The scene with Marge and her old friend from High school seems out of place and random but it's the conversation and the revelation later that he was lying that leads her to revisit the dealership, to not take people at face value just because they're meek.
Also, very little of the movie actually takes place in Fargo, North Dakota, just the meeting at the start to plan the kidnapping, the rest is in Minnesota.
Correct. This scene is critical for her to realize the ways in which someone can lie right to your face. Even something that is easily proven otherwise.
I think it’s really funny that Steve Buscemi’s character wanted to fight over the price of the Sierra, even when he knew he had that million dollars waiting for him after he left. It’s a great insight into what a short-sighted, shitty person he was. And, in the end, it got him killed..
Especially considering that car was used in multiple murders. It's evidence and the authorities are looking for it. Common sense would say you'd want to get as far away from that car as you can. Just another example of what a bonehead Carl was. You got $40k and another $920k in the suitcase, Carl. Let Gaear have that car lol.
The Coen brothers put that part in there about it being based on a true story, but it really wasn't. Also, Jerry told the kidnappers he was only going to get $80,000 and split it with them, but he knew the whole time he was going to ask for a million. He was going to keep the rest for himself and then just pay them the $40,000, which is why Buscemi was so surprised when he saw how much was in there. And that's why he buried it, so his partner wouldn't know.
The Woodchipper used in the movie is in the Visitors Center off I-94 in Fargo, ND. It has a mannequin leg sticking out of it so you can get your picture taken "feeding" it in
when this film came out, I had a friend from the area around Fargo. He kept insisting the movie was ridiculous because "we DON'T talk like that!" He was quite adamant about it and was insulted. Then about six months later, he went home to Minnesota for a vacation after being away for twenty years. He came home quite abashed and admitted that yeah, they really do talk like that. He just hadn't heard it in a long time. :D
As a life long Minnesotan, I can vouch for the fact that the accents were fairly close to how many people sounded in northern Minnesota 50 years ago and earlier, but today even in Brainerd, Bemidji, or Duluth you don't hear that accent much anymore.
The locally-hired actresses who play the truck stop prostitutes Marge interviews also served as Frances McDormand's voice coaches. Having gone to university in the 1970s with a number of people from this area, I thought the film exaggerated a bit on the vocabulary tics but got the general accent down.
I love the contrast between Marge's family life and Jerry's. Both have loving families and modest middle-class homes, but while Marge is perfectly content with what she has, Jerry is miserable and unsatisfied, always wanting more. Marge and her husband radiate wholesomeness, while Jerry makes your skin crawl. It's the ultimate contrast between someone who appreciates life's blessings and someone who doesn't.
Jerry also had a collosal arsehole for a father-in-law. Many people have gone crazy on account of dealing with shitty relatives for decades. Doesnt justify Jerry but explains a lot.
So true. The difference is also shown at the end where Marge just can't understand why they'd do all that just for a little bit of money and talking about how nice the day was
I do have some sympathy for Jerry as you could tell from every interaction he's ever had with his father in law has just been passive aggressive open insults to him as he loves his daughter but resents her choosing to marry a meek man with limited means and personality. Over the years I think the bullying and belittling built up so much on him mentally that he choose an idiotic course of action instead of talking to his wife and realising that they already have everything they need to be happy and to just ignore him but he had too much pride and pride always goes before a fall
There’s also a “Fargo” TV series. Each season they tell a different story and they’re all “true stories “. Which they aren’t lol. I think they do that to make the viewer more vested in the story. The series is great also I’d highly recommend watching. Also Fargo is in N Dakota
"Kumiko, The Treasure Hunter" is a film about a lonely Japanese girl who watches a VHS of "Fargo", thinks it's a true story, and travels to Minnesota to look for the money Steve Buscemi buried. Amazing performance by Rinko Kikuchi (of "Pacific Rim" fame). Based on an urban legend about a real Japanese girl who traveled to Minnesota in the early 00's.
damn... beat me to it. wanted to blow thier minds with this story, oh well congrats to you. btw how did you leave a comment 8 days ago, are you a time traveler??
@@lilevil2045 I believe the comment 8 days ago is because it is released to patreon members early and they commented then. You just see the comment now but the time stamp is correct.
They certainly are up there, maybe along with P.T. Anderson. And i hope they keep doing it. I heard Ethan is currently taking a break. He had not been involved in the Tragedy of Macbeth either.
Along with Scorsese, they are the most consistent American filmmakers by a large margin when you count the number of films they've done. Only one debatable miss IMO.
@@dx315 Had Clooney and Zeta Jones in it. Called "Infernal Torture" or something. She looked so good in it that I couldn't dislike the movie, heh. I still preferred that one to Ladykillers, but yeah, both of those weren't even mid-tier Coens
Paul Bunyan was a mythical lumberjack character in the western U.S. He was tired and dragged his axe behind him one day and accidentally create the Rio Grande river. So much bigger than life, so they can't even make a crazy statue big enough to do the stories justice. Correction: That was the Grand Canyon with the Colorado River running through it. Even bigger.
Never heard about the Rio Grande River. He supposedly created the St. Lawrence River and Mississippi River, as well as the 10,000 Lakes of Minnesota, the Great Lakes, the Grand Canyon and Mt. Hood.
The Fargo series is set in the same "universe" as this movie, and season 1 actual answers the "what happened to the money" question. It's a great thing to react to after watching this.
i still don't understand how people could think that season 1 is not the best one, in my opinion it's still one of the best seasons of all shows out there...
The blond kidnapper is Swedish actor Peter Stormare. The region of the US, where the film is based is Minnesota, North and South Dakota where many Scandinavian immigrants settled in the 19th and early 20th century. This accounts for the accents (They also settled in places like Michigan, Illinois and Wisconsin).
