Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

Fargo: Season Two

 Fargo: Season Two
type
TVTItem
 Fargo: Season Two
label
Fargo: Season Two
 Fargo: Season Two
page
FargoSeasonTwo
 Fargo: Season Two
comment
Seasons of Fargo 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5Fargo (Season Two), which aired on October 12, 2015, takes the series back to 1979 to explore the infamous-yet-mysterious Sioux Falls incident that everyone insists on vaguely recalling in the first season.Minnesota State Police trooper Lou Solverson (Patrick Wilson) and his father-in-law, Rock County Sheriff Hank Larsson (Ted Danson), investigate an Accidental Murder scene left behind by the ambitious Peggy Blumquist (Kirsten Dunst) and her small-town-minded husband, Ed (Jesse Plemons). Their attempts to avoid the law end up entangling them in the middle of a turf war against the Kansas City mafia, with Floyd Gerhardt (Jean Smart) leading the Gerhardt crime family in their struggle after her husband Otto suffers a crippling stroke.The series also features Cristin Milioti, Jeffrey Donovan, Zahn McClarnon, Bokeem Woodbine, and Nick Offerman in supporting roles, among others.
 Fargo: Season Two
fetched
2023-12-07T01:47:30Z
 Fargo: Season Two
parsed
2023-12-07T01:47:30Z
 Fargo: Season Two
processingComment
Dropped link to CallBack: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Fargo: Season Two
processingComment
Dropped link to HistoricalDomainCharacter: Not a Feature - IGNORE
 Fargo: Season Two
processingComment
Dropped link to Rhinoceros: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Fargo: Season Two
processingComment
Dropped link to TheGiftOfTheMagi: Not a Feature - ITEM
 Fargo: Season Two
processingComment
Dropped link to TheNarrator: Not a Feature - UNKNOWN
 Fargo: Season Two
processingUnknown
TheNarrator
 Fargo: Season Two
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1649e053
type
Your Mom
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1649e053
comment
Your Mom: Lou, of all people.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1649e053
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1649e053
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_1649e053
 Fargo: Season Two / int_16fdd774
type
Losing a Shoe in the Struggle
 Fargo: Season Two / int_16fdd774
comment
Losing a Shoe in the Struggle: When Peggy hits him with her car, one of Rye's shoes flies off and ends up caught on a tree branch. Since Peggy drives off with him lodged in her windshield, the presence of the phantom shoe initially confuses Lou and Hank.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_16fdd774
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_16fdd774
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_16fdd774
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1869b4b1
type
Unreliable Narrator
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1869b4b1
comment
Unreliable Narrator: Peggy tells Ed she was a total mess after running down Rye and couldn't think straight. However, we see her being cool and collected as she cleans herself up and takes time to do regular chores.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1869b4b1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1869b4b1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_1869b4b1
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1c445e86
type
Poor Communication Kills
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1c445e86
comment
Poor Communication Kills: The cops at the motel in Sioux Falls turned off their radio, so Lou can't warn them of the Gerhardt family's approach.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1c445e86
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1c445e86
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_1c445e86
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1d029135
type
Fictional Document
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1d029135
comment
Fictional Document: A History of True Crime in the Midwest, seen being plucked from a bookshelf at the start of "The Castle" and heard being read by Martin Freeman.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1d029135
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1d029135
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_1d029135
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1dfd19f9
type
Papa Wolf
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1dfd19f9
comment
Papa Wolf: (Ironically) Bear. He was really upset when he found out that Dodd sent his son to make the hit on the Butcher and then would stop at nothing to free him from jail. Ultimately, he gives in to reason when Karl convinces him that breaking him out will be much worse for him than letting him go to trial. It's obvious he does not want his son involved in the family business and will go to great lengths to make sure he accomplishes legitimate things. He also calls Simone out before he executes her for showing no concern for her cousin's situation.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1dfd19f9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_1dfd19f9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_1dfd19f9
 Fargo: Season Two / int_203141e3
type
Cute and Psycho
 Fargo: Season Two / int_203141e3
comment
Cute and Psycho: Peggy
 Fargo: Season Two / int_203141e3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_203141e3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_203141e3
 Fargo: Season Two / int_23781532
type
Ironic Name
 Fargo: Season Two / int_23781532
comment
Ironic Name: Peggy wants to go to a seminar in Sioux Falls called "Lifesprings," but ends up in the middle of a bloodbath instead.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_23781532
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_23781532
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_23781532
 Fargo: Season Two / int_26ac510e
type
Mythology Gag
 Fargo: Season Two / int_26ac510e
comment
Mythology Gag: The Coen Brothers were inspired to make the original film by imagining a big book chronicling true crime in the Midwest. This season is revealed to be another story in just such a book, which is read by a narrator.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_26ac510e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_26ac510e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_26ac510e
 Fargo: Season Two / int_26d1f65f
type
Verbal Tic
 Fargo: Season Two / int_26d1f65f
comment
Verbal Tic: Lou says "Yup" when he spots a clue, as if confirming a suspicion he'd already formed.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_26d1f65f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_26d1f65f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_26d1f65f
 Fargo: Season Two / int_27690f66
type
Literary Allusion Title
 Fargo: Season Two / int_27690f66
comment
Literary Allusion Title: "Waiting For Dutch" is a reference to Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett. "Before the Law" is a parable by Franz Kafka. The Myth of Sisyphus is a philosophical essay by Albert Camus. Fear and Trembling is a Christian theological work by Søren Kierkegaard. The Gift of the Magi is a short story by O. Henry. Rhinoceros is an Absurdist play by Eugène Ionesco. "Loplop" is the name of an avian Author Avatar used by Surrealist artist Max Ernst. The Castle is a novel by Franz Kafka. "Palindrome" is a literary term for a word read the same forwards and backwards.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_27690f66
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_27690f66
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_27690f66
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2ae29c0d
type
The Dreaded
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2ae29c0d
comment
