Winter John
Member
Looking forward to this. Hopefully it will wash away the bitter disappointment of True Detective's 2nd season.
Even if anthologies are trending, its still jarring for a network to take a show that won three Emmys (including best miniseries), two Golden Globes and a Peabody and say, Lets do it again, except change everything.
FX president John Landgraf understands the potential pitfalls. You risk taking this incredible win that you had, and turning it into an embarrassing failure, he says. The deciding factor was Hawleys pitch, and putting faith in a showrunner who underwent the Hollywood version of trial by fire. My biggest concern in making Fargo the first time was the bar that had been set by the movie. On some level, it almost seemed like a suicide mission. I have a lot of confidence in Noah now from having done that.
There was a contingency plan in place co-stars Allison Tolman and Colin Hanks had deals with options to return for a second season but Hawley pitched Fargo 2.0 as a prequel. The narrative travels back to 1979 when Tolmans Molly was just a preteen, and transforms her father, Lou (played by Keith Carradine last year and Patrick Wilson this year), into the series leading man
Another thing that changed in season two: the sprawling narrative which Hawley admits is a much bigger story with a lot more moving pieces than season one was continually massaged and rejiggered, right up until the last minute.
The great thing about making an ensemble show is it becomes modular, Hawley says. It might work on the page to cut from one scene to another, but on the screen, its more powerful to take that second scene and move it first or move it later.
Case in point: To build suspense for a key storyline in the premiere, Dunst and Plemons characters first appear much later than scripted, while the introduction of Smarts extended clan of criminals was moved up from a later episode to better emphasize their importance, requiring a few extra scenes to be shot deep into production.
Its a relentlessly challenging process, Landgraf says. Ive watched every cut of every one of these episodes usually three or four times because theres so much adjustment and experimentation going on. If it feels simple and seamless on some level to the audience, thats really the triumph of what Noahs achieved. The layering of work it takes to get there is pretty remarkable.
It is the same one from late July. Great trailer, though!
Each season of Fargo is a complete different story ?
I've been meaning to watch the first season but i don't really like to see shows that are unfinished (unless its a one season story kind of thing)
Rewatching that trailer and man, if nothing else, season 2 has an incredible look to it.
Not a fan of Kirsten Dunst, but everything else looks solid
Just re-watched season 1 and it was as amazing as I remembered it to be, really can't wait for season 2 to start
He said in an interview that he was glad that this didn't require any hair & makeup on a daily basis. He just had to grow the beard and go to work.Damn, Ted Danson looks legit.
Drop Dead Gorgeous, too.She was good in Melancholia.
She was good in Melancholia.
Drop Dead Gorgeous, too.
Don't think I've seen either of these, might as well check them out before s2 starts. Maybe they'll change my opinion of her!
Melancholia is so boring. I wouldn't recommend watching it.
FX Networks will give viewers one last chance to watch the first season of "Fargo" before the second season debuts.
FXM will marathon all 10 episodes of Season 1 starting at 2 p.m. ET/11 a.m. PT Sunday, Oct. 11, with the first episode airing commercial-free. Season 2 premieres Oct. 12 on FX.