Tag Archives: Justified

‘Justified’ has a strange one with ‘Guy Walks Into a Bar’

Last night’s episode of “Justified” was promoted as a showdown between our favorite deputy U.S. marshal Raylan Givens (Timothy Olyphant) and Quarles (Neal McDonough), the increasingly psychotic mobster who’s come to Kentucky from Detroit to corner the drug trade.

But while the barroom stand-off between Givens and Quarles was good, the episode’s high-dive into Quarles’ psyche was its strength.

And, not surprisingly, it turns out that the inside of Quarles’ head is not that pleasant a place to visit.

As the FX series works its way toward the season’s climax — three episodes remain — series honcho Graham Yost continues to move his players around the chessboard, pitting them against each other in small clashes and confrontations, building toward what will no doubt be a fiery finale.

Quarles — outwardly smooth but inwardly showing signs of a disastrous mental breakdown — has a pretty seamy hidden side. We’ve already caught glimpses of his hobby — he brutalized a guy tied to a bed a few episodes ago — and last night a young friend of Quarles’ victim came calling, gun in hand.

Quarles, pressing his own forehead against the barrel of the young man’s gun, recounts his own horrific upbringing, sexually servicing the friends of his heroin addict father.

By the end of the speech, McDonough probably clinched an Emmy nomination, horrified viewers and added a layer of complication and sympathy to his character.

The sympathy was mostly gone by the episode’s final scene, however, as we see Quarles advancing on the young man, now tied up and helpless in a bathroom.

Other great moments:

Dickie Bennett saying “Amen” after everything Raylan or the judge said in court.

Eva’s hookers helping Boyd in his efforts to influence the election for Harlan County sheriff. With one gesture and one secret ingredient — pineapple juice — one young prostitute makes a table full of rednecks blush. We really need to see more Harlan County politics.

Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins). Sure, you could say that Boyd, Raylan’s frenemy, is the highlight of most episodes. But it’s fascinating how the writers have made Boyd a more effective and more compelling character than Raylan lately. Whether it’s buying votes with sexual favors from Eva’s girls or getting election results thrown out through political chicanery, Boyd is living large.

Raylan, who has always been alternately cool and hot-tempered, remains the focus of the show. But more often than not lately he seems kind of adrift. That was demonstrated last night when he couldn’t think of anything to say in court to help keep Dickie locked up.

I’m guessing that something will happen next week that will re-focus Raylan on the juggling act he is faced with: Getting rid of an increasingly out-of-control Quarles while keeping an eye on Boyd and Limehouse (Mykelti Williamson), the homegrown crime boss.

 

 

‘Justified’ begins gathering ‘Loose Ends’

If we learned nothing else from “Justified” tonight, it was: Kentucky women are badass.

“Loose Ends,” tonight’s episode of the third season of “Justified” on FX, was in some ways another “moving pieces into place” episode. U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens and Detroit-mobster-comes-to-Harlan-County Quarles look to be headed for a major conflict. The preview for next week had the two of them facing off.

But tonight Quarles was off stage to a great extent and Raylan was doing what he does best: Dealing with Kentucky lowlifes.

Tonight that meant Tanner, the hood who previously ran an illegal medical clinic, trying to shake down a bomb maker. Tanner isn’t — wasn’t — very smart, but how smart do you have to be to know you shouldn’t threaten a bomb maker?

The meat of the episode was left for Boyd Crowder and his moll, Ava, who acted to protect their own interests tonight.

Boyd gave a bravura VFW hall campaign speech for his preferred candidate for Harlan County sheriff in an effort to unseat Quarles’ bought-and-paid-for lawman.

And Ava let her shotgun do the talking once again as she blew away a lowlife (another one) who formerly pimped out some local girls, set them up as bank robbers and then began killing them to eliminate witnesses.

It was one of the highlights of this very strong season so far when Ava (Joelle Carter) suggested to Boyd that she take over as madam. Watching Walton Goggins’ Boyd try to cover his smile was priceless.

 

‘Justified’ shows us ‘The Man Behind the Curtain’

Tonight’s “Justified” episode on FX, “The Man Behind the Curtain,” felt like an intermediate episode, as if the show’s creators were setting the stage for the final episodes of this season.