I've always thought the seemingly throwaway Mike Yamagita scene (and later reveal that he was full of shit) was meant to demonstrate to Marge and to the viewer that, despite her ability to quickly read people and crime scenes, she can easily be fooled when her guard is down. It does seem to briefly shake her confidence.
hmm I've assumed that scene just follows the theme, without it the movie could be seen to be about money and evil it causes but Mike expands the scope to "some people are miserable, make bad life choices and you shouldn't get dragged down with them"
or perhaps that with a bit more positive spin, I think there's a line in the end not included in the reaction that ties it together, something liek "we got it pretty good"?
I once saw a theory (and I wish I remember where) that this was a 'film blanc', with every film noir trope inverted. In that analysis, Mike Yamagita was an inversion of the 'Lady in Red' temptress archetype.
Frances McDormand is a fantastic actress. If you want to see more of her I highly recommend Three Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri! Its another crime drama that also stars Woody Harrelson and Sam Rockwell.
You guys misunderstood the ransom. He didn't change how much he was asking. He lied to the kidnappers and told them it was 80k so he only had to give them 40k. He didn't want them to know he was asking for 1m. That's why he tried to make sure he was the one giving them the money. So he could set the rest aside and just give them the 40k. And then Steve Buscemi was screwing over his partner. He took out the 40k theybwere promissed and stashed the rest for himself.
All the reactors I've seen have missed this detail, and I can't fault them for it. When I first watched this movie more than 2 decades ago, I missed it too. I didn't pay attention to the dollar amounts and assumed it was a straightforward ransom. Knowing that he was trying to cheat the kidnappers too is the explanation for why he was so upset when his father in law insisted on dropping off the money in person. And even though his wife would've died anyway, his inability to stand up to his father in law in that moment is the trigger that got Wade, the parking attendant, and eventually Buscemi killed, and also got Stormare and himself arrested.
If you don't count the multiple murders, the creepy schoolfriend, the kidnapping and the woodchipper scene, this is the most wholesome Coen Brothers movie ever. Great review again guys.
Fargo? Oh yaaaah! 5:06 Funny you'd say that George. People complained that Steve Buscemi talked too much in this movie, and that's the whole reason why the Coen brothers cast him in the Big Lebowski as a character who constantly gets told to shut up. In the original Big Lebowski script there was no Donny.
margie and norm are so adorable, life goals right there. and margie in particular is just an amazing character. this also just made me think of "my cousin vinny" another great movie with great accents and a "best actress" win, like mcdormand here.
The scene with Mike Yanagita was in there to get Margie to second guess her initial interview with Jerry. After she discovers Mike was lying to her, she's starts to realize Jerry was lying too and goes to interview him again, where he essentially cracks.
At the end of the movie is the usual disclaimer about "no one in the movie bears any resemblance to a real person." The thing at the beginning, claiming that it was all real, was part of the comedy.
I'm from northern Minnesota- I've been to Fargo, Brainerd, Minneapolis, etc many many many times - nobody has an accent like this. Yes, there is an accent but this movie is like a cartoon version of it.
You guys HAVE to watch the Fargo series! It's at the top of my list for things I would love to see you watch, along with everything else Cohen Brothers.
The Coens have a slightly trollish sense of humor sometimes, so they may have given multiple explanations about the "true story" lie at the beginning of the movie, but one of the first ones I heard was that they felt audiences would find the twists and turns in the story to be too absurd unless the audience believed it had actually happened. Later, when they made O Brother Where Art Thou?, they talked about how it was a riff on Homer's The Odyssey, and then later confessed they'd never read the whole thing. I'll say this every time you guys do a Coen Brothers movie, but I really hope you guys consider doing some of the non-headline movies. The big ones left are O Brother, No Country, and Raising Arizona, and they're all great. However, their remake of True Grit, The Hudsucker Proxy, Blood Simple (this one is very much in the same vein as Fargo), Miller's Crossing, The Man Who Wasn't There, Burn After Reading, and A Serious Man are also all great and deserve reactions as well (and that's not to slight the few other movies they made I didn't list, just that there are a couple that might not make for great videos). They're truly among the best living filmmakers and I would love to see you do nearly their whole catalog without relying on polls, since people haven't necessarily seen some of these others and they deserve the exposure.
Harve Presnell had a superb Baritone voice and was one of the few people in the musical Paint Your Wagon that could actually sing. He was also in one of the most moving scenes in Saving Private Ryan ( as the general reading out Lincoln's letter)
The accent is common to the north in the US. It's common in North Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin. I don't know any other states, but those 3 are famous for it
By the way, the movie isn’t really based on true events, but it was claimed to be so in order to get people more interested and involved in the story; very smart filmmaking technique on the part of the Coen brothers.
It's not that smart, it's just lying. It doesn't take a genius to know that people will be more invested in something if you tell them a murder mystery was based on a true story.
The accent thing is prevalent in some North Central states with heavy Euro ancestry, they sound very Canadian or visa versa. I think you may enjoy a short series called Mare of Easttown.
I have family & friends from that area of Minnesota/North Dakota, and they had no idea this was a comedy for the rest of us. Their weird accents and mannerisms are so funny, but they seemed 100% normal to them. Sayings like "Ah geez", "Oh ya?", "The heck d'ya mean?" are super normal to them.
Frances McDormand won the Oscar for this role. She's from the US and was raised near Pittsburgh but her adoptive parents were Canadian so the accent probably came naturally to her. She's been married to Joel Coen ever since shortly after the Coen's first film which she starred in. I'll throw in YET ANOTHER recommendation for the series which is great, especially the first season which answers the "what happened to the money" question. It's run for four seasons, each one tells a different story but all of them are connected very loosely. There's often several years between seasons as the show runner doesn't do another one until he's come up with a story to tell.
