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Tag: fargo

  • Ryan Reynolds Remaking 1970s Crime Movie ‘Thunderbolt and Lightfoot’ for Amazon MGM (Exclusive)

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    Ryan Reynolds and Amazon MGM have teamed up to develop a remake of Thunderbolt & Lightfoot, a 1974 action comedy that starred Clint Eastwood and Jeff Bridges.

    Reynolds is eyeing to star in the adaptation and will produce alongside his team at his Maximum Effort production banner.

    Reynolds is also collaborating on the script with writers Enzo Mileti and Scott Wilson, a writing team who worked on season four of comedic crime show Fargo. Shane Reid, who edited Reynolds Deadpool & Wolverine, will make his directorial debut with the project.

    Thunderbolt & Lightfoot starred Eastwood as a bank robber disguised as a preacher and on the run from his old gang, who erroneously believe he double-crossed them. When he meets up with Lightfoot, a low-level street thief played by Bridges, the two come up with a plan to team with the old gang for a new bank job. Nothing goes as intended.

    The movie was the directorial debut of Michael Cimino, who would later go on to win a best directing Oscar for his 1978 Vietnam War drama The Deer Hunter. Cimino also wrote the script for Thunderbolt & Lightfoot. Bridges earned an Academy Award nomination for best supporting actor for his performance.

    The project could be an ideal vehicle for an A-lister two-hander. As some have suggested, it could offer a possibility for a reteaming of Reynolds and Hugh Jackman, something for which some have been clamoring.

    Jeff Bridges, Clint Eastwood in ‘Thunderbolts and Lightfoot’ (1974)

    Everett

    Mileti and Wilson worked as writer and consulting producers on FX’s drug crime show Snowfall and were staff writers on the Frank Grillo-starring MMA drama The Kingdom. The duo is repped by WME and Untitled Entertainment.  

    Reynolds this week signed on to star as the villain in Netflix’s live-action adaptation of Eloise, based on the children’s book series written by Kay Thompson and illustrated by Hilary Knight, which he and his Maximum Effort cohorts are producing. He is also a producer on John Candy: I Like Me, the documentary on the late great comedic actor that premiered at this year’s Toronto Film Festival and now streams on Amazon.

    Reynolds is repped by WME and Sloane Offer.

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    Borys Kit

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  • ‘Ripley,’ ‘Fallout,’ ‘Fargo’ and ‘Oppenheimer’ Take Top Honors at Location Managers Guild Awards

    ‘Ripley,’ ‘Fallout,’ ‘Fargo’ and ‘Oppenheimer’ Take Top Honors at Location Managers Guild Awards

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    Emmy contenders “Fallout,” “Fargo” and “Ripley” were among the winners at the 11th annual Location Managers Guild International Awards, presented Saturday at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills.

    Additionally, motion picture awards went to Best Picture Oscar recipient “Oppenheimer,” which was filmed throughout New Mexico, and “Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning – Part 1,” filmed in Norway, Italy and in the U.K.

    “Fallout” was lensed in Utah, New York and Namibia; “Fargo,” in Alberta, Canada; and “Ripley,” in Italy. “Toyota: “Present from the Past,” filmed in Washington State, topped the commercial category.

    Film in Iceland received the Outstanding Film Commission Award, on the strength of its support for “True Detective: Night Country.”

    Also during the ceremony, which was hosted by actress and producer Rachael Harris (“Suits,” “Diary of a Wimpy Kid,” “The Hangover”), several previously-announced awards were handed out. David Shepheard, vp of Martini Film Studios, presented the Lifetime Achievement Award to supervising location manager Sue Quinn, known for her work on the “Fantastic Beasts,” “Harry Potter” and “Pirates of the Caribbean” franchises.

    The Trailblazer Award was given to location manager Bill Bowling, known for his work on films such as “Jupiter Ascending” and “Cloud Atlas.” Location Guide commercial director Clara Le presented.

    The Motion Picture & Television Fund was bestowed with the Guild’s Humanitarian Award, recognizing the MPTF’s commitment to health and social services to the entertainment community. The award was presented by Camilla Belle (“Law and Order”) and accepted behalf of the MPTF by the Fund’s director of community social services Jennifer Jorge.

