Thursday, April 1, 2010

Justified- "Oh hey, look. It's that guy from Sex in the City!"


I am starting have a serious problem with Justified and, to be honest, I am close to throwing in the towel. Last night's episode was another guest-star filled one-off that did very little, (until the very end) to advance the plot and characters. The structure of the show seems to be: Raylan goes after a different quirky bad guy each week, Raylan kills bad guy at the end, audience gets a tiny nugget that barely advances the far more intriguing overall plot involving Ava, Boyd, and Raylan's dad. If that is enough to keep you interested, god bless.

The biggest issue with this structure is the fact that these guests appear and disappear so quickly, the audience doesn't get a chance to care about them or understand their motivations and nuances. Take last night's episode; We are introduced to Arnold Pinter, a fish-out-of-water, Brooklynite bookie/snitch, played by that dude from Sex In The City who bangs that ugly redhead. Raylan is given the unenviable task of being his go-between in the Marshall's office. The two seem to hit it off, mainly because neither wants to in Kentucky. The Pinter character is pretty decent, but he doesn't get the screen time required to really flesh him out. We don't even find out how he ended up in the Bluegrass state.

Even more egregious, was the way the Travis Travers character was handled. He went from being a deadbeat stoner to a homicidal criminal mastermind in the blink of an eye. I didn't buy it for even a second. But that is what happens when you have to squeeze a new character into a 43 minute window every week. Sometimes it works pretty well (Boyd and Pinter), mostly it just feels forced (Travers).

I think the thing that frustrates me so much about Justified is the squandered potential. Timothy Olyphant is a grade-A bad-ass and the Raylan character is perfect for him. I like the chemistry between him and his boss, who seems to really get what Raylan is all about. I like the idea of a law enforcement agent coming back to his hometown against his will to take down a crew of white-supremacists. But I really can't get passed the formulaic repetitiveness of the past two episodes.

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