I love this movie so much. By the way, the Coen brothers invented the true story thing because they thought that they would finally win the well-deserved Academy Award if they made a movie about a "real" case. Whether they won it because of that is of course speculation, but they got it anyway. :) You should definitely check out the TV show as well. It has four seasons, but each season has its own little story, so they're not directly connected. Especially the first season is great and reminds in its style very much of the movie. Also the series has been nominated for a total of 228 awards, having won fifty-one of those nominations, inlcuding some Golden Globe and Emmy Awards.
Oh Simone you little beauty.. what a way to kick off a film reaction. Fargo's a damn fun if bizarrely dark movie. I love the back and forth between Buscemi and Stormare.. brilliant writing.
I'm certain you would greatly enjoy another wonderful film with a superb performance from Frances McDormand, and stellar support from Sam Rockwell and Woody Harrelson; 'Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri'. I would love to see your reaction, you're both great fun and Simone's intros are absolutely legendary, hilarious, and too adorable for words! Thanks so much guys, you're fantastic! 😀
The relationship between Marge and Norm is one of my favorites in cinematic history. Also, Chirrut Imwe and Baze Malbus from Rogue One, and Dr. Logan and Bub from Day of the Dead. So many people rave about Gomez and Morticia, Romeo and Juliet, or Jack and Sally. Marge and Norm are the every person, couple next door. They are the anchor of this movie.
The Coen brothers grew up in a suburb of Minneapolis, but they were Jews in a largely Jewish city surrounded by a sea of Scandinavian Lutherans, so they would have felt like outsiders among these polite yet stoic people with funny accents, and I think that shows in how they portray the characters.
I also loved seeing him in "Magnolia" and "Mystery Men." He always does excellent work, but it was a bit easier to like those characters than this one.
I had to go to Fargo back in December for work - this wasn’t filmed there due to some weather or something, but they got the aesthetic down pretty good. Lots of snow, lots of open fields filled with snow, and lots of very friendly, cheery people.
The scene when William H. Macy tries to escape always cracks me up! The way he tries to weasel his way out, the screams and cries he makes! He's such a loser but you can't help but want to kinda hug and punch him at the same time!
The tv show was/is really really great. The only reason it somewhat flew under the radar was due to it being released at the same time as true detective season 1 which took most of the hype. I feel like the humor and everything would be just for you guys :D
Back in the glory days of suburban malls, there was a novelty store called Spencer's that carried all kinds of movie stuff, but not normal movie stuff. One item was a snow globe of Margie kneeling beside the car in the snow. They also had one with the wood chipper.
I'm sure you've found out already but that "true story" bit is a troll, ja. No idea why the Coens did it, but ja, it didn't really happen. If you don't know it, I highly recommend the tabletop RPG "Fiasco". 3 to 5 players, no GM, do-it-yourself Coen brothers story about people with great ambitions and poor impulse control.
@@CineBingeReact Brief anecdote: I saw _Fargo_ opening weekend with a bunch of friends, and of course we also believed it really happened. But the thing is, one member of our group showed up five minutes late and didn’t see the “true story” text at the beginning. When we all got back to the lobby, he said something like, “the filmmaking style really feels like a docudrama,” and we, in our ignorance, all yelled at him, “that’s because it was real!”
@@CineBingeReact In the behind the scenes feature on the Fargo DVD, Frances McDormand, who is married to Joel Coen, commented on the "true story" aspect. She said it was so typical of Joel and Ethan to do that, basically by making the audience believe this was a true story, it altered their perception of the film. So basically, it was a lie intended to manipulate the audience... but to what they felt would be a more enjoyable experience. Genius.
Another great video!!! This is easily my favourite Coen Brothers movie. I first watched this film with my mom shortly after it came out, and we basically had the same experience you did trying to figure out what the tone of this film is. Frances McDormand (Margie) won an Oscar for this performance, and well deserved as well . . . she is so awesome!. She also happens to be the wife of Joel Coen.
Great reaction! One of my all time favorite movies! Another movie from the same year is Sling Blade, written and directed by, and starring, Billy Bob Thornton. You all should check it out sometime.
The accent's in this are done so well. It's such a great, Northern Midwestern Dakotan, Wisconsin, kinda accent. When I lived in Michigan, there was some of this, I caught, but, ya, there is a difference, not like I can say anything. I'm from Maine, I've been told I have a bit of an Irish/Scottish sounding accent. Lol. Especially if I get frustrated or stressed/angry.
As a few others have mentioned, they also made a TV show that takes place in the same universe and is thematically similar (though with different characters). The first season also explains what happens to the money that was buried in the snow.
"Based on a true story" is so often ignored by viewers of the film. Minnesota had a plague of treasure hunters looking for the money from this film. Fargo is in North Dakota, by the way. It is on the border of Minnesota and the area is Fargo/Moorhead, with Moorhead Minnesota being on the Minnesota side.
I have seen in multiple sources that the card at the beginning saying that it was based on a true story was actually the Coen brothers pulling a practical joke on the audience. It wasn't based on a true story. And my favorite line in te movie was when Buscemi said "You should see the other guy!". And you two just crack me up!
Friend of mine came from that region and I remember when this movie came out he asked us if he actually sounded like that and everybody at the table said "Yaaa". 😁
The Coen Brothers basically did a trilogy on different parts of the US. The Big Lebowski was the LA portion, this was the upper Midwest portion, and Oh Brother, Where Art Thou? was the southern portion.
This was my dad's families favorite thanksgiving movie that we watched every year for 10 years with all cousins and aunts/uncles etc. It was great how many of us just kids watching this as childhood movie quoting it all the time.
As for her reaction when she saw the guy outside her window, she was shocked, her reation is undertandable when you realize she lives in an area that she pretty safe.
Fargo is a city in North Dakota. Home of the North Dakota State University Bison! The great thing about this movie, it really doesn't have anything to do with Fargo.