    Additional presenters included Helena-Alexis Seymour (“Chronicles of Jessica Wu”), Kate Linder (“Young and the Restless”), Doug Jones (“The Shape of Water”), 10-time Olympic swimming medalist Gary Hall Jr.; and AFCI executive director Jaclyn Philpott.

    The list of competitive winners follows:

    OUTSTANDING LOCATIONS IN A PERIOD TELEVISION SERIES

    “Fallout”

    Paul Kramer, Chris Arena, Mandi Dillin / LMGI, David Park / LMGI, Paul van der Ploeg

    OUTSTANDING LOCATIONS IN A CONTEMPORARY TELEVISION SERIES

    “Fargo” Season 5

    Mohammad Qazzaz / LMGI, Luke Antosz / LMGI

    OUTSTANDING LOCATIONS IN A TV SERIAL PROGRAM, ANTHOLOGY, MOW OR LIMITED SERIES

    “Ripley”

    Robin Melville / LMGI, Giuseppe Nardi / LMGI, Fabio Ferrante, Shane Haden

    OUTSTANDING LOCATIONS IN A PERIOD FEATURE FILM

    “Oppenheimer”

    Justin Duncan /LMGI, Dennis Muscari, Patty Carey-Perazzo, T.C. Townsen

    OUTSTANDING LOCATIONS IN A CONTEMPORARY FEATURE FILM

    “Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning – Part 1”

    David Campbell-Bell, Enrico Latella / LMGI, Jonas Fylling Christiansen, Niall O’Shea, Ben Firminger

    OUTSTANDING FILM COMMISSION

    Film in Iceland

    “True Detective: Night Country”

    OUTSTANDING LOCATIONS IN A COMMERCIAL

    Toyota: “Present from the Past”

    Mark Freid / LMGI, Paul Riordan / LMGI

    (Pictured: “Ripley”)

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    Carolyn Giardina

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  • William H. Macy visits DC’s Warner Theatre for special screening of movie masterpiece ‘Fargo’ – WTOP News

    William H. Macy visits DC’s Warner Theatre for special screening of movie masterpiece ‘Fargo’ – WTOP News

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    “It’s just a lovely, lovely script.” WTOP’s Jason Fraley speaks with William H. Macy ahead of the actor hosting a screening of the 1996 film on Thursday.

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews ‘Fargo’ with William H. Macy at Warner Theatre (Part 1)

    He earned acclaim in films (“Boogie Nights”) and TV series (“Shameless”), but his career role remains his Oscar-nominated performance in the movie masterpiece “Fargo” (1996).

    This Thursday, William H. Macy visits Warner Theatre in D.C. to host a screening of a film that combines the comedy of “The Big Lebowski” (1998) with the drama of “No Country for Old Men” (2007) for a genre bender that remains the Coen Brothers’ best.

    “We’re taking questions from the audience,” Macy told WTOP.

    “I saw the film on a big screen for the first time with good sound, maybe for the first time since we made the thing, and it is a magnificent film. I was knocked out. I was really proud to be in it. Everybody is stunning in the thing. Franny (actress Frances McDormand) just broke my heart yet again and, boy, everything from (cinematographer) Roger Deakins’ shooting to the Coen Brothers, it’s just a brilliant film.”

    The story follows Jerry Lundegaard, a bankrupt used-car salesperson in Minneapolis who seeks an investment from his rich father-in-law. When he’s refused, Jerry hires two criminals in Fargo, North Dakota, to kidnap his wife for ransom money, but the plan backfires and the bodies pile up as do clues for pregnant detective Marge Gunderson.

    “Everything they do is intentional,” Macy said.

    “Joel does most of the directing, but Ethan directs too, then Ethan does most of the writing, but Joel writes too. I think that’s the way they work. It’s really tandem. … They’re funny guys, good Lord they are. I think one of the things that’s so brilliant about the film is that it’s really horrifying and funny at the same time. They treated the violence in such a banal manner that it’s even more horrifying.”