The Dreaded: The Gerhardt family has a nasty reputation in Fargo. Ben Schmidt tells Lou that he would rather confess to the murders himself and go to jail than have to take on the Gerhardts. Episode 7 has "The Undertaker," an infamous enforcer sent to clean up the mess Mike makes. Mike ends up shooting him dead in their first meeting.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2ae29c0d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2ae29c0d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_2ae29c0d
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2b7d29e1
type
Artifact Title
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2b7d29e1
comment
Artifact Title: Oddly inverted. The original movie takes place almost exclusively in Minnesota with only the opening scene in Fargo. The first season has a few scenes in Fargo. But the second season has much of it taking place there and is the home of the Gerhardts.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2b7d29e1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2b7d29e1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_2b7d29e1
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2be15316
type
Ambiguously Jewish
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2be15316
comment
Ambiguously Jewish: The Kansas City mob seems to be a multiethnic corporation run predominantly by Jews. The Kitchen brothers wear wide-brimmed hats and beards, giving them a Jewish look. Hamish Broker is played by the very Jewish Adam Arkin. Joe Bulo (played by the Jewish Brad Garrett) drops a Yiddish expression and seems to have a very low opinion of Germans. Season Four reveals that Bulo was a member of the mob when it was still the Italian Mafia, though this doesn't necessarily prevent him from being Jewish.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2be15316
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2be15316
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_2be15316
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2d4fa515
type
Ax-Crazy
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2d4fa515
comment
Ax-Crazy: Hanzee is prone to attacking and killing people for offending him or even just irritating him.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2d4fa515
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_2d4fa515
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_2d4fa515
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3036294e
type
Scary Black Man
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3036294e
comment
Scary Black Man: Mike Milligan, who some early reviewers compared to Shaft.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3036294e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3036294e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_3036294e
 Fargo: Season Two / int_39ed1c8a
type
Conspiracy Theorist
 Fargo: Season Two / int_39ed1c8a
comment
Conspiracy Theorist: Karl Weathers is frequently holding court on a wide range of conspiracy theories that were popular in the 1970s and 80s.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_39ed1c8a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_39ed1c8a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_39ed1c8a
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3b113b7
type
Character Development
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3b113b7
comment
Character Development: Ben Schmidt is a pretty lousy cop who is cowardly about facing the Gerhardts and wants to push responsibility to others. In the end, however, he manages to drop two of the Gerhardts' goons and, even though he's cold-cocked by Peggy, he's still the only person who goes with Lou to hunt them down. In the end, he's grown a lot.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3b113b7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3b113b7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_3b113b7
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3bc88a7f
type
Foregone Conclusion
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3bc88a7f
comment
In "Fear and Trembling", Constance mentions the seminar she and Peggy plan on attending is in Sioux Falls, which, according to Lou in Season 1 and foreshadowed throughout Season 2, becomes the site of a massacre.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3bc88a7f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3bc88a7f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_3bc88a7f
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3dc6aa5b
type
New Old West
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3dc6aa5b
comment
New Old West: Well, Midwest, but it borrows heavily from this genre. Lou and Hank are stoic but noble lawmen of the sort who would be played by John Wayne or Gary Cooper in a classic Western, the Gerhardts basically a frontier bandit gang complete with a Badass Native enforcer, the Kansas City mob are emblematic of the relentless march of civilization that eventually brought the Wild West to an end, and their conflict with the Gerhardts is practically a Genre Throwback to deconstructionist Westerns like The Wild Bunch.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3dc6aa5b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3dc6aa5b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_3dc6aa5b
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3e95582f
type
The Greatest Story Never Told
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3e95582f
comment
The Greatest Story Never Told: Hank and Lou agree that they left out the U.F.O. incident from their official reports, knowing that no one would believe it.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3e95582f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3e95582f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_3e95582f
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3fca462c
type
Deus ex Machina
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3fca462c
comment
Deus ex Machina: In "The Castle", Lou, Ed, and Peggy are in lethal danger when all of a sudden an UFO appears and hovers over the motel. They use the distraction to save themselves.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3fca462c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_3fca462c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_3fca462c
 Fargo: Season Two / int_40582f4b
type
Guttural Growler
 Fargo: Season Two / int_40582f4b
comment
Guttural Growler: Bear speaks with a voice that will shake the fillings out of your teeth.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_40582f4b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_40582f4b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_40582f4b
 Fargo: Season Two / int_40cc0c7e
type
Bittersweet Ending
 Fargo: Season Two / int_40cc0c7e
comment
Bittersweet Ending: It's pretty apparent that Lou's wife and father-in-law aren't long for this world, leaving him to raise Molly without them. The Gerhardt criminal empire is destroyed and all its members are dead save Charlie, who is in jail and will likely be convicted of attempted murder, ruining his father's hopes of a better life for his son. Mike is doomed to a life of mediocrity as some nameless office schmo, and Hanzee loses his entire identity, himself resigned to a lifestyle he's come to despise, and is Doomed by Canon. Ed's dead, having never gotten the simple life that he wanted, Ben and Hank are clearly affected by the events of the season, and Peggy is downright certifiable, not to mention carted off to prison. The body count of the season is tremendous, but even so, Lou seems to take everything in stride and goes on to live his life, getting to see his daughter grow up and start a loving family of her own.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_40cc0c7e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_40cc0c7e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_40cc0c7e
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4127eb1
type
Shut Up, Hannibal!
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4127eb1
comment
Shut Up, Hannibal!: While Peggy delivers her Motive Rant to Lou, he shuts her up pretty quickly by stating firmly, "People are dead, Peggy."