Now you have to watch Fargo the TV series - all seasons tie into the movie but you have to pay attention to the details. And BTW, the wood chipper from the movie is on display in the Fargo Welcome center!
Back when this film was in theaters, a couple of guys I was training always used to quote lines from it at each other. "Oh ya, you betcha" and "smoke a fucking peace pipe!" etc. but I had little desire to see it even though I loved The Big Lebowski. The idea of watching some melodrama in the frozen midwest didn't appeal to me. But all that quoting eventually wore me down and I saw it and now it's one of my favorites.
LOL The film's called "Fargo" which is the name of the capitol city of North Dakota, though the actual story takes place in Minnesota. The two states do share a border.
I've been to Brainerd, MN, where Marge is from, and the accents in the film are absolutely dead on. In an interview about this film, Frances McDormand talked about the backstory work she and the actor who played Norm did. They decided both had been on the police force, but realized she was better at the job, so he opted to concentrate on his painting - and the stamp competition - to be a stay-at-home Dad. Very modern for the 80s.
This is a morality tale illustrating the value of commonplace, ordinary, everyday love when compared to the pettiness, emptiness & pointlessness of the pursuit of money. A superb film in all aspects.
I was over there after the movie came out still on dvd, the new thing, was North Dakota, very close to the Canadian border, visiting a friends family, i told them you guys sound like the guys in the movie, they said no, they said same as you, but i saw them do every one of those, yaaaaa, no joke i'm from Liverpool, England, are accent is one of a kind, trust me, they were the same.
Great reaction you two! I don't know if you have time to watch others doing reaction videos now, but I would highly recommend Cassie (Popcorn in Bed) reacting to Fargo. Her response to the accents is simply hilarious as they hit very close to home for her. Plus she had a small technical glitch that happened at a really emotional point in the movie that was incredibly funny.
The scene with Marge and her old friend from High school seems out of place and random but it's the conversation and the revelation later that he was lying that leads her to revisit the dealership, to not take people at face value just because they're meek.
Also, very little of the movie actually takes place in Fargo, North Dakota, just the meeting at the start to plan the kidnapping, the rest is in Minnesota.
@@sparky6086 Yeah, "Brainerd" sounds like sequel to "Bad Taste". "Bad Taste 2: Brainerd" :P
The best liars are......we'll never know.
@@Rincenso I see what you did there :)
Correct. This scene is critical for her to realize the ways in which someone can lie right to your face. Even something that is easily proven otherwise.
I think it’s really funny that Steve Buscemi’s character wanted to fight over the price of the Sierra, even when he knew he had that million dollars waiting for him after he left. It’s a great insight into what a short-sighted, shitty person he was. And, in the end, it got him killed..
He also fought over the $4 parking price. Wade also suggested low balling the kidnappers with a half million dollar offer.
Cheapskates.
“There’s more to life than a little money, ya know.”
Always reminded me of his role as Mr. Pink in Reservoir Dogs not wanting to tip the waitress out of principle lol.
Especially considering that car was used in multiple murders. It's evidence and the authorities are looking for it. Common sense would say you'd want to get as far away from that car as you can. Just another example of what a bonehead Carl was.
You got $40k and another $920k in the suitcase, Carl. Let Gaear have that car lol.
@@nateman10 Good theory, except that Mr. Pink was the smart one. Here he's a moron.
The Coen brothers put that part in there about it being based on a true story, but it really wasn't. Also, Jerry told the kidnappers he was only going to get $80,000 and split it with them, but he knew the whole time he was going to ask for a million. He was going to keep the rest for himself and then just pay them the $40,000, which is why Buscemi was so surprised when he saw how much was in there. And that's why he buried it, so his partner wouldn't know.
"Poor Steve Buscemi."
He read the script; he knew what he was getting himself into.
Ya, a woodchipper. Oh ya.
@@zzz7zzz9 YAAAA!
Get himself into... i saw what you did there!
The Woodchipper used in the movie is in the Visitors Center off I-94 in Fargo, ND. It has a mannequin leg sticking out of it so you can get your picture taken "feeding" it in
morbid
On seeing this film originally, we all laughed at the wood chipper scene, meaning we appreciated the humor.
when this film came out, I had a friend from the area around Fargo. He kept insisting the movie was ridiculous because "we DON'T talk like that!" He was quite adamant about it and was insulted. Then about six months later, he went home to Minnesota for a vacation after being away for twenty years. He came home quite abashed and admitted that yeah, they really do talk like that. He just hadn't heard it in a long time. :D
As a life long Minnesotan, I can vouch for the fact that the accents were fairly close to how many people sounded in northern Minnesota 50 years ago and earlier, but today even in Brainerd, Bemidji, or Duluth you don't hear that accent much anymore.
@@lastguyminn2324 Yeah, I hear a lot of people down by the cities say that they don’t talk like that. It’s more up north.
The locally-hired actresses who play the truck stop prostitutes Marge interviews also served as Frances McDormand's voice coaches. Having gone to university in the 1970s with a number of people from this area, I thought the film exaggerated a bit on the vocabulary tics but got the general accent down.
That's so funny ha ha ha
That's hilarious!!!
I love the contrast between Marge's family life and Jerry's. Both have loving families and modest middle-class homes, but while Marge is perfectly content with what she has, Jerry is miserable and unsatisfied, always wanting more. Marge and her husband radiate wholesomeness, while Jerry makes your skin crawl. It's the ultimate contrast between someone who appreciates life's blessings and someone who doesn't.
Very astute. Absolutely true.
Well Said. .... PEACE to ALL.
Jerry also had a collosal arsehole for a father-in-law. Many people have gone crazy on account of dealing with shitty relatives for decades. Doesnt justify Jerry but explains a lot.