    You won’t find a better slimeball antagonist than Macy’s Jerry, fudging the numbers with a worn pencil and throwing temper tantrums with his ice scraper. His weasel chops are best on display during a concerned phone call off screen, only to realize that he’s just practicing his act, shifting back to a normal tone to speak to the operator.

    “[The operator bit] was a little improv, I suggested it because I knew the camera was gonna come around the corner and catch me,” Macy said.

    “[The pencil bit] I was sitting at the desk waiting for them to set up the shot and I was doodling on the pad, Ethan came over and looked at it and said, ‘Hey, let’s shoot this,’ so they got an insert of the pad. [The ice scraper bit] was scripted that way, some version of: ‘He loses his [crap] in the parking lot.’”

    His naiveté stirs a deadly cocktail with his criminal hires, Steve Buscemi’s motor-mouthed Carl Showalter (“I’m not here to debate, Jerry”) and Peter Stormare’s ice-cold Gaear Grimsrud (“Stop at Pancakes House”). The duo dances on the knife’s edge of murder and buddy comedy, as Buscemi promises “total silence” by relentlessly talking.

    “They’re a great couple — it’s really well drawn,” Macy said. “When the wife gets free from the two kidnappers and starts to run, Steve Buscemi says, ‘No, no,’ and they stand there and watch and laugh as she tries to escape. It’s so horrifying. It’s so cruel. … Peter Stormare is a serious actor, he was Ingmar Bergman’s Hamlet, he’s a serious actor.”

    Still, the best performance arguably belongs to Frances McDormand in her first of three Oscar wins before “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” (2017) and “Nomadland” (2020). Voted the American Film Institute’s No. 33 Greatest Movie Hero of All Time, Marge surprisingly doesn’t even show up until a full 30 minutes into the film.

    Not only does McDormand master the Midwest accent for zingers (“I think I’m gonna barf!”), she outsmarts her male colleagues (“I’m not sure I agree 100% with your police work, Lou”) and brings home the bacon to her heart-of-gold husband Norm (John Carroll Lynch).

    This gender reversal was way ahead of its time, flipping the script to show Marge receiving work calls in the middle of the night and Norm waking up to make her breakfast.

    “She really was [pioneering], but it’s not as if they were making something up out of whole cloth,” Macy said. “That’s the reality of most working families and that’s what they wrote and that’s what’s great about it,” Macy said.

    Their relationship is the thematic core of the movie, summarized by Marge in the police car finale: “There’s more to life than a little money.” The answer to that question comes in the final scene where Marge and Norm sit in bed awaiting the birth of their child. A soft lullaby plays as Marge delivers the film’s final line: “Two more months.”

    It’s the perfect punctuation on a masterfully directed film by Joel and Ethan Coen, the former of whom became the first filmmaker to direct his wife (McDormand) to an Academy Award.

    Few filmmakers have ever crafted such a signature atmosphere, capturing the quirky accents of the Upper Midwest and the isolation of frigid landscapes with red blood painted on white snow, all backed by the epic drums and tragic violins of Carter Burwell’s score.

    “It happens in Minnesota every once in a while, you get a brown January,” Macy said.

    “We got up there and there wasn’t any snow, so they immediately started renting all of the snow-making. … The lads had to keep driving farther north to find snow and they finally did … but normally that time of year the snow would be waste high. … Deakins’ initial thing of the Oldsmobile coming up over that hill in that white out, ahh, it’s just stunning!”

    The setting includes statues of Paul Bunyan, whose ax foreshadows a murder. The Coens brilliantly use transitions (cutting from Buscemi’s TV to Marge’s TV), visual storytelling (taillights disappearing during a car chase), black comedy (home invasion), and mise-en-scène (high angle of a parking lot as Jerry finds himself at a crossroads).

    Note how they film Jerry at work, shooting through vertical blinds of his office window like jail bars closing in on him.

    “There are no accidents,” Macy said.

    “The purpose of technique is to bring out your subconscious. Did they choose that shot because it looked like jail bars? One could say, ‘Yes, they chose that shot.’ Did they say to themselves, ‘Hey, it looks like jail bars,’ I don’t know, but that’s what art is. These iconic images come out and I think sometimes the artist had no idea what it was doing. John Lennon said ‘Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds’ is not about LSD.”

