Film Review
After a somewhat erratic start to their filmmaking career Joel and
Ethan Coen finally hit their stride with this superbly crafted jet
black comedy-thriller, a film which boldly claims to have been inspired
by a true story but which is in fact a work of pure fiction (albeit one
that liberally borrows from several real-life incidents). Whilst
Fargo has many similarities with
the Coens' debut film,
Blood Simple
(1984), it is a far slicker, far more sophisticated work and, for all
its austere wintry setting and surfeit of blood-splattered
ultra-violence, it has a warmth and sincerity that is generally hard to
come by in the Coens' films. A massive critical and commercial
success,
Fargo was nominated
for seven Oscars in 1997, in categories that included Best Picture and
Best Director, and it took two awards, for its leading actress (Frances
McDormand) and screenplay. This is the Coens at their near-best -
one of the most compelling and most memorable American thrillers of the
1990s.
Smartly written and directed with breath-taking panache,
Fargo grabs the spectator's
attention from the first scene and doesn't let go for a
nanosecond. The only sympathetic character in the film is the
completely fearless, heavily pregnant Marge Gunderson (superbly played
by Frances McDormand, a regular of the Coens' films and Joel Coen's
wife), who makes the unlikeliest (and cutest) crime investigator since
Peter Falk's Columbo. Every other character (mostly male) is as
vile and pathetic a species of humanity as you can imagine, and yet the
Coens somehow manage to render each of them human, through some subtle,
but highly effective dark comedy. William H. Macy's Jerry
Lundegaard, the crooked car dealer who has his wife kidnapped, deserves
our contempt, but we can hardly help sympathising with him as his badly
conceived plan goes up the swanny. The same goes for the
trigger-happy kidnapper Carl Showalter (convincingly portrayed by Steve
Buscemi) - he is as bad as they come, but even he doesn't deserve to
end up in the wood chipper.
The snow-covered highway wilderness in which most of the film takes
place, beautifully photographed by Roger Deakins, brings an almost
surreal, fairytale-like quality to the film, something that renders the
few brief moments of extreme violence particularly shocking. Just
as the setting feels strangely unreal, so the characters have an
unsettlingly comicbook feel about them. Only Marge Gunderson
convinces us that she is a real person living in the real world
(apparently content with her badly paid job and no-hoper husband);
everyone else seems to exist in a kind of delusional fantasy, having no
sense of what is right or wrong and therefore pursuing an existence
that is as pointless as it is selfish. We share Marge's
incomprehension about the state of the world around her at the end of
the film: just why can't people be grateful for what they have, instead
of mucking up their lives for a few measly bits of paper?
Despite its warped humour and the shining humanity of its central
heroine,
Fargo takes us into
a very dark place before driving home its underlying moral - that there
is far more to life than money - with devastating effect.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Minneapolis car dealer Jerry Lundegaard needs money, badly. In a
desperate attempt to save his ailing business he tries to persuade his
wealthy father-in-law Wade Gustafson to lend him a large sum of money
to secure a real estate deal, but Gustafson is too smart for his
son-in-law and refuses to stump up the money. Jerry has one last
hope, to arrange that his wife be kidnapped so that he can collect a
share of the ransom money. Through one of his employees, he makes
contact with two hardened criminals, Carl Showalter and Gaear Grimsrud,
and they agree to take part in Jerry's insane scheme. The
abduction goes off as planned, but things soon get out of hand.
In their getaway, the kidnappers shoot dead a patrol cop and two
passers-by, and the local police chief Marge Gunderson is soon on their
tail. Despite being seven months' pregnant, Marge is determined
to bring the killers to book and it isn't long before Jerry Lundegaard
has her breathing down his neck. When Wade Gustafson hears about
the abduction, he insists on delivering the ransom money himself, and
is prepared to use his gun if his daughter is not returned to him
unharmed. Expecting Jerry to deliver the money, Showalter is
taken by surprise and shoots Gustafson dead, but only after sustaining
a bullet wound himself. Marge finally succeeds in tracing the
kidnappers' getaway car and arrives at their hideout, just in time to
see Grimsrud feeding his accomplice into the wood chipper...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.