So true. The difference is also shown at the end where Marge just can't understand why they'd do all that just for a little bit of money and talking about how nice the day was
I do have some sympathy for Jerry as you could tell from every interaction he's ever had with his father in law has just been passive aggressive open insults to him as he loves his daughter but resents her choosing to marry a meek man with limited means and personality. Over the years I think the bullying and belittling built up so much on him mentally that he choose an idiotic course of action instead of talking to his wife and realising that they already have everything they need to be happy and to just ignore him but he had too much pride and pride always goes before a fall
Simone: Oh my god this is so sad
George: This is the funniest thing I have seen in my entire life
A great reaction! My favorite part is, after single-handedly capturing the monster, she gives him a stern lecture in the car lol!
And after she gives him a talking to, he actually looks at her! With everyone else he just stares off into the distance. She got through.
@@MisterHPlays True, it's the only time he gives anything resembling a warm look to anyone.
In that moment, he was probably thinking “Ja.”
There’s also a “Fargo” TV series. Each season they tell a different story and they’re all “true stories “. Which they aren’t lol.
I think they do that to make the viewer more vested in the story.
The series is great also I’d highly recommend watching.
Also Fargo is in N Dakota
And the first season has Bilbo in it.
Fargo series (especially the first season) is damn amazing and well worth a watch.
You guys would love it
@@technopirate304 They’re all good.
And one of the seasons has the ice scraper...
It’s been said by many. William H Macy could effortlessly play Ned Flanders in a live action Simpsons
He certainly couldarooney
Ya darn tootin'!
@@inspectortanzi "tootin" "
"Kumiko, The Treasure Hunter" is a film about a lonely Japanese girl who watches a VHS of "Fargo", thinks it's a true story, and travels to Minnesota to look for the money Steve Buscemi buried. Amazing performance by Rinko Kikuchi (of "Pacific Rim" fame). Based on an urban legend about a real Japanese girl who traveled to Minnesota in the early 00's.
It’s a great film to watch after Fargo and also very sad
damn... beat me to it. wanted to blow thier minds with this story, oh well congrats to you. btw how did you leave a comment 8 days ago, are you a time traveler??
i was just gonna say.
@@lilevil2045 I believe the comment 8 days ago is because it is released to patreon members early and they commented then. You just see the comment now but the time stamp is correct.
Well, I didn't know about this movie so, Thanks. I'll look it up. 👍🍿
This is the movie that convinced me that the Coens were the best filmmakers in America. 27 years later, my opinion hasn't changed.
They certainly are up there, maybe along with P.T. Anderson. And i hope they keep doing it. I heard Ethan is currently taking a break. He had not been involved in the Tragedy of Macbeth either.
@@silent-trouble Yeah, that was troubling. Hope it wasn't a health thing.
Along with Scorsese, they are the most consistent American filmmakers by a large margin when you count the number of films they've done. Only one debatable miss IMO.
@@FrancoisDressler Ladykillers? (the miss?)
@@dx315 Had Clooney and Zeta Jones in it. Called "Infernal Torture" or something. She looked so good in it that I couldn't dislike the movie, heh. I still preferred that one to Ladykillers, but yeah, both of those weren't even mid-tier Coens
Paul Bunyan was a mythical lumberjack character in the western U.S. He was tired and dragged his axe behind him one day and accidentally create the Rio Grande river. So much bigger than life, so they can't even make a crazy statue big enough to do the stories justice.
Correction: That was the Grand Canyon with the Colorado River running through it. Even bigger.
Never heard about the Rio Grande River. He supposedly created the St. Lawrence River and Mississippi River, as well as the 10,000 Lakes of Minnesota, the Great Lakes, the Grand Canyon and Mt. Hood.
The Fargo series is set in the same "universe" as this movie, and season 1 actual answers the "what happened to the money" question. It's a great thing to react to after watching this.
I really liked the season with Martin Freeman and Colin Hanks
I second the recommendation. That series was great (if you can handle that "universe")!
One of the best shows ever made - and second season is even better imo. Third still great.
Oh yes. The Fargo series is superb.
i still don't understand how people could think that season 1 is not the best one, in my opinion it's still one of the best seasons of all shows out there...
The blond kidnapper is Swedish actor Peter Stormare. The region of the US, where the film is based is Minnesota, North and South Dakota where many Scandinavian immigrants settled in the 19th and early 20th century. This accounts for the accents (They also settled in places like Michigan, Illinois and Wisconsin).
I've always thought the seemingly throwaway Mike Yamagita scene (and later reveal that he was full of shit) was meant to demonstrate to Marge and to the viewer that, despite her ability to quickly read people and crime scenes, she can easily be fooled when her guard is down. It does seem to briefly shake her confidence.
hmm I've assumed that scene just follows the theme, without it the movie could be seen to be about money and evil it causes but Mike expands the scope to "some people are miserable, make bad life choices and you shouldn't get dragged down with them"
or perhaps that with a bit more positive spin, I think there's a line in the end not included in the reaction that ties it together, something liek "we got it pretty good"?
That is really interesting. Hadn't thought of it that way. Thanks I'll give a another look.
I once saw a theory (and I wish I remember where) that this was a 'film blanc', with every film noir trope inverted. In that analysis, Mike Yamagita was an inversion of the 'Lady in Red' temptress archetype.
@@mjs752002 Sounds like the Brothers. They love to twist things.
Frances McDormand is a fantastic actress. If you want to see more of her I highly recommend Three Billboards Outside Ebbing Missouri! Its another crime drama that also stars Woody Harrelson and Sam Rockwell.
I was just recommending in bruges because it reminds me of thus film a bit, but that's another fantastic Martin McDonagh film.
She was also the mom in "Almost Famous".
Thanks for the suggestion, I think I'll watch this afternoon. ... PEACE.