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4127eb1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4127eb1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_4127eb1
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4781adbb
type
Jerk with a Heart of Gold
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4781adbb
comment
Karl Weathers spouts conspiracy theories to Sonny while berating him for being slow on the uptake, but also shows righteous indignation over perceived institutional racism and Betsy's struggle with cancer.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4781adbb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4781adbb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_4781adbb
 Fargo: Season Two / int_479ac4fb
type
LateToTheParty
 Fargo: Season Two / int_479ac4fb
comment
Late to the Party: Mike Milligan arrives a few minutes after the Sioux Falls Massacre has ended and wisely decides to just get into his car and drive off.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_479ac4fb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_479ac4fb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_479ac4fb
 Fargo: Season Two / int_48c8fcbc
type
Kosher Nostra
 Fargo: Season Two / int_48c8fcbc
comment
Kosher Nostra: The Kansas City mob is an Ambiguously Jewish crime outfit. Many of the mobsters have Jewish mannerisms and drop Yiddish phrases, and the enterprise as a whole is noticeably businesslike and profit-driven, which is reminiscent of stereotypical Jewish avarice above all other concerns. This is complicated in Season Four, where it is revealed that the KC mob evolved from the Italian Mafia, and Joe Bulo was a member before their transition.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_48c8fcbc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_48c8fcbc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_48c8fcbc
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4ab9c868
type
Pretty Little Headshots
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4ab9c868
comment
Pretty Little Headshots: The trope is Zigzagged throughout. It's played straight in episode 8 with Dodd who's shot through the head, and while the exit wound is bigger than the entry wound, it's a small clean hole through and through. Episode 9 averts this with Bear, who's shot through the chin, and a good chunk of his skull is taken off when the bullet exits.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4ab9c868
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4ab9c868
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_4ab9c868
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4af55b78
type
Credits Gag
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4af55b78
comment
Credits Gag: The first episode has one in the style of the 70s MGM logo.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4af55b78
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4af55b78
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_4af55b78
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4e7c4536
type
Wham Line
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4e7c4536
comment
Wham Line: In "Fear and Trembling", Constance mentions the seminar she and Peggy plan on attending is in Sioux Falls, which, according to Lou in Season 1 and foreshadowed throughout Season 2, becomes the site of a massacre. In the season finale "Palindrome", Hanzee, having just received his new identity of "Moses Tripoli," tells his associate of his policy toward rivals, "Kill or be killed. Head in a bag. (in Sioux) That's the message." This reveals Hanzee to be the true identity of Mr. Tripoli, the Fargo boss Malvo kills back in season 1. When Tripoli is told that the killing of Sam Hess was likely personal and not related to the business, he responds with almost the same words.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4e7c4536
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_4e7c4536
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_4e7c4536
 Fargo: Season Two / int_500696c6
type
Seinfeldian Conversation
 Fargo: Season Two / int_500696c6
comment
Seinfeldian Conversation: In "The Castle", the various cops talk about where the best place to piss is while playing poker.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_500696c6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_500696c6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_500696c6
 Fargo: Season Two / int_5313c266
type
Bookends
 Fargo: Season Two / int_5313c266
comment
Book Ends: The final episode ends the same way as the first episode - with Lou and Betsy going to bed and bidding each other good night.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_5313c266
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_5313c266
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_5313c266
 Fargo: Season Two / int_55232afa
type
Politically Incorrect Hero
 Fargo: Season Two / int_55232afa
comment
Politically Incorrect Hero: Lou and Betsy have very conservative views on gender. Betsy tells Lou to feed more than what he had on fishing trips as a child because "she's a girl" and Lou's speech to Peggy at the end is subtly sexist, albeit not in a condescending way.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_55232afa
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_55232afa
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_55232afa
 Fargo: Season Two / int_55cd4012
type
"Everybody Dies" Ending
 Fargo: Season Two / int_55cd4012
comment
"Everybody Dies" Ending: All of the Gerhardts are killed except for Charlie, and he is going to jail. Hanzee, Betsy, and Hank are all Doomed by Canon even though they survived the season. Ed Blumquist and quite a few other supporting characters don't survive the season as well.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_55cd4012
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_55cd4012
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_55cd4012
 Fargo: Season Two / int_57de4e72
type
Beauty Inversion
 Fargo: Season Two / int_57de4e72
comment
Beauty Inversion: Jean Smart has long had "real woman" good looks and has aged gracefully. In this series, she looks like an old woman of the prairie who has strongly led a crime family.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_57de4e72
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_57de4e72
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_57de4e72
 Fargo: Season Two / int_59907e4f
type
Police Are Useless
 Fargo: Season Two / int_59907e4f
comment
Police Are Useless: Every cop except Lou and Hank are pretty useless. Ben and the Fargo police are too afraid of the Gerhardts to do anything about their criminal empire to be much good. The South Dakota cops are too obsessed with Jurisdiction Friction to listen to reason. When Lou calls in a murder, the South Dakota trooper who arrives ignores it and insists on following his previous orders to escort Lou out of the state.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_59907e4f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_59907e4f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_59907e4f
 Fargo: Season Two / int_599f943f
type
Karma Houdini Warranty
 Fargo: Season Two / int_599f943f
comment
Karma Houdini Warranty: Peggy and Ed skirt the edge of escape and justice for a majority of the season, but once they flee from the Sioux Falls massacre in "The Castle," Ed ends up dead and Peggy awaiting trial. An interesting Subverted example ends up happening with Hanzee. As stated above, he ends up washing himself clean from any involvement in the crimes of the season in the finale "Palindrome". He also, however, adopts the fake identity of Moses Tripoli, who Malvo killed back in season one, so his ultimate fate is revealed to be Laser-Guided Karma.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_599f943f
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Fargo: Season Two / int_599f943f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_599f943f
 Fargo: Season Two / int_5d397b9c
type
The Mountains of Illinois
 Fargo: Season Two / int_5d397b9c
comment
The Mountains of Illinois: Luverne, being in southwest Minnesota, is a prairie town in Real Life. The show, however, regularly portrays Luverne with lots of pine forests — a feature of the northeastern part of the state.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_5d397b9c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_5d397b9c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_5d397b9c
 Fargo: Season Two / int_60194b82
type
Spanner in the Works
 Fargo: Season Two / int_60194b82