And that’s okay, because few shows can be this entertaining in setting up a season climax.

The players in this Kentucky-set cops-and-drug-dealers series spent most of the episode marshaling their forces. Pun intended.

As U.S. Deputy Marshal Raylan Givens circled around the edges of out-of-town mobster Quarles’ new world, Quarles began leaning on people: He threatened the just-visiting son of his old patron back in Detroit. He brought a briefcase full of money to the office of the sheriff in the guise of a “campaign contribution.” Before the end of the episode, he tracked Gary, the hapless doofus who used to be married to Raylan’s ex, Winona, to his new stomping grounds.

I’m not feeling good about Gary’s future. And that’s not just based on the preview for next week’s episode, which looks like Quarles is angling to frame Raylan for something dire.

Tonight’s episode featured some good action from Boyd Crowder, Raylan’s frenemy. Boyd rejected an overture from Quarles in a previous episode and now Quarles has the sheriff lean on Boyd. Before things were over tonight, Boyd began his own career as a political kingmaker.

Even while Raylan seemed — in slightly haphazard fashion — to be getting on with his life and career, events and his own habits seemed to be conspiring against him. Fellow marshal Tim was more than a little hostile to Raylan tonight and Raylan — in a plot point drawn from Elmore Leonard’s recent book, “Raylan” — is living above a noisy bar and working part-time as a bouncer.

And — Bing! — how much fun was it to see Stephen Tobolowsky as an FBI agent who disapproves of Raylan’s tactics? The actor, best known for playing Ned Ryerson in “Groundhog Day,” plays this role very differently than his recurring part in “Glee.”

‘Justified’ packs a punch with ‘When the Guns Come Out’

“I got no interest in shit-kicker on shit-kicker crime.” — Deputy U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens to lifelong friend/antagonist Boyd Crowder.

The third season of “Justified,” the FX series about good guys and bad guys in the hills of Kentucky, just gets better and better.

In tonight’s episode, “When the Guns Come Out,” Raylan Givens (Timothy Olyphant) finds himself dealing with the fallout from a burgeoning drug war in rural Harlan County.

As Boyd (the wonderful Walton Goggins) muscles in on the Oxycontin trade, gunmen working for Detroit mobster Quarles (Neal McDonough) start killing people.

Poor Raylan is befuddled by the sudden disappearance of Winona (Natalie Zea), his pregnant ex-wife, but he’s sufficiently on his game to not only banter with Boyd but pistol-whip a sleazy pimp whose hookers are victims/witnesses to the murders.

Off in the wings, homegrown mobster Limehouse (Mykelti Williamson) begins to maneuver his response to the growing threat of Quarles.

Tonight’s episode had a perfect mix of Raylan/Winona soap opera, Raylan/Boyd dramatic/comedic tension and violence so abrupt it’s almost funny.

There were great moments for Raylan’s boss, crusty marshal Art (Nick Searcy) and an appearance by Ava (Joelle Carter). And a return appearance by Stephen Root as a Harlan County judge.

It surprises me somewhat that “Justified” creator and producer Graham Yost makes this all look so effortless. But the show is better with every episode.

‘Justified’ takes a page from Leonard’s book

A while back I reviewed Elmore Leonard’s latest book, “Raylan,” which featured Leonard’s U.S. marshal character Raylan Givens, played in the FX series “Justified” by Timothy Olyphant.

In “Raylan,” the marshal investigates and runs afoul of a nurse and criminal crew who are stealing kidneys in a manner familiar to students of urban legends: They tranquilize people, deposit them in motel bathtubs and remove their kidneys.

Tonight’s episode of “Justified,” “Thick as Mud,” explores that same story line. In this case, the victim is Dewey, one of Harlan’s least intelligent lowlifes. As the episode opens, Dewey wakes up in a motel bathtub with a couple of incisions and a timeline until his body starts shutting down.

Dewey (Damon Herriman) staggers through much of the episode looking for cash in order to buy back his kidneys. He leaves a trail of knocked-over stores and rifled cash registers. And, of course, Raylan is on the case.