    Macy was nominated for Best Supporting Actor but lost to Cuba Gooding Jr. in “Jerry Maguire,” while “Fargo” lost Best Picture to “The English Patient.” I told him that I thought the latter was ridiculous as “Fargo” is superior.

    “I will back you on that,” Macy said.

    “If you’re in one of the top categories and you get a nomination, that’s real, you can take it to the bank that you did a good thing. As to who wins, that’s a little capricious, but I’ll tell ya, it was not a good year to get an Oscar nomination because there were a bunch of great films out that year! ‘Sling Blade’ was out that year, ‘Jerry Maguire,’ I mean the list goes on and on, it was a great year for films.”

    Today, the legacy continues in the acclaimed FX series “Fargo,” which just wrapped Season 5.

    “I think it’s great,” Macy said. “I watched the whole first season. That was Billy Bob [Thornton] right? I thought, man, he should have paid them; he was having so much fun. I thought that was a fabulous season, then I’ve seen bits and pieces of all the other season. They’re ripe characters, it’s a ripe part of the country, it was a great series.”

    Still, as great as the TV series is, there’s no topping the original Coen Brothers flick.

    “It’s just a lovely, lovely script,” Macy said. “It’s so simple and, as you say, profound at the same time — and it tells a walloping good story, one of the best stories that the brothers have ever told, I think.”

    WTOP’s Jason Fraley previews ‘Fargo’ with William H. Macy at Warner Theatre (Part 2)

    Listen to our full conversation on the podcast below:

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    Jason Fraley

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  • ‘Fargo’ Season 5 Finale Recap With Noah Hawley

    ‘Fargo’ Season 5 Finale Recap With Noah Hawley

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    Jo and Rob break down the Fargo Season 5 finale. They discuss their personal feelings on the final episode, how the characters of Indira Olmstead and Witt Farr fall flat in the end, and the conclusion to Gator’s redemption arc. Along the way, they briefly talk about the intense prison scene between Lorraine and Roy. Later, they’re joined by the creator and showrunner of Fargo, Noah Hawley, to talk about how this season grapples with the symptoms of a divided America, the final confrontation between Dot and Ole Munch, how he goes about creating likable family characters, Witt Farr’s demise, and much more.

    Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney
    Guest: Noah Hawley
    Producer: Kai Grady

    Subscribe: Spotify

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    Joanna Robinson

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  • ‘Fargo’ Season 5, Episode 9 Recap

    ‘Fargo’ Season 5, Episode 9 Recap

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    Jo and Rob are back to break down the ninth episode of Fargo Season 5 and talk about what they’re hoping to see in the season finale. They head to Coen Corner to parse the Coen references in this episode, and go through listener emails regarding the truth of the phrase “fruit of the poisonous tree,” Russian election scams, Oregonian anarchists, and more.

    Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney
    Producers: Sasha Ashall and Kai Grady

    Subscribe: Spotify

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    Joanna Robinson

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  • Jennifer Jason Leigh Breaks Down Her Wild ‘Fargo’ Ride

    Jennifer Jason Leigh Breaks Down Her Wild ‘Fargo’ Ride

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    This post contains spoilers about episode nine of Fargo’s fifth season.

    There are two people Jennifer Jason Leigh had in mind when it came to crafting her delectable, scenery-chewing matriarch in the new installment of Noah Hawley’s Fargo: William F. Buckley, the flamboyant conservative commentator, and her own mother, the late Emmy-nominated screenwriter Barbara Turner. “When I veered more toward Buckley, it could get a little more grand,” she tells Vanity Fair of her performance. “When I would veer toward my mother, I could bring it in.”

    One can see a bit more of the latter, perhaps, in Leigh’s tender and commanding work in the series’s penultimate episode, “The Useless Hand,” which premiered Tuesday night. Up until this point, Leigh’s powerful Lorraine Lyon—with her exquisitely expensive wardrobe, haughty mid-Atlantic accent, and Cheshire cat grin—had been skeptically investigating the disappearance of her daughter-in-law, Dot (Juno Temple). But as the reality of Dot’s mysterious past and her abusive former partner, Roy Tillman (Jon Hamm), become clear, Lorraine realizes she needs to take action to hold her family together. And so she does, making a few simple phone calls that set the stage for an epic clash between law enforcement and Tillman’s criminal-militia enterprise. The result feels like classic Fargo, and a culmination of the show’s bold statements on the state of the country.