comment
Spanner in the Works: The Blomquists' actions completely disrupt the plans of both the Gerhardt Family and the Kansas City Syndicate. Hanzee's scheme to get Ed and Peggy derails the police, the Kansas City Mob, and the Gerhardts' plans.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_60194b82
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_60194b82
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_60194b82
 Fargo: Season Two / int_62f9d08e
type
Freeze-Frame Bonus
 Fargo: Season Two / int_62f9d08e
comment
Freeze-Frame Bonus: If you pause during "The History of True Crime in the Midwest" in "The Castle", you can see spoilers for the episode. Namely, that Hanzee sets up and murders the surviving Gerhardts in the Sioux Falls Massacre.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_62f9d08e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_62f9d08e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_62f9d08e
 Fargo: Season Two / int_66755d29
type
Author Avatar
 Fargo: Season Two / int_66755d29
comment
"Loplop" is the name of an avian Author Avatar used by Surrealist artist Max Ernst.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_66755d29
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_66755d29
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_66755d29
 Fargo: Season Two / int_6941e30b
type
Room Full of Crazy
 Fargo: Season Two / int_6941e30b
comment
Room Full of Crazy: Hank's office full of symbols. The reason is more eccentric than crazy: he's trying to create a more effective language based on pictures.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_6941e30b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_6941e30b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_6941e30b
 Fargo: Season Two / int_6bd689ca
type
Meaningful Echo
 Fargo: Season Two / int_6bd689ca
comment
Meaningful Echo: When Rye threatened the judge in the Waffle Hut, he told her it wasn't "one of those optional, check-A-or-B scenarios." Later, when Hank asks Peggy to explain why she continued driving after hitting Rye, she replied that it wasn't a test where you could check A or B.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_6bd689ca
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_6bd689ca
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_6bd689ca
 Fargo: Season Two / int_6bda9a30
type
Meaningful Name
 Fargo: Season Two / int_6bda9a30
comment
In "Waiting For Dutch", Otto, the Gerhardt patriarch is threatening "I'll grind their bones to make my bread" when he has a stroke; bread is also a recurring symbol of Gerhardt family stability in early episodes. In the next episode, Rye has his bones ground in a meat grinder; from then on, no bread and peace, just meat and war.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_6bda9a30
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_6bda9a30
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_6bda9a30
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7276d0de
type
Mugging the Monster
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7276d0de
comment
Mugging the Monster: A bunch of racist barflies in Sioux Falls try to pick a fight with Hanzee. A few minutes later, they, the bartender, and a pair of cops are dead or dying on the ground.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7276d0de
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7276d0de
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_7276d0de
 Fargo: Season Two / int_73e152ad
type
"Rise and Fall" Gangster Arc
 Fargo: Season Two / int_73e152ad
comment
"Rise and Fall" Gangster Arc: Mike Milligan is a lieutenant for the Kansas City Mafia, sent to assist his boss Joe Bulo with handling the Gearhardt crime family. After Bulo's decapitation, Milligan seizes the reins and wades into a full-scale war with the Gearhardts. After he wins, he seems poised to rise in the organization... which never happens. Milligan's only reward is a tiny office and a 9-to-5 job.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_73e152ad
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_73e152ad
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_73e152ad
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7464705c
type
Arc Words
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7464705c
comment
Arc Words: “Okay, then.�
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7464705c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7464705c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_7464705c
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7570a10c
type
Bond Villain Stupidity
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7570a10c
comment
Dodd complains to Ed that women lack the ability to think rationally. All the while he's engaging in some major Bond Villain Stupidity by not either getting the hell out of there or finishing off Peggy.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7570a10c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7570a10c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_7570a10c
 Fargo: Season Two / int_76a08cd6
type
Friend or Foe?
 Fargo: Season Two / int_76a08cd6
comment
Friend or Foe?: Dodd Gerhardt accidentally shoots one of his own men during their search of the Blomquists' house.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_76a08cd6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_76a08cd6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_76a08cd6
 Fargo: Season Two / int_79a60aec
type
For Want of a Nail
 Fargo: Season Two / int_79a60aec
comment
For Want Of A Nail: To ensure that they aren't implicated in the killing, Peggy and Ed fake an accident. Which leads to Hanzee Dent discovering the car in a local auto shop and tracking them down. Which also leads Lou to the same conclusion. Had Peggy driven Rye to the hospital instead of going home, the war between the Gerhardts and Kansas City would've played out a lot differently and a lot of the collateral deaths likely wouldn't have happened.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_79a60aec
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_79a60aec
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_79a60aec
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7febc23b
type
Establishing Character Moment
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7febc23b
comment
Establishing Character Moment: Rye is introduced whining about his lack of respect to his condescending older brothers. Karl Weathers spouts conspiracy theories to Sonny while berating him for being slow on the uptake, but also shows righteous indignation over perceived institutional racism and Betsy's struggle with cancer. Ben Schmidt is introduced getting distracted by a woman walking by while Lou is trying to talk shop with him, establishing him as a pretty poor cop. When Constance is first introduced, she surreptitiously glances down at Peggy's butt when her back is turned and then starts urging her to think independently of her husband, establishing her an Ambiguously Gay suitor.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7febc23b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_7febc23b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_7febc23b
 Fargo: Season Two / int_83a26b37
type
Longing for Fictionland
 Fargo: Season Two / int_83a26b37
comment
Longing for Fictionland: Peggy convinces herself that her situation with Ed in "Palindrome" is just like a romantic movie she had recently seen, because if they were like the two lead characters, Ed would still want to be married to her.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_83a26b37
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_83a26b37
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_83a26b37
 Fargo: Season Two / int_863fa679
type
What Happened to the Mouse?
 Fargo: Season Two / int_863fa679
comment
What Happened to the Mouse?: While Charlie's incarcerated, his final fate after is never shown as the season concludes. Gale, the surviving Kitchen brother (the one with the red trench coat), is not seen after he and Mike Milligan stroll around the Gerhardt house and kill one of their hired thugs.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_863fa679
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_863fa679
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_863fa679
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8797239c
type
Bait-and-Switch
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8797239c
comment