It all comes down to a face-off between Raylan and the kidney thieves.

Also tonight, Raylan’s frenemy, Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins) finally meets up with Quarles (Neal McDonough), the Detroit mobster who has come to Kentucky with plans to cut himself into the crime business.

Boyd, obviously sensing a threat, tells Quarles he’s not impressed with the smooth criminal’s style, evening going so far as to call him a carpetbagger.

The episode sets the stage for conflicts among Raylan, Boyd and Quarles. Not to mention Limehouse (Mykelti Williamson), who so far this season seems confined to showing up at the end of the episode and dispensing equal parts charm and menace.

I have to say I enjoyed the way “Justified” treated the kidney-snatching plotline more than the way Leonard — who got a story credit for tonight’s episode — handled it in his recent book.

“Justified” continues to be one of the best slice-of-criminal-life dramas on TV. The show, like its characters, make it all look so easy.

Elmore Leonard’s ‘Raylan’ a new take on the ‘Justified’ cop

If you’ve been watching and enjoying “Justified” the past couple of years, you probably know that the FX series about the U.S. marshal dealing with hillbillies, meth dealers and killers in the hills of Kentucky is taken from the work of Elmore Leonard, one of the most beloved writers of crime drama.

The lead character in the show, Raylan Givens, has appeared in a couple of Leonard novels, “Pronto” and “Riding the Rap,” and “Justified” itself is based on a Leonard short story, “Fire in the Hole.”

Leonard has returned to Kentucky and the world of Raylan Givens in “Raylan,” a recent novel that some “Justified” fans will find familiar.

“Raylan” follows Givens as he deals with a marijuana-dealing family, a double-dealing coal company representative and a card-dealing poker player who happens to be a Butler University student from Indianapolis.

A couple of those plot points should seem especially familiar if you’ve watched the show, but Leonard — who apparently shared some storylines with the writers of the series — threw in a few twists. Marijuana-dealing brothers Dickie and Coover don’t answer to their mother, Mags Bennett, but to their father, and they’re involved in organ-snatching. And Carol, the coal company executive sent to Harlan County to persuade property owners to give up their mountain, is more dangerous here.

To be honest, the book feels a little half-baked. Is it because I knew and loved the TV versions of these stories and characters first? Maybe. But the coal company story goes nowhere and the storyline about the card-playing college student feels truly tacked on.

As much as I loved seeing Boyd Crowder, Raylan’s longtime friend and sometimes nemesis, in the book, he doesn’t have a lot to do.

And frankly I can’t imagine the Raylan Givens I’m familiar with doing some of the things Leonard has his character do in this book.

What happens when an author’s characters take on a life of their own? Well, Arthur Conan Doyle killed off Sherlock Holmes when he became something more to readers than to the author.

I’m sure Leonard — who wrote genre classics like “Get Shorty” and “Out of Sight” — can live with the TV incarnation of his Kentucky lawman. And thanks to the TV show, viewers can embrace whichever they prefer.

‘Alcatraz,’ ‘Justified’ have strong second weeks

What a fun feeling when two TV shows — one a returning favorite in its third season, the other brand new out of the box — start off strong.

I’m playing catch-up here, but I wanted to mention this week’s installments of “Justified,” airing Tuesdays on FX, and “Alcatraz,” airing Mondays on Fox.

In the second week of it’s third season, “Justified” continues the compelling story of Kentucky’s small-time crooks and the federal marshals who must deal with them, particularly Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins) and Raylan Givens (Timothy Olyphant) respectively.

In Tuesday night’s episode, Givens was reunited with an old partner — and an old flame, from the sexual tension on display — named Karen Goodall. The inside joke here is that Goodall is actually Karen Sisco, a federal deputy previously played in the movie “Out of Sight” by Jennifer Lopez and — in a TV series a few years back — Carla Gugino. Like “Justified,” Sisco’s stories are drawn from the works of author Elmore Leonard.

Gugino returns to the character in “Justified” — she’s apparently signed for a few episodes — and it’s fun watching her and Olyphant kind of circling each other, particularly since Goodall/Sisco returns just as Givens is about to settle down with his ex-wife, Winona.