    Leigh is having the time of her life in this part, owning every room she walks into just as Lorraine does. But what’s most impressive about her turn is the way, in an episode like this, she subtly gives this larger-than-life figure some new dimension. It’s a trademark of the Oscar-nominated actor, who’s been known for taking on big, complicated roles, from the ’90s independent scene to her resurgence in Quentin Tarantino’s The Hateful Eight, and imbuing them with a tough, hard-earned humanity. In an exclusive breakdown with Vanity Fair, Leigh reveals what led her to this moment—both in Fargo, and her career.

    Vanity Fair: Let’s jump right into episode nine, and how it advances Lorraine’s arc. There’s a real shift in terms of her relationship to Dot and her place in the story. You don’t know at the beginning of the show whether you’re meeting a villain.

    Jennifer Jason Leigh: Nor did I know when I first read it, because I only read the first three episodes.

    Did you talk it through after that, though?

    In talking to [Hawley] at the beginning, he did tell me that she would have this tremendous arc, but when I first read, we were just given three episodes—you don’t know what her place is or where. The thing about Fargo is you can never trust your take on a character. They’re always going to end up surprising you in some profound way.

    Leigh behind the scenes on Fargo.

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    David Canfield

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  • ‘Fargo’ Season 5, Episode 8 Recap

    ‘Fargo’ Season 5, Episode 8 Recap

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    Jo and Rob are back to break down the eighth episode of Fargo Season 5. They open by reading through a handful of listener emails on how this season is depicting the Midwest and its culture. Next, they discuss the rise and fall of Danish Graves, the likelihood of an effective Gator redemption arc, and Roy Tillman’s viciousness. Along the way, they revisit this season’s themes of debt and the characters’ constructed realities.

    Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney
    Producer: Kai Grady

    Subscribe: Spotify

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    Joanna Robinson

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  • ‘Fargo’ Season 5, Episode 4 Recap

    ‘Fargo’ Season 5, Episode 4 Recap

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    Jo and Rob are back to break down the fourth episode of Fargo Season 5. They discuss the contentious dichotomy between the haves and the have-nots, the action-packed home invasion sequence, and the ongoing parallels between Roy Tillman and Dot Lyon. Along the way, they talk about Jennifer Jason Leigh’s performance and why her outsized presence works within the context of her character. Later, they theorize about some potentially hidden familial connections and parse through some listener emails.

    Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney
    Producer: Kai Grady

    Subscribe: Spotify

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    Joanna Robinson

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  • ‘Fargo’ Season 5, Episodes 1-3 Recap

    ‘Fargo’ Season 5, Episodes 1-3 Recap

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    Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney reunite to break down the first three episodes of Fargo Season 5. They give a brief overview of their relationships with past seasons of the series and the Coen brothers’ film it’s loosely based on, before discussing why this time around feels like a return to form. Next, they unpack this season’s thematic through line that places the wives at the center of the story, walk through a taxonomy of the recurring Fargo archetypes up until this point, and highlight their favorite needle drops from the episodes.

    Hosts: Joanna Robinson and Rob Mahoney
    Producer: Kai Grady

    Subscribe: Spotify

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    Joanna Robinson

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  • ‘Fargo’ Season 5 Goes Back to Its Coen Brothers Roots. Plus, Thanksgiving Content Consumption.

    ‘Fargo’ Season 5 Goes Back to Its Coen Brothers Roots. Plus, Thanksgiving Content Consumption.

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    Chris and Andy discuss Dave Filioni being named the new chief creative officer of Lucasfilm, as well as the first two episodes of Fargo Season 5

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    Chris Ryan

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  • Everything We Know About Fargo Season 5

    Everything We Know About Fargo Season 5

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    Another season of murder and mayhem in the sleepy, snowy Midwest? You betcha. In November, Fargo returns for its fifth season after a three-year hiatus. Creator Noah Hawley hasn’t said much about this season in the press, likely because until recently he was held back by the writers strike—but there is actually a lot of information about it out there, if you know where to look. Below, find everything we know about Fargo season five so far.