Bait-and-Switch: The first episode seems to heavily tease that Rye Gerhardt, youngest of his clan, will one day grow up to become Carl Sholwater, one of the villains of the original Fargo feature film, played by Steve Buscemi. They seem to favour the same taste in jacket, haircut and facial hair, and Rye is established as having severe anger issues stemming from being bullied and belittled by his elder siblings and parents, which would conceivably provide a backstory for Carl's own poor impulse control. In the end, however, Rye is dead before the first episode is even over. In episode 7, the mobsters bring in "The Undertaker," an infamous Mob "cleaner" who seems set to be the next Big Bad of the show. In their first meeting, Mike walks up, hand extended, and shoots the Undertaker in the head. The second season, unlike previous installations, is actually set in the Fargo area in the 70s, and introduces three large, taciturn bearded white men (Bear Gerhardt and the Kitchen Brothers). Early fan speculation posited that any of them could eventually become Mr. Tripoli, the boss of the 2006 Fargo syndicate in the first season; a man who is also heavyset, bearded and generally quiet. Instead, by the end of the series all three are dead, and it is established that Ohanzee Dent, a skinny Native American man, undergoes plastic surgery and an identity change to become "Mr. Tripoli", and most likely put on weight as a result of years of success as a crime boss.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8797239c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8797239c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_8797239c
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8b606a51
type
There Is No Kill Like Overkill
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8b606a51
comment
There Is No Kill Like Overkill: Dieter Gerhardt apparently took 19 bullets to the head in 1951.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8b606a51
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8b606a51
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_8b606a51
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8d6d9535
type
Artistic License – Medicine
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8d6d9535
comment
Artistic License – Medicine: Hanzee steals hydrogen peroxide to disinfect his wounds. In reality, hydrogen peroxide slows down wound healing, but is often used on wounds due to a common misconception.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8d6d9535
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8d6d9535
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_8d6d9535
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8e20979
type
Wham Episode
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8e20979
comment
Wham Episode: "The Castle" depicts the infamous Sioux Falls Massacre, set up in season 1 and foreshadowed all season. But even that event of huge importance is almost completely overshadowed by the UFO descending above the massacre and being seen by Lou, Bear, Hanzee, Ed, and Peggy.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8e20979
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_8e20979
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_8e20979
 Fargo: Season Two / int_917bed8a
type
Minnesota Nice
 Fargo: Season Two / int_917bed8a
comment
Minnesota Nice: Discussed and deconstructed by Mike Milligan, who claims that people in the Midwest are not really that nice, but are just very good at using politeness to disguise the fact that they are actually unfriendly and hostile to someone.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_917bed8a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_917bed8a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_917bed8a
 Fargo: Season Two / int_96a33f11
type
Riddle for the Ages
 Fargo: Season Two / int_96a33f11
comment
Riddle for the Ages: According to The Narrator, no one ever found out what caused Hanzee to betray the Gerhardts or even if it was a spur-of-the-moment decision or something that has been brewing for decades.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_96a33f11
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_96a33f11
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_96a33f11
 Fargo: Season Two / int_970c790a
type
Big Bad
 Fargo: Season Two / int_970c790a
comment
Big Bad: By the end of the season, it's clear that Hanzee fits the bill.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_970c790a
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_970c790a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_970c790a
 Fargo: Season Two / int_973d220f
type
Never My Fault
 Fargo: Season Two / int_973d220f
comment
Never My Fault: The self-absorbed Peggy never takes responsibility for anything. When speaking of her hit-and-run, she only ever blames the victim for being in the road. In the end, she blames male patriarchy for all of her poor decisions instead of her own failings.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_973d220f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_973d220f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_973d220f
 Fargo: Season Two / int_9c9c4f9
type
Disappointing Promotion
 Fargo: Season Two / int_9c9c4f9
comment
Disappointing Promotion: After claiming credit for destroying the Gerhardt crime family, Mike Milligan returns to the Kansas City Syndicate expecting his star to rise in the organization (even proclaiming himself a king and with ideas to form his own crew). The Syndicate indeed believes he should be rewarded for his efforts... with a promotion to a paltry middle management position, complete with a tiny office. Milligan is completely crestfallen to see how little his war has gotten him.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_9c9c4f9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_9c9c4f9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_9c9c4f9
 Fargo: Season Two / int_9d12bbc1
type
Foreshadowing
 Fargo: Season Two / int_9d12bbc1
comment
Foreshadowing: In "Waiting For Dutch", Otto, the Gerhardt patriarch is threatening "I'll grind their bones to make my bread" when he has a stroke; bread is also a recurring symbol of Gerhardt family stability in early episodes. In the next episode, Rye has his bones ground in a meat grinder; from then on, no bread and peace, just meat and war. In "Did You Do This? No, You Did It!", Ed calls the Gerhardts and Mike Milligan from a phonebooth that has a game of hangman on the wall. Later, Dodd fails to kill him by stringing him up in a noose. The letters that are filled in are S_O_X F_LL_, which makes Sioux Falls the obvious answer. Lou's first scene with his family has him reading a book to his daughter. The book seems to be portraying a very family-unfriendly scene, which causes Lou to become increasingly disturbed. This establishes a feeling of vague unease before the bodies start dropping. The UFO arrival is foreshadowed in a few scenes, with both Rye and Hanzee seeing strange lights in the trees several episodes before its appearance. The newspaper featuring Hanzee's mugshot includes a headline about the UFOs. The gas station by the lake has several UFO posters on its walls.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_9d12bbc1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_9d12bbc1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_9d12bbc1
 Fargo: Season Two / int_9d17b859
type
Made of Iron
 Fargo: Season Two / int_9d17b859
comment
Made of Iron: The Gerhardt men are notoriously hard to kill. In 1951, it apparently took 19 bullets to do in Dieter Gerhardt. In 1979, his grandson Rye was beaten, stabbed, run over by a car, bled out for several hours, and still had enough strength left in him to attack Ed before finally being put down via yet another stabbing. Dodd needs to be tasered with a cattle prod no less than three times before Peggy can be sure he is not getting up. He also withstands being stabbed multiple times and being hit in the back of the head with a fireplace tool before being taken down with a headshot by Hanzee. Bear is shot in the head and twice in the chest, and still managed to almost strangle Lou to death. He's only stopped by the massive distraction of the UFO, at which point a shot to the head puts him down.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_9d17b859
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_9d17b859
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_9d17b859
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a0ccd559
type
Last Chance to Quit
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a0ccd559
comment
Last Chance to Quit: Lou offers this to the Blomquist couple in the closing minutes of "Fear and Trembling".
