why the Mike Yanagita scene is critical.
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Saltpeter — 9 years ago(December 11, 2016 07:35 AM)
The problem with all this is, Marge should have known Jerry was lying the first time she met him. He was acting nervous, fidgety, impatient, evasive; clearly lying about something, clearly hiding something. She's supposed to be a trained, seasoned, experienced police officer, so how could she not have noticed his suspicious behavior?
She certainly didn't need to experience something later with someone else in order for the light bulb to go off in her brain about Jerry's behavior.
Not that I minded the Mike Yanagita scene; to me it was typical of the Coen Brothers' quirkiness. But I don't find it plausible that it was necessary to make her wake up.
My two cents, anyway! -
Luke_was_a_terrorist — 9 years ago(December 20, 2016 06:49 PM)
It's so sad that after 20 years, this post still needs to be written.
I will never understand how people did not understand the significance(which the OP is spot on about)
I think you're the opposite of paranoid, I think you walk around with the delusion people like you. -
Mandingo609 — 9 years ago(December 21, 2016 10:30 AM)
You're assuming that most people commenting here seen this film during it's theatrical run. How do you know that the people commenting here didn't just discover this film after the popularity of the TV series?
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FearlessOneDay — 9 years ago(December 25, 2016 08:25 PM)
Thanks for your explanation. I think the screenplay could easily have made the connection between Mike's b.s. and Jerry's b.s. more concrete. For example, Margie could have said something to herself in the car, "Margie, you're gullible." Or "Margie, you're too trusting." That's all it would have taken for viewers to NOT think the Mike scene was unnecessary. Because frankly, I've seen the movie several times and like many other viewers, I didn't make the connection. She's in the car eating a sandwich from Hardees.and then she's re-interviewing Jerry? And the Mike scene is so strangely amusing that you think the Coen Bros just slipped it In for comic relief. (The only thing funnier would be a Somali immigrant saying, "Okie Dokey.")
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TxMike — 9 years ago(December 26, 2016 06:21 AM)
"She's in the car eating a sandwich from Hardees.and then she's re-interviewing Jerry? "
I get your point, and that would have been unequivocal, but they chose to make it more subtle. If you are paying close attention to Marge you see her body language and facial expressions that make the connection more subtly. And because so many miss that connection I started this thread.
.... TxMike .... -
SealedCargo — 6 years ago(May 19, 2019 05:07 PM)
it's also important because it's brilliant, and its the kind of thing that happens in a Coens movie, and it gives a little bit of the old Coens weirdness within what's a really good movie but still their most mainstream
The Fearmakers Blog
https://thefearmakers.blogspot.com/ -
TheFearmakers — 5 years ago(October 26, 2020 11:06 AM)
for a Coen Brothers movie a bizarre scene like this is not only necessary, it's completely normal, in their world, and one of the best scenes in the movie
www.thefearmakers.blogspot.com -
sim7396 — 4 years ago(January 16, 2022 10:40 AM)
Thank you TxMike, much appreciated!
I'm really sick and tired of TV networks and basic cable channels censoring and mutilating movies and TV shows. The first time I saw Fargo was on one of those channels. They cut the Mike Yanagita scene but not all of the related lines, so it looked like bad editing. Actually, the movie editing was perfect, it was some greedy TV merchant who cut a portion of the movie to sell more commercials or because they thought the scene was "non-essential."
Today I saw the movie again on Amazon Prime. Not only the picture quality was better, it was also uncensored and uncut.
Schrodinger's Cat walks into a bar, and doesn't. 