    Wait, remind me: What’s Fargo?

    Based on Joel and Ethan Coen’s beloved, Oscar-winning 1996 black comedy, Hawley’s Fargo is an anthology series that takes place in the farthest reaches of the Midwest. Much like the movie, it’s got venal criminals, gnarly violence, and a very, very dark sense of humor. Though each season stands on its own, they all take place in the same shared universe—so cameos from previous seasons’ characters are always possible. Oh, and the show is fictional, despite the cheeky text that opens each episode: 

    This is a true story. The events depicted took place in [location] in [year]. At the request of the survivors, the names have been changed. Out of respect for the dead, the rest has been told exactly as it occurred.

    Who is in Fargo season five?

    Past seasons of Hawley’s anthology have been led by heavy hitters like Martin Freeman, Kirsten Dunst, Ewan McGregor, and Chris Rock. Season five is no different: The new batch stars Jon Hamm in one of his first major TV roles since Mad Men wrapped in 2015. He’s joined by Jennifer Jason Leigh, New Girl’s Lamorne Morris, Black Mirror’s David Rysdahl, Kids in the Hall vet Dave Foley, Never Have I Ever’s Richa Moorjani, British character actor Sam Spruell, Stranger ThingsJoe Keery, and Ted Lasso’s Juno Temple.

    What’s Fargo season five about?

    In typical Fargo fashion, the logline is long. The basic gist: Temple’s Dot Lyon is a housewife who finds herself “in hot water with the authorities,” according to FX’s official description, making her this season’s answer to Freeman’s and Dunst’s characters. Hamm plays the dogged sheriff in hot pursuit of her, while Leigh plays Dot’s imposing mother-in-law, who’s never liked her son’s wife.

    Want more nitty-gritty detail? Here’s the full description, courtesy of FX:

    The latest installment of Fargo is set in Minnesota and North Dakota, 2019. After an unexpected series of events lands “Dorothy ‘Dot’ Lyon” (Juno Temple) in hot water with the authorities, this seemingly typical Midwestern housewife is suddenly plunged back into a life she thought she had left behind.  

    North Dakota Sheriff “Roy Tillman” (Jon Hamm) has been searching for Dot for a long time. A rancher, preacher and a constitutional lawman, Roy believes that he is the law and therefore is above the law. At his side is his loyal but feckless son, “Gator” (Joe Keery), who is desperate to prove himself to his larger-than-life father. Too bad he’s hopeless. So when it comes to hunting Dot, Roy enlists “Ole Munch” (Sam Spruell), a shadowy drifter of mysterious origin.  

    With her deepest secrets beginning to unravel, Dot attempts to shield her family from her past, but her doting, well-meaning husband “Wayne” (David Rysdahl) keeps running to his mother, “Lorraine Lyon” (Jennifer Jason Leigh), for help. CEO of the largest Debt Collection Agency in the country, the “Queen of Debt” is unimpressed with her son’s choice in a wife and spares no opportunity to voice her disapproval. However, when Dot’s unusual behavior catches the attention of Minnesota Police Deputy “Indira Olmstead” (Richa Moorjani) and North Dakota Deputy “Witt Farr” (Lamorne Morris), Lorraine appoints her in-house counsel and primary advisor, “Danish Graves” (Dave Foley), to aid her daughter-in-law. After all, family is family. But Dot has an uncanny knack for survival. And with her back to the wall, she’s about to show why one should never provoke a mother Lyon.

    What are the titles of the season’s first six episodes?

    According to IMDB, they are as follows:

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    Hillary Busis

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  • Thief Swipes Former North Dakota Governor’s SUV During Morning Radio Show Gig

    Thief Swipes Former North Dakota Governor’s SUV During Morning Radio Show Gig

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    FARGO, N.D. (AP) — Former North Dakota Gov. Ed Schafer learned a lesson about his car keys after his vehicle was stolen as he hosted a Fargo radio show.

    Schafer was guest hosting KFGO’s “News and Views” program Friday morning when police called the station to ask if he owned a 2020 GMC Yukon, the station reported.

