The New Zealand Herald

Ozark's back and deadlier than ever

Each episode zips past and is packed with enough questions and answers to keep you hitting play next.

- Karl Puschmann

Adelivery man whistles as he weaves his way through a crowded Mexican marketplac­e. He enters a small shop pushing a trundler laden with two big cardboard boxes. He walks past the aisle of shoes and children’s dress-up outfits and up to the counter with a smile on his face and a clipboard in his outstretch­ed arm. The shopkeeper takes the clipboard, rests it on the counter and signs for the delivery. Without warning the delivery man slams his head down on the counter before slitting his throat with a machete that would be comically oversized if it hadn’t just been used so violently.

This is the first attention-grabbing, stomach-churning minute of the first episode of Ozark’s third season. Ever since season’s two’s chilling finale which flipped the audience’s expectatio­n that Jason Bateman’s character was gonna break bad I’ve been hanging out to see what happened. And now that it was happening in terrible graphic detail I had no idea what was happening.

I didn’t know who just got murdered, why he got murdered, or

why the murderer then walked into the shop’s backroom to kill the two people in there by tying them up and detonating a bomb that was in one of his two boxes.

I mean, drugs obviously. The two out the back clearly weren’t harmless stock boys, seeing as they were feeding fat stacks of loose cash into money counters before being fatally interrupte­d. It’s awful, graphic stuff. But what happened next was worse.

Before detonating the bomb, the delivery guy/hit man, exits through a side door and into the crowd of people milling about. Without pause he furtively places the second box in the middle of the bustling square before disappeari­ng into the sea of shoppers.

The first bomb explodes and all that loose cash starts falling from the sky like pesos from heaven. As the money rains down people start scrambling all around to grab as much as they can. And then the second bomb goes off.

Cripes. Talk about starting with a bang. Or more accurately bangs.

After that explosive beginning Ozark returns to the familiar. We see Marty and Wendy Byrde, champagne glasses in hand, hamming their way through an infomercia­l style ad for their now-launched, drug-cartel-funded Riverboat Casino.

They look happy. Behind the television smiles they’re not. The cartel’s just given the ever cautious Marty the hard word, forcing him to kickstart his money-laundering operation despite his concern that there’s an FBI informant hidden among all the new hires at the casino.

Having forced them to walk down this criminal path at the end of the last season Wendy is getting increasing­ly frustrated by her husband’s conservati­ve nature. She’s identified an opportunit­y for expansion in the form of a failing casino they could take over that, if successful, would make them major players in the area. Problem is Marty has no desire to take on any more stress and even less to get more indebted to the cartel.

They’re at a stalemate. And they’re in couples’ therapy. Which isn’t working. Mostly because it’s rigged.

This leads to a resentful Wendy once again taking matters into her own hands and steering them even closer to their murderous crime boss.

This would all be bad enough if Ruth, the young manager at the casino, wasn’t such a wildcard.

With one swift kick to the nether regions she invites the cruel attention of the Kansas mob to the casino, the very night that Marty implements his Ocean’s 11- style plan to launder money in and out of the casino under the watchful eyes of the security cameras.

For an episode that’s mostly setup there’s an awful lot going on.

We gradually learn what that brutal opening was about and we start to fear what’s going to happen next.

While Netflix has experiment­ed with weekly releases for some of its high-profile shows it’s wisely stuck with releasing Ozark as a full season dump.

Each episode zips past and is packed with enough questions and, more importantl­y, answers to keep you hitting play next when the end credits roll.

Ozark’s always been good but now, just like the Byrde family, I’m all in.

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 ??  ?? Laura Linney and Jason Bateman in season three of Ozark.
Laura Linney and Jason Bateman in season three of Ozark.
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