope that mysticism and immortality will not be introduced here. Maybe this is a dream, or a hallucination, or some kind of manifestation of madness in the fantasy of this man (Ole Manch, or something like that)? In the series before, of course, there were inexplicable moments, such as UFOs, this is even part of his style. The main thing is punctuality and moderation.
@Nog: Well, this is a feature series, not a documentary. Therefore, the authors have their hands free. But in general, it may be all banal schizophrenia in a criminal, and it is shown, albeit in this way.
@Serial732: So what? Don't you know that everything that is filmed on "real events" is often far from reality, and sometimes even 99% fantasy? The main thing in the phrase is based on real events - the word "BASED", i.e. it has a drop of something taken from real life. And then this tiny detail is outlined by invented artistic techniques. You are too naive.
@Serial732: yes, and the Negroes from season 4, in 1952, in beautiful coats, in expensive cars, talking in long clever phrases - that's how it was, yeah.
@Nog: Yes, there was some kind of devilry in almost every season, which was either "really" or not... Last season, the Demon of the Smutni family, a noseless snowman. In the third, bowling in the timeless. In the second, a UFO. I don't remember the first one anymore, but it also seemed to have something to do with Malvo, Thornton's hero.
@Stalker_inc: In the first season there was a connection with the 1996 film. Not that it was the epitome of devilry, but it was. The suitcase with the money that Carl buried in the film is found by Stavros from the first season. The place is marked with a red dustpan left in the 1996 film. This money brings troubles to both the criminals from the film and Stavros. Then there are my assumptions. It's a stretch to call Lorne Malvo himself a man, rather an evil spirit, a demon who kills everyone indiscriminately, and pushes the weak in spirit to bad deeds. For example, after their meetings with Lester, the latter begins to do bad things and eventually dies. Officer Grimley, despite the specifics of his job, is simple-minded and peaceful, but Malvo harasses him with his appearances and forces him to commit murder. Just in between, Malvo kills the entire management of Fargo - a word that is not entirely clear to me, which collectively contains many very unusual and sometimes insane incidents.
Well, in every issue, starting with the film, the same road with a fence made of stretched wire along the roadsides appears. Even in the current season, it is shown.
@Nog: The creators explained it. Look, this is a pseudo-story based on real events from the words of eyewitnesses like. Hence all the mysticism follows, like people believed in it and like people eyewitnesses told it like that 😂 A conditional unreliable narrator
Huge respect for The Prodigy, it was very unexpected to hear, gorgeous. The situation is heating up, although it is still a very long time before the finale, knowing Fargo perfectly well, everything will finally explode.
@Sich666: at first I didn't understand, I thought out of place, why are you here? And then it came to me) Smack My Bitch Up, after all, in the subject!
@Candramelekh: and what's the fun of watching 1-2 episodes and dropping the series? TV shows, of course, come in varying degrees of shit, but the Bridge, Banshee, Firefly, Happy Valley? And I just started looking through a huge list of dropped
@doonyasha: do you need to drop it without looking? or if you've already started, then don't you dare stop, even if it's utter shit... Did I understand you correctly?
@MarkRaffer: I'm not talking about shitty TV shows, but objectively good ones (good ratings, good reviews). Do you think that all over 700 dropped TV shows are shit?
@doonyasha: Well, the first Fargo was objectively good... specifically, this fifth one is for an amateur, and even more laborious - so the last season turned out to be a turd, but you can also find good reviews about it. So no - your approach doesn't tell you at all how to define anything... whether it's good or not, you have to watch a few episodes.
The gun seller in the store is Bill Williamson from the "Rampage" movie trilogy. How symbolically they exchange phrases with Wayne while his wife examines the shotgun: Wayne: Wow, how much is he? Seller: $1,300. You can't put a price tag on a human life! Wayne: You seem to have succeeded.
If you do not watch the Rampage, then this is a common chatter between the seller and the buyer
Everything was more or less predictable before this sudden strange flashback and the subsequent satanic ritual) It brought a welcome touch of madness to a fairly smooth plot
Perhaps only I heard it: somewhere in the tenth minute, when Dot and her husband are discussing a visit to a gun store, music from a very old black-and-white cartoon "Dance of Skeletons" is playing on the background, to whom they showed it in a pioneer camp as a child, and we regularly played this short film before the films.
After the end of the third episode, I realized how wise I was to wait until all the episodes of Fargo were released, and only then I started watching. It's quite difficult to wait a whole week for the next episode after such a finale. It keeps you in suspense perfectly.
И снова респект за музыку, Prodigy было прям в тему. Человек (как он себя называет) - какой-то шиза, прям дрожь пробирает от него еще с первой серии, какой-то чиканутый 🤪 Да там и шериф тоже странный тип - видит бывшую жену на потолке, пока настоящая жена пристает 🫣
Another dumb cliche, in all the movies, people going to buy weapons don't know that they don't give them out right away. Although the lady pretends to be a scoundrel
The dumb nigga continues to be infernally stupid, instead of shouting to the attendant that the docks thing was stolen, he stands and obediently eats shit
In the series before, of course, there were inexplicable moments, such as UFOs, this is even part of his style. The main thing is punctuality and moderation.
But in general, it may be all banal schizophrenia in a criminal, and it is shown, albeit in this way.
The main thing in the phrase is based on real events - the word "BASED", i.e. it has a drop of something taken from real life. And then this tiny detail is outlined by invented artistic techniques.
You are too naive.
It's a stretch to call Lorne Malvo himself a man, rather an evil spirit, a demon who kills everyone indiscriminately, and pushes the weak in spirit to bad deeds. For example, after their meetings with Lester, the latter begins to do bad things and eventually dies. Officer Grimley, despite the specifics of his job, is simple-minded and peaceful, but Malvo harasses him with his appearances and forces him to commit murder. Just in between, Malvo kills the entire management of Fargo - a word that is not entirely clear to me, which collectively contains many very unusual and sometimes insane incidents.
Well, in every issue, starting with the film, the same road with a fence made of stretched wire along the roadsides appears. Even in the current season, it is shown.
Look, this is a pseudo-story based on real events from the words of eyewitnesses like.
Hence all the mysticism follows, like people believed in it and like people eyewitnesses told it like that 😂
A conditional unreliable narrator
The series flew by ppts quickly
The sound is gorgeous, and the atmosphere is tense even to the point of perspiration on the forehead
Haha)) you are shockingly undecided in your connections.
Wayne: Wow, how much is he?
Seller: $1,300. You can't put a price tag on a human life!
Wayne: You seem to have succeeded.
If you do not watch the Rampage, then this is a common chatter between the seller and the buyer
And the episode with Tuvan singing resembles Eggers' "Northerner".
It keeps you in suspense perfectly.
Почему бабуля не убежала, не позвонила в полицию?