Tuesday’s episode — dealing with the murder of another marshal — wasn’t as strong as last week’s season premiere. But you can’t beat any show that features Olyphant, Gugino, Nick Searcy as Chief Deputy Art Mullen and Goggins.

There’s also a good introduction of Mykelti Williamson as a new character, a bad guy who is as menacing as he is folksy.

As for “Alcatraz,” I think this week’s episode, “Kit Nelson,” was my favorite so far.

If you haven’t seen “Alcatraz,” the show’s mythology is that, in 1963, the San Francisco island prison wasn’t shut down because all the prisoners were transferred. No, it was shut down because 300 prisoners and guards disappeared.

Now, a half-century later, those prisoners are reappearing, and a crew of cops and experts is pursuing them. Sam Neill, Sarah Jones and Jorge Garcia make up the solid cast of investigators.

This week’s show teased us with a little more mythology of the show. Remember Dr. Beauregard, the unseen medical officer of the modern-day prison in which Neill’s character is lodging recovered prisoners? This week’s episode revealed that Beauregard is not only Neill’s medical shaman in the present but was also the sinister doctor at the prison in the 1960s. And he hasn’t aged a day.

That little revelation, plus the beginning of a mystery involving Jones’ grandfather — a convict on the loose in modern San Francisco — and tidbits about the traumatic past of Garcia’s character are enough to allay my worries that the show might too easily fall into the “escaped prisoner of the week” trap.

And since the show is from “Lost” producer J.J. Abrams, I had to laugh when, out of nowhere, the show introduced a hatch in the middle of the woods from which a kidnapped boy escaped.

I’m not surprised to be enjoying “Justified” this much. I am a little surprised — pleasantly surprised — to be digging “Alcatraz” so much.

 

‘Justified’ is back with a vengeance

One of my favorite shows, “Justified,” returned for a third season last night with one of the strongest season premieres I can remember.

The FX drama, the story of deputy U.S. marshal Raylan Givens as he deals with drug dealers, killers and other lowlifes in his home state of Kentucky, ended a strong season two with Raylan (Timothy Olyphant) getting shot as he brought down the criminal empire of Ma Barker-ish Mags Bennett. Last night’s premiere began with Raylan still recovering from gunshot wounds and on desk duty.

Raylan, as droll and funny as he is sharp-eyed and dangerous, is more than a little rusty, but he’s willing to engage in a brawl, at the U.S. marshals office, with Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins), his longtime friend and antagonist.

Boyd shows up and gives Raylan grief about how the deputy marshal didn’t turn over to Boyd’s homicidal care Dickie Bennett, son of Mags Bennett, who had shot Ava (Joelle Carter), Boyd’s girlfriend (who also has a thing for Raylan).

Punches are thrown, windows are broken and Boyd is carted off to jail. But why would he want to be incarcerated? We find out at the end of the episode.

Meanwhile, Ava and Boyd’s meth-head crew try to find a buyer for the marijuana they stole from Mags Bennett but discover they’ve screwed up and it’s next to worthless. This leads to a good scene in which Ava administers some frying pan discipline to a gang member who refused to obey the jailed Boyd’s orders.

And also meanwhile, Raylan considers setting up housekeeping with his ex-wife, Winona (Natalie Zea), who is pregnant. Throughout the episode, Raylan doubts himself and underperforms. Getting shot took a lot out of him, and even though he handles a new menace at the end of the episode, you have to wonder if his crisis of confidence will continue.

There’s fresh bad guys this season in Robert Quarles (Neal McDonough, a familiar face from many TV series as well as the “Captain America” movie), a super-smooth and lethal killer who is new to Kentucky and seems to be ready to take over the Dixie Mafia.

Last night’s “Justified” had some great moments, from the back-and-forth between Raylan and Boyd to the cool menace of Quarles to the wry observations of Nick Searcy as Art Mullen, Raylan’s boss.

