Justified: Season One
Moderator: MGM
- Mr Wallstreet
- Posts: 3734
- Joined: Sat Feb 14, 2009 10:21 pm
Justified: Season One
It's Deadwood-lite
- Mr Wallstreet
- Posts: 3734
- Joined: Sat Feb 14, 2009 10:21 pm
Every episode is very formulaic: The Marshall is called into investigate a crime; he solves, makes a reference to either his past or the overarching story, learns a little something new about himself and then the episode is more or less wrapped up with a nice bow on top.
The show deals with mature themes such as racism, sexism, verbal/spousal abuse, plenty of swear words thrown around but nothing hardcore. If there were a little less swearing, this would be one of those "quirky" shows on the USA network like Covert Ops or White Collar or In Plain Sight.
Justified doesn't have nearly as many layers and plots as Deadwood or Rome; both those shows kept you guessing how they'd start off, where they'd go and how they'd end. It just seems like Justified is a moderately more violent version of CSI dresseed up as a Western.
The show deals with mature themes such as racism, sexism, verbal/spousal abuse, plenty of swear words thrown around but nothing hardcore. If there were a little less swearing, this would be one of those "quirky" shows on the USA network like Covert Ops or White Collar or In Plain Sight.
Justified doesn't have nearly as many layers and plots as Deadwood or Rome; both those shows kept you guessing how they'd start off, where they'd go and how they'd end. It just seems like Justified is a moderately more violent version of CSI dresseed up as a Western.
This is my biggest problem with season 1.Mr Wallstreet wrote:Every episode is very formulaic: The Marshall is called into investigate a crime; he solves, makes a reference to either his past or the overarching story, learns a little something new about himself and then the episode is more or less wrapped up with a nice bow on top.
It goes out the window for season 2.
Season 2 becomes an awesome over-reaching, solidly written season.
The formulaic crap goes out the window, and they really come into their own.
"French is like anal, exotic but oh so unnecessary."