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Various chronicles of deception, intrigue and murder in and around frozen Minnesota. Yet all of these tales mysteriously lead back one way or another to Fargo, North Dakota.
Another exemplary cast elevates wordless gestures and already witty lines into exciting entertainment, with Jessie Buckley and Glynn Turman being the overall breakouts, but this version of Fargo feels bleaker than any that preceded it.
. It feels like Hawley is going less for the quirky black humor of the first three seasons and more for the tone of what was seen in the Coen's early serious films.
If you've stuck with "Fargo" this long and over the years haven't been turned away by the freewheeling nature of its story or the quirky characters which inhabit the narrative, than season 4 will prove just as rewarding.
The Coen Brothers make movies about quirky characters, but it would be nice if Noah Hawley and the team behind the Fargo TV series would remember that there's more to those movies than the quirk.
Rock dives into the material and adds emotional gravitas. His charisma as a performer creates comedic elements with ease, but he never loses sight of the stakes.
Fargo has always been a little off-kilter, but those elements stand out as particularly indulgent or egregious this season, when its overall storytelling approach is so uneven.