It’s still very early in the season, and Mags Bennett and her addled brood made strong villains last season, maybe too strong for any successors to possibly top. But I’m wondering if Quarles and company — not to mention Boyd, Ava, Winona and the rest — won’t give a shaken Raylan his greatest challenge yet this year.

 

‘Justified’ returns tomorrow night

Oh yeah. The coolest show on TV is back.

“Justified,” the crime drama based on Elmore Leonard’s writings about small-time Kentucky criminals and the U.S. marshal opposing them, returns Tuesday night on FX.

Timothy Olyphant is back as Raylan Givens, the slow-simmering marshal, as is Walton Goggins as Boyd Crowder, Raylan’s longtime friend, sometimes nemesis, sometimes ally.

FX has given us an idea about what to expect this season:

“In Season 2, Deputy US Marshal Raylan Givens (Olyphant) squared off against criminal matriarch Mags Bennett (the part for which Margo Martindale won an Emmy Award). The end of Season 2 brought about the end of the Bennett family’s hold over Harlan County and the return of Raylan’s old nemesis/friend Boyd Crowder to the criminal life. This season, Boyd and his crew will find they aren’t the only ones making a play to rule the Harlan underworld. Now Raylan finds himself facing off against dirty politicians, hidden fortunes, a mysterious man named ‘Limehouse’ and an enterprising and lethal criminal from the Motor City.”

The Motor City? Will Raylan run afoul of “The Detroit Connection?” (Sorry, inside joke.)

Even though this is the third season, you won’t be missing anything if you’re just jumping into the show.

Check it out, Tuesday night on FX.

Can’t wait: Upcoming TV shows to watch for

Back in the day, TV networks threw all their season premieres into the same week in September. It made for a fun issue of TV Guide but was fairly suicidal. Even though there were only three or four networks back then, it was impossible to check everything out.

With the splintered and factionalized TV picture that came with the explosion of cable, TV series premiere virtually throughout the calendar year. Shows take mid-season breaks, stay off the air for months and years (I’m looking at you, “Mad Men”) and pop up whenever.

There’s something to look forward to in the coming weeks, however: The return of several new favorite dramas.

First up is one of my favorite shows, FX’s “Justified.” Based on characters created by crime novel legend Elmore Leonard, the show features Timothy Olyphant as U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens, back in his home state of Kentucky and, with cool Stetson and even cooler demeanor, running roughshod over lowlifes and bad guys.

“Justified” returns at 10 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 17 on FX.

Not long after comes Feb. 12 and the premiere of the second half of season two of “The Walking Dead” on AMC.

The survivors of the zombie apocalypse, traumatized by the loss of young Sophie, forge ahead with their efforts to find their way through the wilds of Georgia and the end of the world.

I’m hoping — really, really hoping — that Rick, Lori, Daryl Dixon and the rest get off the farm where they’ve been all season so far, and get out of there quickly once the second half of the season begins.

How many years has it been since we last saw Don Draper and the rest of the cast of AMC’s “Mad Men?” Two? Three? Less than that? Really?

Well, the deliberately-paced 1960s character drama will finally return on March 25, if you can believe star Jon Hamm’s recent announcement.

Speaking of great characters: One of my favorite episodic dramas of the past couple of years is “Sherlock,” the modern-day retelling of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s classic Sherlock Holmes tales. Benedict Cumberbatch returns as the brilliant detective and Martin Freeman makes for one of the most satisfyingly irritable John Watsons ever.

Just three episodes aired on PBS’s “Masterpiece Mystery” last year and three more are coming in May. Best news: Three more episodes are now in the works.

I wish I could tell you with some certainty when A&E’s “Longmire” series will premiere, but I haven’t seen a date other than “sometime in 2012.”

I also wish I could tell you that the series is faithful to Craig Johnson’s wonderful mystery series about Walt Longmire, an old-fashioned modern-day Wyoming sheriff dealing with an odd assortment of characters and crimes. I wish I could say that it is — and it very well might be — but the casting is a little young and a little off.

The best bit of casting? Katee Sackhoff of “Battlestar Galactica” as Longmire’s funny, profane deputy, Victoria. The actress is perfect for the part.

Of course, there are other shows to look forward to. But that’s a pretty good start to any year.