Albany Times Union

This season, ‘Fargo’ confronts racism in America

Fourth installmen­t of series is packed with storylines

- By Robert Lloyd

The fourth season of “Fargo” is upon us, three years after the third, though time in this anthologic­al series is of no particular import as the setting or year changes with each self-contained, if tangential­ly linked, story. This is the one that stars Chris Rock, and takes place in 1950, in Kansas City, Missouri, 602 miles south of the North Dakota city that gives the series its name.

All seasons of “Fargo,” whenever or wherever they take place, share what might be called an aesthetic universe, shaped mainly by the 1996 Coen brothers film that inspired it and the tastes of series creator Noah Hawley (of the multiplane sci-fi series “Legion”), who has written or co-written most of the episodes and directed several, including the two that open the new season.

There is also something of Wes Anderson’s casestudy sensibilit­y — like the movie, every season erroneousl­y claims to be a “true story” — and maybe a little bit of David Lynch. Additional­ly this year, there are small and large nods to “The Untouchabl­es,” “The Godfather” and “The Wizard of Oz.” What the series shares with these inf luences is the quality of belonging to a world much like but not exactly our own, a movie world, heightened, even cartoonish — not necessaril­y in a bad way, and not entirely devoid of human feeling. There might be the hint of something supernatur­al as well. And there is always snow.

I tend to enjoy these series, even as I sometimes think there may be less there than meets the eye. (I feel the same way about many Coen brothers films; their own gangland story, “Miller’s Crossing,” is referenced here too.) But what meets the eye is very appealing. The production values are high, the photograph­y beautiful; the writing is crisp and fuels good performanc­es, so that even characters you don’t care for or even particular­ly care about tend to be vivid and individual and humanize what is mechanisti­c in the plotting. It’s a playground for actors. I had no trouble watching nine hours of the new series at a sitting, except for the sitting.

Brief ly put, this season involves the faltering balance between two Kansas City mobs, one Black, one Italian, that may be heading toward “war.”

At the head of the first is Loy Cannon, played by Chris Rock. Better and worse bad guys are the rule in “Fargo,” and Loy is, most of the time, the better kind — respected rather than feared, a man with a plan, more thoughtful than not, and history’s underdog: “I’m not just fighting a few Italians; I’m fighting 400 years of history. I’m fighting a mindset.”

Every season has featured a template inherited from the movie. A weak person is overwhelme­d by the multiplyin­g effects of a bad decision; a profession­al villain, usually from out of town, sows chaos; and a dedicated, dogged officer of the law attempts to keep the peace. There is a quote from philosophe­r Bertrand Russell attached as an epigram to the ninth episode — “Life is nothing but a competitio­n to be the criminal rather than victim” — but while this seems to describe the world view of certain (well, many) characters, it’s not really true of the series as a whole. Some of them are creating a future beyond those options, which is what has kept “Fargo” a buoyant, rather than a bitter, sort of noir: It makes a place for goodness.

Unfortunat­ely, this year has no analog for the good cops Allison Tolman, Colin Hanks, Patrick Wilson, Ted Danson and Carrie Coon played in earlier series, and Frances Mcdormand on film before them, though elements of that character are seeded in E’myri Crutchfiel­d’s bright high school girl with a Nancy Drew streak; Ben Whishaw’s sorrowful Irish member of the Italian gang; and Timothy Olyphant, back in a cowboy hat as a federal marshal. But because criminals dominate the action, the story seems not so much morally complex as unfocused, and because there are so many storylines competing for air, including one involving Jessie Buckley as a nurse with bad habits (and a Minnesota accent to honor the franchise), the show robs some promising characters of screen time. I would watch a whole series of “The Ethelrida Pearl Smutny Mysteries” starring Crutchfiel­d’s curious teen, whose parents (a biracial couple) run a funeral parlor where many of those storylines intersect. She belongs at the center of the action here, but keeps drifting to the edge.

But what most sets this “Fargo” apart is that it means to be about something more than human fecklessne­ss; it has contempora­ry America on its mind. To start, it brings a substantia­lly Black cast to a series whose stars have been up to now largely white. Race is not all that’s going on here, but it’s always going on, in big and little ways.

Some points are laid out on velvet for your inspection. It would take a most insensible viewer not to hear the address to 2020 in Italian mob boss Josto Fadda’s (Jason Schwartzma­n) remarks to Loy: “This country loves a man who takes what he wants, unless that man looks like you. ... Society looks at me, they see a fella that’s using crime to get ahead. But you, all they see is crime. And that’s why you’re going to lose

... ‘cause I can take all the money and (women) I want and still run for president. But you, it’s always going to be the rope.”

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