You guys misunderstood the ransom. He didn't change how much he was asking. He lied to the kidnappers and told them it was 80k so he only had to give them 40k. He didn't want them to know he was asking for 1m. That's why he tried to make sure he was the one giving them the money. So he could set the rest aside and just give them the 40k.
And then Steve Buscemi was screwing over his partner. He took out the 40k theybwere promissed and stashed the rest for himself.
All the reactors I've seen have missed this detail, and I can't fault them for it. When I first watched this movie more than 2 decades ago, I missed it too. I didn't pay attention to the dollar amounts and assumed it was a straightforward ransom. Knowing that he was trying to cheat the kidnappers too is the explanation for why he was so upset when his father in law insisted on dropping off the money in person. And even though his wife would've died anyway, his inability to stand up to his father in law in that moment is the trigger that got Wade, the parking attendant, and eventually Buscemi killed, and also got Stormare and himself arrested.
No honor amongst thieves.
Yes, why is this so complicated for people?
Kidnappers might get greedy and blackmail him for a bigger cut.
Not that hard to work out.
If you don't count the multiple murders, the creepy schoolfriend, the kidnapping and the woodchipper scene, this is the most wholesome Coen Brothers movie ever. Great review again guys.
3:40 "meek scumbag" is a perfect description.
Ok, I have absolutely loved Simone’s openings lately!
Agreed. I watch a few different reaction channels and I usually skip the intros but not on this channel!
Fargo? Oh yaaaah!
5:06 Funny you'd say that George. People complained that Steve Buscemi talked too much in this movie, and that's the whole reason why the Coen brothers cast him in the Big Lebowski as a character who constantly gets told to shut up. In the original Big Lebowski script there was no Donny.
Who doesn't want to listen to Steve Buscemi talk?
margie and norm are so adorable, life goals right there. and margie in particular is just an amazing character. this also just made me think of "my cousin vinny" another great movie with great accents and a "best actress" win, like mcdormand here.
Same. Such a beautiful contrast between their selfless, supportive decency and the rest of the characters
The scene with Mike Yanagita was in there to get Margie to second guess her initial interview with Jerry. After she discovers Mike was lying to her, she's starts to realize Jerry was lying too and goes to interview him again, where he essentially cracks.
At the end of the movie is the usual disclaimer about "no one in the movie bears any resemblance to a real person." The thing at the beginning, claiming that it was all real, was part of the comedy.
I'm from northern Minnesota- I've been to Fargo, Brainerd, Minneapolis, etc many many many times - nobody has an accent like this. Yes, there is an accent but this movie is like a cartoon version of it.
Yeah but the Yoopers more than make up the difference.
You guys HAVE to watch the Fargo series! It's at the top of my list for things I would love to see you watch, along with everything else Cohen Brothers.
I concur, best series outside of Better Call Saul !
Definitely one of the best shows ever made.
Simone, don't you change ANYTHING about your reactions; your reactions are the only reason why I come here.
Discussing the poster: "There's 'Fargo' in 'pink'." Yes to match the pink blood also in the poster
More Coen Brothers!
O Brother Where Art Thou, Raising Arizona and Burn After Reading are all really fun and worth a watch too.
The scene ending with “That’s it. End of story.” is just brilliantly hysterical.
After watching this movie, I've been saying "End of story" at the end of convoluted, pointless stories for the last 25 years.
The Coens have a slightly trollish sense of humor sometimes, so they may have given multiple explanations about the "true story" lie at the beginning of the movie, but one of the first ones I heard was that they felt audiences would find the twists and turns in the story to be too absurd unless the audience believed it had actually happened. Later, when they made O Brother Where Art Thou?, they talked about how it was a riff on Homer's The Odyssey, and then later confessed they'd never read the whole thing.
I'll say this every time you guys do a Coen Brothers movie, but I really hope you guys consider doing some of the non-headline movies. The big ones left are O Brother, No Country, and Raising Arizona, and they're all great. However, their remake of True Grit, The Hudsucker Proxy, Blood Simple (this one is very much in the same vein as Fargo), Miller's Crossing, The Man Who Wasn't There, Burn After Reading, and A Serious Man are also all great and deserve reactions as well (and that's not to slight the few other movies they made I didn't list, just that there are a couple that might not make for great videos). They're truly among the best living filmmakers and I would love to see you do nearly their whole catalog without relying on polls, since people haven't necessarily seen some of these others and they deserve the exposure.
Thanks Tyler! Yes, we really want to get through all o the Coen Bros filmography. We've loved what we've watched so far!!
@@CineBingeReact I very much look forward to you guys watching more!
I’d add ‘Inside Llewyn Davis’ as well.
@@CineBingeReact Big Lebowski , "shut up Donny" is joke about this move , when Buscemi wont stop talking .
@@maladjustedmoon5200 Was going toask why that one was omitted from the list. It's one of my favourites and was my introduction to the Coen brothers.
It is so funny as you start to realize she's the only competent cop in the department.
Fargo (North Dakota) was where Jerry met the kidnappers in the opening scene. The rest of the movie took place in Minnesota.
Harve Presnell had a superb Baritone voice and was one of the few people in the musical Paint Your Wagon that could actually sing.
He was also in one of the most moving scenes in Saving Private Ryan ( as the general reading out Lincoln's letter)
The accent is common to the north in the US. It's common in North Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin. I don't know any other states, but those 3 are famous for it
The 3 states with heavy Scandinavian ancestry in the northern parts.
Everyone is a delight in this. As usual with the Coens the script is flawless.
And the cinematography is breathtaking.
pancakes house
Simone's intro and the banter between her a George was top notch.
Simone, you made us all lol with your intro. Another great dark comedy I'd like you two to react to is Tucker and Dale vs Evil.
I was going to say the same thing.
By the way, the movie isn’t really based on true events, but it was claimed to be so in order to get people more interested and involved in the story; very smart filmmaking technique on the part of the Coen brothers.