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a0ccd559
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a0ccd559
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_a0ccd559
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a4d8473b
type
Stealth Sequel
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a4d8473b
comment
Stealth Sequel: Aside from the obvious, non-stealthy ways in which this is a prequel to Season 1, Moses Tripoli, the boss of the Fargo syndicate, is the identity assumed by Hanzee Dent at the end of the season. He also has an encounter with Mr. Numbers and Mr. Wrench, who are children at the time.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a4d8473b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a4d8473b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_a4d8473b
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a70223
type
Karma Houdini
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a70223
comment
Karma Houdini: After multiple episodes of murdering innocent bystanders, Ohanzee has managed to elude police capture at the end of the season. He'll eventually be killed by Malvo, but not before reigning as the head of the Fargo mob.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a70223
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a70223
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_a70223
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a7c91a10
type
Meaningless Villain Victory
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a7c91a10
comment
Meaningless Villain Victory: Mike Milligan wins the war against the Gerhardts, but his reward is a tedious desk job.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a7c91a10
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a7c91a10
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_a7c91a10
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a7ca682e
type
Kitchen Sink Included
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a7ca682e
comment
Kitchen Sink Included: Peggy uses a loose sink to smash one of Dodd's men in the head.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a7ca682e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_a7ca682e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_a7ca682e
 Fargo: Season Two / int_aa245ded
type
Mob War
 Fargo: Season Two / int_aa245ded
comment
Mob War: One of the main plot points of the season is the fight between the Gerhardt Crime Family and the Kansas City Mafia. In the end, Kansas City wins because of Hanzee Dent's betrayal and the Gerhardts' internal strife. It culminates in the mythic Sioux Falls Massacre, and, with around 60 deaths total, has, as Lou said in Season 1, bodies stacked up to the second floor.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_aa245ded
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_aa245ded
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_aa245ded
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ab21dce
type
TheCloudcuckoolanderWasRight
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ab21dce
comment
The Cloud Cuckoo Lander Was Right: Lou's conspiracy theorist friend Karl says that the Powers That Be are behind the events at the Waffle Hut. Lou tells him it's just a shooting in the middle of Minnesota, not a presidential assassination. Karl tells him to just watch, this thing is going to snowball. This being Fargo, he turns out to be right.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ab21dce
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ab21dce
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_ab21dce
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ab5eea65
type
Dramatic Irony
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ab5eea65
comment
Dramatic Irony: Two members of the Gerhardt outfit are on their way to assassinate Ed and anyone who witnesses the murder. We then cut to the butcher shop, where Noreen starts talking to Ed about the inevitability of death. When he goes into the back room, Noreen jokes that she might be dead when he returns.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ab5eea65
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ab5eea65
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_ab5eea65
 Fargo: Season Two / int_aca32000
type
Armor-Piercing Response
 Fargo: Season Two / int_aca32000
comment
Armor-Piercing Response: Lou Solverson gives one in "Palindrome." Lou tells Peggy Blumquist that the desire to "be a wife and a mother and this self-made career woman, like there's 37 hours in a day" doesn't really matter in the moment, since "People are dead, Peggy", no matter what the reason is.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_aca32000
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_aca32000
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_aca32000
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ad17a1ac
type
Freudian Excuse Is No Excuse
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ad17a1ac
comment
Freudian Excuse Is No Excuse: Lou Solverson says as much in the "Palindrome" episode. Peggy is going on about her desire to "be a wife and a mother and this self-made career woman, like there's 37 hours in a day". Lou's Armor-Piercing Response is "People are dead, Peggy". Essentially, Lou doesn't care why those people died; it was still murder, and nothing excuses that.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ad17a1ac
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ad17a1ac
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_ad17a1ac
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ad1db87c
type
Oh, Crap!
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ad1db87c
comment
Oh, Crap!: The Judge was truly surprised when Rye pulled a gun on her. Ed, Peggy, and Hanzee all have this reaction at the end of "Loplop", when they see Lou and Hank approaching the cabin.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ad1db87c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ad1db87c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_ad1db87c
 Fargo: Season Two / int_af7d483f
type
Dreaming of Things to Come
 Fargo: Season Two / int_af7d483f
comment
Dreaming of Things to Come: Betsy manages to see her daughter as she grows old, even her child with Gus and an older Lou in the 10th episode.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_af7d483f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_af7d483f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_af7d483f
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b0e81c37
type
A Simple Plan
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b0e81c37
comment
A Simple Plan: Rye just wanted to extort the judge to get a few more bucks. What could possibly go wrong?
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b0e81c37
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b0e81c37
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_b0e81c37
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b11ac9f5
type
Abusive Parents
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b11ac9f5
comment
Abusive Parents: Dodd Gerhardt physically and verbally abuses his adult daughter Simone. He seems rather resentful of the fact that she is a girl, when he wanted a boy, even though she seems rather enthusiastic about entering the family business.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b11ac9f5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b11ac9f5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_b11ac9f5
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b53077b3
type
Take That!
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b53077b3
comment
Take That!: Reagan gets a pretty scathing representation. After asking Lou about his military service, Reagan starts recalling the war movies he filmed as if it's on the same level as Lou's experience. He also mixes up the details, foreshadowing his infamous memory lapses during his presidency. When Lou presses him on how he's going to fix the problems in the nation, Reagan just pats him on the shoulder and walks away without responding.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b53077b3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b53077b3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_b53077b3
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b707726f
type
Hypocritical Humor
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b707726f
comment
Hypocritical Humor: Dodd complains to Ed that women lack the ability to think rationally. All the while he's engaging in some major Bond Villain Stupidity by not either getting the hell out of there or finishing off Peggy. Karl says that RFK's assassination was falsely blamed on an "Ay-Rab," then calls the perpetrators racist.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b707726f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_b707726f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_b707726f
 Fargo: Season Two / int_bb18a227
type
It's All About Me
 Fargo: Season Two / int_bb18a227
comment
It's All About Me: Peggy's primary characterization is that she's utterly self-absorbed. She constantly prioritizes "being the best me" above all other practical concerns. She kicks off the plot by refusing to take responsibility for hitting Rye out of fear for the consequences it will have on her. Even when she and Ed on are on the lam and Ed is strategizing how to survive, Peggy blathers on about her latest self-improvement epiphany.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_bb18a227
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_bb18a227
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_bb18a227
 Fargo: Season Two / int_bc103f8b
type
Subverted