    It turns out that the SUV had been stolen out of the station’s parking lot. The thief apparently drove it to a probation office and surrendered to authorities, Schafer said.

    The vehicle has a push-button start feature and requires a key fob to be in the vehicle before it can be operated. But Schafer had left a spare fob inside, enabling the thief to start it up and drive off.

    The former governor and U.S. agriculture secretary says he’s been warned about being more careful.

    “My wife for 31 years has said, ‘Why don’t you lock your car?’” Schafer said.

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  • North Dakota police say 1 officer died, 2 injured in shooting that also left suspect dead in Fargo

    North Dakota police say 1 officer died, 2 injured in shooting that also left suspect dead in Fargo

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    FARGO, N.D. (AP) — One police officer died and two others were critically injured in a shooting in Fargo, North Dakota, that also killed the suspect on Friday, police said.

    The shooting happened before 3 p.m. on a busy street. Multiple witnesses said a man opened fire on police officers before other officers shot the suspect.

    In a statement late Friday, police said a civilian also was seriously wounded.

    Many questions remain about what led a gunman in Fargo, North Dakota, to open fire on police as they were responding to a traffic crash.

    Fargo’s police chief says a gunman opened fire on police and firefighters “for no known reason” as they responded to a traffic crash in North Dakota.

    Police did not provide information about a possible motive or circumstances leading to the shooting. The identities of the slain officers and the suspect were withheld pending notification of their families.

    The Fargo Police Department said the investigation is ongoing.

    “We sincerely are asking for your patience and our community’s patience and understanding as the Fargo Police Department works through this incident,” Gregg Schildberger, Fargo chief communications officer, said Friday evening.

    More details will be released at a press conference scheduled for 3:30 p.m. Saturday at Fargo City Hall, Schildberger said.

    “This is very difficult on all of us. We are releasing as much information as we can at this point,” Schildberger said. “We appreciate all the messages from the community that have been given to us in support of our officers.”

    Sanford Medical Center Fargo spokesperson Paul Heinert said in an email that the hospital “did receive patients stemming from today’s shooting incident in Fargo.” He said updates on their conditions would come from the Fargo police.

    Police said there was no known threat to the public. But after the shooting, officers converged on a residential area about 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) away and evacuated residents as they gathered evidence they said was related to the shooting.

    Witnesses reported seeing and hearing gunshots in the area. Shannon Nichole told KFGO Radio she was driving in the area at the time.

    “I saw the traffic stop and as soon as I drove, shots were fired and I saw the cops go down,” Nichole said. “My airbag went off and the bullet went through my driver’s door.”

    A man grabbed her and said they needed to get out of the area, Nichole said.

    Chenoa Peterson said she was driving with her 22-year-old daughter when a man pulled out a gun and began firing at police.

    “He proceeds to aim it and you just hear the bullets go off, and I’m like, ‘Oh, my God! He’s shooting,’” she told The Associated Press.

    Peterson’s first instinct was to pull over and try to help, but her daughter convinced her to leave. “It’s weird knowing that if you were 10 seconds earlier you could have been in that,” she said.

    Bo Thi was working alone at a nail salon near where police reported the shooting when she heard what sounded like fireworks or a motorcycle backfiring. She said gunshots didn’t cross her mind at the time.

    Surveillance video provided by Fargo resident Allison Carlson captured the rapid sounds of gunfire.

    North Dakota Attorney General Drew Wrigley said the state Bureau of Criminal Investigation was working with federal, state and local law enforcement in response to a “shooting incident” but provided no details of what happened.

    Police and other agencies across the region posted their sympathies for Fargo police on Facebook.

    “Thinking of our brothers and sisters in Fargo,” a post from the South Dakota Fraternal Order of Police said.

    The Glenwood Fire Department in Minnesota posted, “Please keep the blue lights shining to show our support of not only our local law enforcement, but also those affected by todays events!”

    ___

    Ballentine reported from Columbia, Missouri. Associated Press writers Lisa Baumann in Bellingham, Washington, and Alina Hartounian in Phoenix contributed to this report.