It's not that smart, it's just lying. It doesn't take a genius to know that people will be more invested in something if you tell them a murder mystery was based on a true story.
?
One Christmas my kids gave me a snow globe of the wood chipper scene. Still have it.
It’s been told that Fargo is like harsh reality enters a cartoon world.
If you do go to Fargo ND, you can see the actual wood chipper at the Fargo-Moorhead visitor center. They have it on display!
The accent thing is prevalent in some North Central states with heavy Euro ancestry, they sound very Canadian or visa versa. I think you may enjoy a short series called Mare of Easttown.
U do know all American states cept maybe Hawaii has euro ancestry, right?
@@TheChromanoise Yeah. That was a bit vague.
I understand that Minnesota can have a very thick Swedish accent. Being Swedish myself, I kind of enjoy it.
I have family & friends from that area of Minnesota/North Dakota, and they had no idea this was a comedy for the rest of us. Their weird accents and mannerisms are so funny, but they seemed 100% normal to them. Sayings like "Ah geez", "Oh ya?", "The heck d'ya mean?" are super normal to them.
Remove all accent, keep the same phrases, you're here in Missouri, and not Missour-ah.
Frances McDormand won the Oscar for this role. She's from the US and was raised near Pittsburgh but her adoptive parents were Canadian so the accent probably came naturally to her. She's been married to Joel Coen ever since shortly after the Coen's first film which she starred in. I'll throw in YET ANOTHER recommendation for the series which is great, especially the first season which answers the "what happened to the money" question. It's run for four seasons, each one tells a different story but all of them are connected very loosely. There's often several years between seasons as the show runner doesn't do another one until he's come up with a story to tell.
Lol Simone doing the Fargo accent is absolutely priceless!!
I love this movie so much.
By the way, the Coen brothers invented the true story thing because they thought that they would finally win the well-deserved Academy Award if they made a movie about a "real" case. Whether they won it because of that is of course speculation, but they got it anyway. :)
You should definitely check out the TV show as well. It has four seasons, but each season has its own little story, so they're not directly connected. Especially the first season is great and reminds in its style very much of the movie. Also the series has been nominated for a total of 228 awards, having won fifty-one of those nominations, inlcuding some Golden Globe and Emmy Awards.
Oh Simone you little beauty.. what a way to kick off a film reaction. Fargo's a damn fun if bizarrely dark movie. I love the back and forth between Buscemi and Stormare.. brilliant writing.
I'm certain you would greatly enjoy another wonderful film with a superb performance from Frances McDormand, and stellar support from Sam Rockwell and Woody Harrelson; 'Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri'. I would love to see your reaction, you're both great fun and Simone's intros are absolutely legendary, hilarious, and too adorable for words! Thanks so much guys, you're fantastic! 😀
You guys are becoming sillier and sillier in you reactions. Keep it up, it is so refreshing!
The relationship between Marge and Norm is one of my favorites in cinematic history. Also, Chirrut Imwe and Baze Malbus from Rogue One, and Dr. Logan and Bub from Day of the Dead. So many people rave about Gomez and Morticia, Romeo and Juliet, or Jack and Sally. Marge and Norm are the every person, couple next door. They are the anchor of this movie.
i genuinely think Simone was as shocked to hear her brains cold open as much as we were
The Coen brothers grew up in a suburb of Minneapolis, but they were Jews in a largely Jewish city surrounded by a sea of Scandinavian Lutherans, so they would have felt like outsiders among these polite yet stoic people with funny accents, and I think that shows in how they portray the characters.
I love the two yeah’s Jerry says at the table when they mention they aren’t horse trading
The movie actually takes place in Brainerd, Minnesota. Just the opening scene at the bard where the deal takes place is in Fargo, North Dakota.
🤔How could you not automatically love Simone & George!? Great as usual. Keep it up guys!!
One of the best "Dark Comedies"
and most of my family in Minnesota 100% talks like that with a thick accent
I absolutely love William Macy in this. A truly magnificent performance
I also loved seeing him in "Magnolia" and "Mystery Men." He always does excellent work, but it was a bit easier to like those characters than this one.
@@jean-paulaudette9246 not to mention "Pleasantville"!
I had to go to Fargo back in December for work - this wasn’t filmed there due to some weather or something, but they got the aesthetic down pretty good. Lots of snow, lots of open fields filled with snow, and lots of very friendly, cheery people.
The first two seasons of the TV series is great! Highly recommend!
The VHS tape Christmas Gift for this movie included a Snow Globe of the Woodchipper Scene.
The Fargo series is also amazing. The humour and the killer in that are incredible.
The scene when William H. Macy tries to escape always cracks me up! The way he tries to weasel his way out, the screams and cries he makes! He's such a loser but you can't help but want to kinda hug and punch him at the same time!
I love how dry the humour is in this. So good.
The tv show was/is really really great. The only reason it somewhat flew under the radar was due to it being released at the same time as true detective season 1 which took most of the hype. I feel like the humor and everything would be just for you guys :D
Back in the glory days of suburban malls, there was a novelty store called Spencer's that carried all kinds of movie stuff, but not normal movie stuff. One item was a snow globe of Margie kneeling beside the car in the snow. They also had one with the wood chipper.
I'm sure you've found out already but that "true story" bit is a troll, ja. No idea why the Coens did it, but ja, it didn't really happen.
If you don't know it, I highly recommend the tabletop RPG "Fiasco". 3 to 5 players, no GM, do-it-yourself Coen brothers story about people with great ambitions and poor impulse control.
haha yah! my goodness. I'm happy to know that it didn't actually happen but hate that I was duped lol
@@CineBingeReact Brief anecdote: I saw _Fargo_ opening weekend with a bunch of friends, and of course we also believed it really happened. But the thing is, one member of our group showed up five minutes late and didn’t see the “true story” text at the beginning. When we all got back to the lobby, he said something like, “the filmmaking style really feels like a docudrama,” and we, in our ignorance, all yelled at him, “that’s because it was real!”