 Fargo: Season Two / int_bc103f8b
comment
An interesting Subverted example ends up happening with Hanzee. As stated above, he ends up washing himself clean from any involvement in the crimes of the season in the finale "Palindrome". He also, however, adopts the fake identity of Moses Tripoli, who Malvo killed back in season one, so his ultimate fate is revealed to be Laser-Guided Karma.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_bc103f8b
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Fargo: Season Two / int_bc103f8b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_bc103f8b
 Fargo: Season Two / int_be8416ea
type
Shrouded in Myth
 Fargo: Season Two / int_be8416ea
comment
Shrouded in Myth: Ed Blomquist becomes this to most of the Gerhardt family because of Dodd's fabrications and his sheer luck. By the time Hank tries to explain to Floyd that "The Butcher of Luverne" is not a hitman, she's convinced he's some sort of Sleeper Agent.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_be8416ea
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_be8416ea
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_be8416ea
 Fargo: Season Two / int_bf67c13e
type
Opening Monologue
 Fargo: Season Two / int_bf67c13e
comment
Opening Monologue: Freeman's voice-over narration prefaces the penultimate episode.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_bf67c13e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_bf67c13e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_bf67c13e
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c2676b00
type
Jurisdiction Friction
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c2676b00
comment
Jurisdiction Friction: The crimes take place in three different states and four different jurisdictions. Lou and Hank, being competent officers as well as family, are only to happy to work together. The Fargo PD play nice with the Minnesota State Troopers, but Ben Schmidt resists doing anything to upset the Gerhardts. In the final episodes, however, when the Rock County Sheriff, Minnesota State Troopers, Fargo Police Department and South Dakota State Troopers all must work together, friction comes to a boil, mostly due to the South Dakota Troopers insisting on running the show and making bad calls. When Lou objects to their handling of it, he's petulantly ejected from the state. Even when Lou stumbles on a murder scene, the troopers ignore his observations and kick him out.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c2676b00
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c2676b00
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_c2676b00
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c2e1f423
type
Really Dead Montage
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c2e1f423
comment
Really Dead Montage: All the Gerhardts that died are shown in the opening of the 10th episode.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c2e1f423
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c2e1f423
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_c2e1f423
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c335b9ec
type
Irony
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c335b9ec
comment
Irony: In "Myth of Sisyphus" Bear insists that he and Dodd will dictate what happens to their own children - Bear for his son Charlie, Dodd for his daughter Simone. By the end of the story, Dodd has roped Charlie into his scheme, landing him in jail, while Bear takes it upon himself to execute Simone for her betrayal. In "The Gift of the Magi", Mike Milligan justifies Kansas City's war against the Gerhardt family by saying "we can't leave because we're the future, and they're the past. The past can no more become the future than the future can become the past." After the Gerhardts are destroyed, Mike expects to be the new kingpin, just like in "the old days", but instead his only reward is a boring 9-to-5 desk job, where the less glamorous but more profitable future of organized crime lies. In the end, he was just as unprepared for the changing times as the Gerhardts were.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c335b9ec
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c335b9ec
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_c335b9ec
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c3bdfbb9
type
Let's You and Him Fight
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c3bdfbb9
comment
Let's You and Him Fight: Hanzee sets up the Gerhardts to start a firefight with the South Dakota cops, hoping that both sides wipe each other out and he can then kill Ed and Peggy.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c3bdfbb9
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c3bdfbb9
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_c3bdfbb9
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c6695a49
type
Mêlée à Trois
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c6695a49
comment
Mêlée à Trois: The Mob War escalates into a conflict between the Gerhardt family, the Kansas City Syndicate, and the state police (mainly Hank and Lou) who are trying to stop them both. This conflict is particularly complicated since the first two factions are trying to kill each other without killing any cops, since neither can handle dealing with police heat in the middle of a Mob War, and the police are likewise trying to avoid getting into a shootout with either side. Hanzee Dent exploits this to wipe out the Gerhardt family by tricking them into thinking a bunch of out-of-state cops not wearing their uniforms are Kansas City men holding Dodd hostage. It doesn't end well for either the Gerhardts or the police.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c6695a49
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c6695a49
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_c6695a49
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c70907c7
type
The Butcher
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c70907c7
comment
The Butcher: Ed is an actual butcher, but when he gets wrapped up in a Mob War, people assume he's some sort of contract killer. He's frequently referred to as "the butcher," and he eventually uses this to his advantage, calling himself the Butcher of Luverne.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c70907c7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_c70907c7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_c70907c7
 Fargo: Season Two / int_cb70651c
type
Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane
 Fargo: Season Two / int_cb70651c
comment
Maybe Magic, Maybe Mundane: After last season's subtly Biblical themes, this season is more overtly sci-fi. UFOs and extraterrestrials are referred to by minor characters and the soundtrack; both Rye and Ohanzee Dent separately see strange bright lights in the sky outside the Waffle Hut. The latter even loses about two hours of time without realizing, judging by his pocket watch. And then a UFO shows up at the motel massacre. Betsy has a vision of the future when she sleeps that is too accurate to be a normal dream.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_cb70651c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_cb70651c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_cb70651c
 Fargo: Season Two / int_cbe687ab
type
Corrupt Corporate Executive
 Fargo: Season Two / int_cbe687ab
comment
Corrupt Corporate Executive: Hamish Broker, middle manager for the Kansas City crime syndicate.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_cbe687ab
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_cbe687ab
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_cbe687ab
 Fargo: Season Two / int_cf92fea8
type
Cassandra Truth
 Fargo: Season Two / int_cf92fea8
comment
Cassandra Truth: In "The Castle", Lou tries to warn Captain Cheney against setting up a sting operation with the Blumquists as bait, telling him that the Kansas City mobsters (who he has faced several times at this point) are too smart to fall for it. Cheney not only calls him a coward, but has one of his deputies escort him out of the state. Lou turns out to be right about the plan being a terrible idea, but the real danger comes from the Gerhardt family, not the Kansas City mobsters.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_cf92fea8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_cf92fea8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_cf92fea8
 Fargo: Season Two / int_d72edeb0
type
Fake Guest Star
 Fargo: Season Two / int_d72edeb0
comment
Fake Guest Star: Zahn McClarnon as Hanzee Dent, Jeffrey Donovan as Dodd Gerhardt, Bokeem Woodbine as Mike Milligan, and Cristin Milioti as Betsy Solverson.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_d72edeb0
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_d72edeb0
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_d72edeb0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_d7472e4f
type
Kicked Upstairs
 Fargo: Season Two / int_d7472e4f
comment
Kicked Upstairs: Mike Milligan's long-awaited promotion to kingpin of the North Dakota underworld turns out to be nothing more than a dull nine-to-five job in a cramped office building.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_d7472e4f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_d7472e4f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_d7472e4f
 Fargo: Season Two / int_d99a228f
type
Unusually Uninteresting Sight
 Fargo: Season Two / int_d99a228f
comment
Unusually Uninteresting Sight: During the long-awaited Massacre at Sioux Falls, a Flying Saucer appears out of nowhere directly above them, and everyone drops what they're doing. Everyone except Peggy, who says, "It's just a flying saucer. Come on, Ed, we've gotta move!"
