Dom Robinson reviews
Fargo
Small Town. Big Crime. Dead Cold.
Distributed by
Polygram
Cat.no: 047 804 2
Cert: 18
Running time: 94 minutes
Year: 1996
Pressing: 1998
Region(s): 2 (UK PAL)
Chapters: 17 plus extras
Sound: Dolby Surround
Languages: English, French, Spanish
Subtitles: English, French, Spanish, Dutch
Widescreen: 16:9, Fullscreen: 4:3
16:9-enhanced: Yes
Macrovision: Yes
Price: £17.99
Extras : Scene index, Biographies, Filmographies.
Director:
(Hudsucker Proxy, Barton Fink, Blood Simple, Miller's Crossing, The Big Lebowski )
Producer:
(Hudsucker Proxy, Barton Fink, Blood Simple, Miller's Crossing, The Big Lebowski )
Screenplay:
(Hudsucker Proxy, Barton Fink, Blood Simple, Miller's Crossing, The Big Lebowski )
Music:
Cast:
Jerry Lundegaard : William H. Macy (Air Force One, Mr. Holland's Opus, Murder In The First, The Client, "E.R." (TV) )
Carl Showalter : Steve Buscemi (Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, Trees Lounge, Desperado, Things To Do In Denver When You're Dead )
Marge Gunderson : Frances McDormand (Blood Simple, Raising Arizona, Mississippi Burning )
Gaear Grimsrud : Peter Stormare
Jean Lundegaard : Kristin Rudrud
Jose Feliciano : Himself
Fargo
tells the true story of events which took place in Minnesota in
1987. The names have been changed to protect the innocent, but the rest has been
told exactly as it occured.
Jerry Lundegaard is a stressed-out executive car salesman on the verge of
failure who arranges for his wife Jean to be kidnapped, in the hope that
splitting the ransom with the kidnappers will enable him to finance a new
business venture. When one of the kidnappers goes off the rails and events
career out of control, it falls to Marge Gunderson, Cheif of the Brainerd Police
Department, to set things to rights.
William H. Macy is best known for his role as Dr. Morgenstern in the
hit television series, E.R. , although he has also had roles in the films
Mr. Holland's Opus, Murder In The First and The Client , not to
mention last year's turn as an aide to President Harrison Ford in Air Force
One . Here he does very well as a man who is trying not to suffer a nervous
breakdown. He just wants a good life for himself and his family, despite having
a job which doesn't appreciate him, but the methods he employs to do this have
a strong possibility of going wrong.
Frances McDormand , also a star of the Coen Brothers' Blood Simple
won an Oscar for Best Actress for Fargo , although I can't really see
why as her role requires her to do little more than go round asking questions
about the increasing number of dead bodies that turn up in and around town, or
to mention the fact that she's "carrying a load here" (ie. pregnant), when all
the other cast on show totally outshine her.
It was an inspired piece of casting to pair Steve Buscemi together
with Peter Stormare , the latter being an actor I have never seen before,
but who looks like an extremely tired Bruce Willis lookalike.
Steve Buscemi, who has many films to his credit including Reservoir Dogs,
Pulp Fiction and who made his directorial debut with Trees Lounge ,
plays a fast-talking small-time criminal who is just interested in making a
quick buck with as little hassle as possible along the way, while making his
grievances as vocal as possible whenever anything goes wrong.
Peter Stormare, on the other hand, plays a character who we don't get to find
out much about and is a man of very few words. It's clear that he also wants to
get the job done, but his methods are more severe. If someone gets in their way,
or poses a threat to him, the simple answer is a bullet through the head... or
sometimes worse.
The picture quality is, on the whole, excellent. However, there are
occasionally some artifacts, eg. the scene where Jean's father meets up with
Steve Buscemi to offer the ransom money - and something close to a cure for
toothache - in chapter 12. As he drives the car there's a large dark area over
most of the picture, since he's driving at night, in which the artifacts are
noticeable (both fullscreen and widescreen sides). Also, there's a fair amount
of artifacts in the black background behind the end credits.
It's a bonus though that both widescreen and fullscreen versions have been
included on the disc as that pleases both sections of the public. Since the
film was shot at 1.85:1 - and this is a 16:9 transfer - the widescreen image
will lose a sliver of picture information to bring it down to 1.78:1 (16:9).
This certainly does not lessen the impact of the gorgeous snow-covered
landscapes captured on film by Joel Coen. For anyone wondering, the fullscreen
version is pan-and-scan as opposed to an open-matte transfer, so you will lose
approximately 28% of the original 1.85:1 film image by watching that format.
The Dolby Surround soundmix comes across very clear during the film and is
used mainly for the memorable musical score, any scenes featuring only
ambience, plus those which have clear gunshot sounds, or the rather gruesome
scenes in which Steve Buscemi makes his last appearance in the film...
Another thing to note is that on playing the disc you can't skip past the
Polygram logo and copyright info.
Extras :
Chapters :
There are 17 chapters spread throughout the film which is fair enough for a
94-minute film, but there's not a lot apart from that.
Cast and Production Notes :
There are brief biographies and filmographies for the three principal cast
members as well as the Coen brothers which go as far as this film (strange
considering it's two years old and they've all been busy since then), save for
a mention of "Upcoming 1997 - The Big Lebowski", but no trailers or commentary
tracks.
Also Available :
This option brings up a small list of other DVD titles available now or coming
soon.
Languages :
The languages and subtitles to be found on the disc come in four variations :
English, French, Spanish and Dutch.
Overall, this film is definitely one of the Coen brother's better offerings
alongside Barton Fink and Hudsucker Proxy and is one that can
be watched time and time again, mainly for the class acting on display and the
writing, for which they received an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay.
Given the amount of space available on a DVD, it would be nice to have seen
a trailer and some other behind-the-scenes extras. However, it's nice to see
one of the first UK DVD titles being one from the well-respected Coen brothers
and given the mostly-excellent picture quality this would make a good start to
your UK region 2 DVD collection.
FILM : ****½
PICTURE QUALITY (4:3) : ****
PICTURE QUALITY (16:9) : ****
SOUND QUALITY : ****
EXTRAS : *
PACKAGE : **½
Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 1998.
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