@@CineBingeReact In the behind the scenes feature on the Fargo DVD, Frances McDormand, who is married to Joel Coen, commented on the "true story" aspect. She said it was so typical of Joel and Ethan to do that, basically by making the audience believe this was a true story, it altered their perception of the film. So basically, it was a lie intended to manipulate the audience... but to what they felt would be a more enjoyable experience. Genius.
Another great video!!! This is easily my favourite Coen Brothers movie. I first watched this film with my mom shortly after it came out, and we basically had the same experience you did trying to figure out what the tone of this film is. Frances McDormand (Margie) won an Oscar for this performance, and well deserved as well . . . she is so awesome!. She also happens to be the wife of Joel Coen.
I'm so impressed with the speed at which you put these reactions out. Thanks so much
Great reaction! One of my all time favorite movies! Another movie from the same year is Sling Blade, written and directed by, and starring, Billy Bob Thornton. You all should check it out sometime.
I've watched old reactions i love how comfortable you both have gotten with us.
The 'other' wood chipper George might be referring to is in Tucker & Dale vs. Evil (a must for you both if you love Alan Tudyk)
The accent's in this are done so well. It's such a great, Northern Midwestern Dakotan, Wisconsin, kinda accent. When I lived in Michigan, there was some of this, I caught, but, ya, there is a difference, not like I can say anything. I'm from Maine, I've been told I have a bit of an Irish/Scottish sounding accent. Lol. Especially if I get frustrated or stressed/angry.
As a few others have mentioned, they also made a TV show that takes place in the same universe and is thematically similar (though with different characters). The first season also explains what happens to the money that was buried in the snow.
Fargo is in North Dakota. Basically South Canada
"Based on a true story" is so often ignored by viewers of the film. Minnesota had a plague of treasure hunters looking for the money from this film. Fargo is in North Dakota, by the way. It is on the border of Minnesota and the area is Fargo/Moorhead, with Moorhead Minnesota being on the Minnesota side.
You guys faces when you saw the wood chipper was priceless... also the husband of the female cop was the guy who trained Morgan in walking dead.
I have seen in multiple sources that the card at the beginning saying that it was based on a true story was actually the Coen brothers pulling a practical joke on the audience. It wasn't based on a true story. And my favorite line in te movie was when Buscemi said "You should see the other guy!". And you two just crack me up!
I grew up an hour south of Fargo ND in Breckenridge MN then at 10 moved to Brainerd MN, love this movie
Friend of mine came from that region and I remember when this movie came out he asked us if he actually sounded like that and everybody at the table said "Yaaa". 😁
Interesting fact too -- the credits show Prince (a Minnesota native) as the dead body in the field.
The Coen Brothers basically did a trilogy on different parts of the US. The Big Lebowski was the LA portion, this was the upper Midwest portion, and Oh Brother, Where Art Thou? was the southern portion.
This was my dad's families favorite thanksgiving movie that we watched every year for 10 years with all cousins and aunts/uncles etc. It was great how many of us just kids watching this as childhood movie quoting it all the time.
Frances is a great actress. She has been nominated for an Oscar 7 times, winning 3 times.
As for her reaction when she saw the guy outside her window, she was shocked, her reation is undertandable when you realize she lives in an area that she pretty safe.
0:01 oh yeah? 😎
Fargo is a city in North Dakota. Home of the North Dakota State University Bison!
The great thing about this movie, it really doesn't have anything to do with Fargo.
Now you have to watch Fargo the TV series - all seasons tie into the movie but you have to pay attention to the details. And BTW, the wood chipper from the movie is on display in the Fargo Welcome center!
Back when this film was in theaters, a couple of guys I was training always used to quote lines from it at each other. "Oh ya, you betcha" and "smoke a fucking peace pipe!" etc. but I had little desire to see it even though I loved The Big Lebowski. The idea of watching some melodrama in the frozen midwest didn't appeal to me. But all that quoting eventually wore me down and I saw it and now it's one of my favorites.
LOL The film's called "Fargo" which is the name of the capitol city of North Dakota, though the actual story takes place in Minnesota. The two states do share a border.
I've been to Brainerd, MN, where Marge is from, and the accents in the film are absolutely dead on. In an interview about this film, Frances McDormand talked about the backstory work she and the actor who played Norm did. They decided both had been on the police force, but realized she was better at the job, so he opted to concentrate on his painting - and the stamp competition - to be a stay-at-home Dad. Very modern for the 80s.
This is a morality tale illustrating the value of commonplace, ordinary, everyday love when compared to the pettiness, emptiness & pointlessness of the pursuit of money. A superb film in all aspects.
Fargo, North Dakota is directly below Saskatchewan/Manitoba.
Simone's RP English accent is perfect. More please!
A Coen Brothers deep cut is "Burn After Reading". It's got a similar tone as Fargo, and is just as batshit crazy. Plus, is also has Francis McDormand.
I was over there after the movie came out still on dvd, the new thing, was North Dakota, very close to the Canadian border, visiting a friends family, i told them you guys sound like the guys in the movie, they said no, they said same as you, but i saw them do every one of those, yaaaaa, no joke i'm from Liverpool, England, are accent is one of a kind, trust me, they were the same.
The Fargo mini-series is really good too! Each season is over in 10 episodes and has a killer cast. They are through 4 seasons now.
Great reaction you two! I don't know if you have time to watch others doing reaction videos now, but I would highly recommend Cassie (Popcorn in Bed) reacting to Fargo. Her response to the accents is simply hilarious as they hit very close to home for her. Plus she had a small technical glitch that happened at a really emotional point in the movie that was incredibly funny.