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  • Zahn McClarnon’s Epic, Groundbreaking Hollywood Story

    Zahn McClarnon’s Epic, Groundbreaking Hollywood Story

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    Welcome to Always Great, a new Awards Insider column in which we speak with Hollywood’s greatest undersung actors in career-spanning conversations. In this entry, Zahn McClarnon revisits his life across dozens of TV shows—leading to two of his biggest showcases yet, in Dark Winds and Reservation Dogs.

    If three makes a trend, then how lucky are we to live in the time of the Zahn McClarnon Episode. The Denver-born actor has been a mainstay on the small screen ever since he moved to Los Angeles in the 1990s, but only recently did prestige TV seem to figure out just how good he was. 

    We can give some credit to Noah Hawley, who cast him for Fargo’s second season in an initially small role that turned pivotal at the story’s bloody climax. A few years later, McClarnon started recurring on Westworld before pulling off career-best work in his stunning season two showcase, “Kiksuya,” bringing knowledge of his Lakota heritage to the rich portrait of his mysterious character, Akecheta. This TV season then completed the trifecta in Reservation Dogs’ surrealist spectacular “This Is Where the Plot Thickens,” in which McClarnon’s Lighthorseman Big goes on a hell of a psychedelic trip. 

    “I’ve been on cloud nine for the last decade,” McClarnon tells me over Zoom, that iconic, evocative face of the small screen sneaking in a grin.

    And that aforementioned trio doesn’t even take into account the biggest career leap McClarnon has taken of late: His first lead role, in AMC’s Dark Winds. The psychological thriller smartly embraces conventions of the cop drama while forging its own path in its focus on two Navajo police officers (McClarnon and Kiowa Gordon) investigating a murder in the ’70s Southwest. Putting a fresh spin on classic genre fare, the show is a great metaphor for how a perennial, oft underused scene-stealer has enhanced popular shows for decades. With pretty much every gripping hour of Dark Winds operating as its own kind of Zahn McClarnon Episode, it’s also the ultimate example of what happens when a Hollywood journeyman finally gets his due.

    Dark Winds.

    By Michael Moriatis/Stalwart Productions/AMC.

    When McClarnon moved to Los Angeles, more than 30 years ago, he synced up with the American Indian Registry for the Performing Arts—a collective of Native American actors from tribes all over the country who’d meet up at the corner of Hollywood and Highland, go out on the same auditions, and lift each other up through disappointments and breakthroughs. McClarnon arrived with nearly nothing in his pockets; the roles for people who looked like him were limited, and of what was available, even less unique. “But immediately, because there’s such a small pool of Native talent, it wasn’t like I was going up against 150 people at an audition,” he says. “It was more like a half a dozen or a dozen depending on the age range…it wasn’t as tough as I think most people had [it]. I wasn’t going up against the Tom Cruises.”

    For better and for worse, McClarnon filled a Hollywood niche. “I got typecast right away,” he says. “It was usually the bad kid or the gangbanger.” But he found some unusual opportunity within that. In 1992, he won a lead role in the Baywatch episode “Showdown at Malibu Beach High,” playing an activist student at the school where Pamela Anderson’s C.J. has just accepted a position, and which is planning to sell off sacred land. He says it was actually a backdoor pilot meant to spin off into a Malibu High series vehicle for Anderson, who’d joined Baywatch that season, but didn’t move forward. 

    The episode still marked a turning point. A few years later, McClarnon booked a recurring role on the Old West–set Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman as Walks on Cloud, the son of Cloud Dancing (Larry Sellers). “It was stereotypical Native stuff, but that’s all that we really had back then,” McClarnon says. “Unfortunately at that time, as a guest-star actor, you weren’t allowed to really voice your opinion on these things.” Still, he found a surprising mentor in Dr. Quinn star Jane Seymour. “She pulled me into her trailer once, sat me down, and talked to me about the business a little bit,” McClarnon says. “It inspired me so much that an actress of that stature, a number one on a TV show, would do that—pull me aside and talk to me about the pitfalls.” They recently saw each other for the first time in 30 years. “I thanked her for helping me jump-start my career,” he says.

    Longmire.

    By John Golden Britt / Netflix.

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    David Canfield

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