 Fargo: Season Two / int_d99a228f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_d99a228f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_d99a228f
 Fargo: Season Two / int_dbc93276
type
This Is Going to Be Huge
 Fargo: Season Two / int_dbc93276
comment
This Is Going to Be Huge: Skip is trying to reopen his electric keyboard store and states confidently that they will soon be everywhere. Of course, we know now that personal computers were the real future of word processing. The Apple II series was already available to the public in 1979.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_dbc93276
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_dbc93276
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_dbc93276
 Fargo: Season Two / int_df410b77
type
Decoy Protagonist
 Fargo: Season Two / int_df410b77
comment
Decoy Protagonist: After killing three people in the Waffle Hut, Rye seems set up to be the Lester Nygaard of Season 2 (an impulsive murderer trying to stay ahead as the police close in on him), only for him to be killed off by Peggy and Ed by the end of the premiere.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_df410b77
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_df410b77
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_df410b77
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e2f7ab99
type
Assassin Outclassin'
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e2f7ab99
comment
Assassin Outclassin': The Narrator of episode 9 confirms that The Undertaker and his men were sent to kill Mike for his failures. Mike and Gale surprise and kill them when they show up.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e2f7ab99
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e2f7ab99
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_e2f7ab99
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e34400ab
type
Ambiguously Gay
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e34400ab
comment
When Constance is first introduced, she surreptitiously glances down at Peggy's butt when her back is turned and then starts urging her to think independently of her husband, establishing her an Ambiguously Gay suitor.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e34400ab
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e34400ab
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_e34400ab
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e3c36782
type
Call-Forward
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e3c36782
comment
Call-Forward: Hanzee, who through many years of plastic surgery and hard work will become Moses Tripoli, the boss of the Fargo syndicate, will be wiped out by Malvo by season one, which is 30 some odd years from the events of season two. During his conversation with his associate, he talks about building a kingdom, though he is reminded that it, too, will eventually fall into the ocean. First season protagonists Molly and Gus, as well as an older Lou and Greta show up in the opening of the series finale. Mr. Wrench and Mr. Numbers are the kids Hanzee helps out in the 10th episode. It helps that Hanzee is going to become Moses Tripoli, the mob boss of the Fargo syndicate.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e3c36782
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e3c36782
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_e3c36782
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e4b69188
type
Very Loosely Based on a True Story
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e4b69188
comment
Very Loosely Based on a True Story: While this season isn't a "true story" any more than the film or first season, Peggy's hit-and-run is based on the murder of Gregory Glen Biggs. Lou also relates the real life story of Ba Van Nguyen's chinook rescue.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e4b69188
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e4b69188
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_e4b69188
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e624f0e8
type
Suspiciously Specific Denial
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e624f0e8
comment
Suspiciously Specific Denial: Whenever Skip is giving his sales pitch for electric typewriters, he asserts, "They're not just for women anymore!"
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e624f0e8
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_e624f0e8
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_e624f0e8
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f0f03464
type
TheSeventies
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f0f03464
comment
The '70s: '79, to be precise. There are references to Jimmy Carter ("the peanut farmer"), Reagan's presidential campaign, and the gas crisis.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f0f03464
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f0f03464
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_f0f03464
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f10d3363
type
Distracted by the Sexy
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f10d3363
comment
Ben Schmidt is introduced getting distracted by a woman walking by while Lou is trying to talk shop with him, establishing him as a pretty poor cop.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f10d3363
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f10d3363
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_f10d3363
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f4bec3d
type
Magic Plastic Surgery
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f4bec3d
comment
Magic Plastic Surgery: Hanzee is revealed to have changed his appearance between seasons one and two to become the head of the Fargo mob. Somehow, he was able to make himself a white, bearded man with crooked teeth.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f4bec3d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f4bec3d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_f4bec3d
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f511ea9b
type
Product Placement
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f511ea9b
comment
Product Placement: Whenever someone drinks a beer, it's a can of Miller Lite. Fittingly, the old branding used in 1979 was reintroduced by Miller in the 2010s.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f511ea9b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f511ea9b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_f511ea9b
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f96f8980
type
Love Makes You Crazy
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f96f8980
comment
Love Makes You Crazy: In "Palindrome," Ed admits that while he still loves Peggy, their personalities and aspirations are too different for their marriage to work. Peggy's brain responds by hallucinating smoke coming through the vent so that she can pretend that their situation is like a movie she had recently watched with a similar setup where the heroine was saved from a perilous situation by the hero who wanted to be with her.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f96f8980
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f96f8980
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_f96f8980
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f9f2c33
type
Running Gag
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f9f2c33
comment
Running Gag: A series-wide one. In the first season, when things start turning bloody, Ben Schmidt says, "It's Sioux Falls all over again!" as a Noodle Incident. In this season, when things start turning bloody at Sioux Falls, Ben says, "It's Rapids City all over again!" as a Noodle Incident even further back in time.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f9f2c33
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_f9f2c33
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_f9f2c33
 Fargo: Season Two / int_fe614133
type
Beauty Is Never Tarnished
 Fargo: Season Two / int_fe614133
comment
Beauty Is Never Tarnished: During the montage of all the dead Gerhardts, Otto, Dodd, and Bear look terrible with holes in their heads. Yet Floyd is lying gracefully with a pool of blood on her sweater and Simone only has a bloodstain on her dress.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_fe614133
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_fe614133
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_fe614133
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ffad4e9f
type
Shown Their Work
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ffad4e9f
comment
Shown Their Work: The Gerhardts are proud German-Americans, having left the Weimar Republic for America. Their home features what is apparently the Gerhardt family crest, which features the Bundesadler insignia, the black eagle featured in the German coat of arms, having been re-introduced by the Weimar Republic.
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ffad4e9f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_ffad4e9f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_ffad4e9f
 Fargo: Season Two / int_name
type
ItemName
 Fargo: Season Two / int_name
comment
 Fargo: Season Two / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fargo: Season Two / int_name
 Fargo: Season Two / int_name
itemName
Fargo: Season Two

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Anthology Series / int_1a2c69d1
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Droste Image / int_1a2c69d1
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Familial Foe / int_1a2c69d1
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Full-Circle Revolution / int_1a2c69d1
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Fun with Homophones / int_1a2c69d1
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Gangster Fiction / int_1a2c69d1
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Invented Individual / int_1a2c69d1
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Rural Gangsters / int_1a2c69d1
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Ruthless Foreign Gangsters / int_1a2c69d1
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
The '70s / int_1a2c69d1
 Fargo: Season Two
hasFeature
Token Good Cop / int_1a2c69d1