Fargo (20th Anniversary Edition) [Steelbook] (Blu-ray) R
A lot can happen in the middle of nowhere.
Out of Print:
Future availability is unknown
on most orders of $75+
|
Brand New
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Also released as:
Fargo
for $9.70
Fargo (20th Anniversary Edition) (Blu-ray)
for $12.50
Fargo (Blu-ray)
for $15.30
Blu-ray Details
- Rated: R
- Run Time: 1 hours, 38 minutes
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Released: August 8, 2017
- Originally Released: 1996
- Label: Shout Factory
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Frances McDormand, William H. Macy, Steve Buscemi & Peter Stormare | |
Performer: | Harve Presnell, Steve Park & John Carroll Lynch | |
Directed by | Joel Coen | |
Screenwriting by | Ethan Coen & Joel Coen | |
Composition by | Carter Burwell | |
Story by | Ethan Coen | |
Produced by | Ethan Coen | |
Director of Photography: | Roger Deakins |
Major Awards:
Academy Awards 1996 -
Best Actress: Frances McDormand
Academy Awards 1996 -
Best Original Screenplay: Ethan Coen & Joel Coen
Cannes 1996 -
Best Director: Joel Coen
Entertainment Reviews:
...A terrific, twisted comedy....A dazzling mix of mirth and malice....McDormand wins your heart...
Rolling Stone
Rating: 4/4 --
Fargo is the best movie ever made in Minnesota. Also the meanest.
Full Review
St. Paul Pioneer Press
The film is a work of brick-by-brick world-building in the service of characters whose ordinariness is just as carefully crafted.
Full Review
Village Voice
...A great movie....FARGO is true toe the rhythms of small-town life....William H. Macy's performance is an implosion of fear and frustration...
Chicago Sun-Times
Returning to the horror-comic vein that launched their careers, director Joel Coen and producer Ethan Coen pepper their new picture with so much humor that the occasional bursts of sheer mayhem seem more ridiculous than revolting.
Full Review
Christian Science Monitor
...The Coens prove themselves masters of orchestrating cross-purposes plots....FARGO is a further demonstration of Joel Coen's remarkable ability to mix comedy with horror...
Sight and Sound
In effect, the Coens have written an action film that disregards the basic principle of the genre: that character is expressed in action.
Full Review
Independent (UK)
Product Description:
Poor Jerry Lundegaard. He's deep in debt. His wealthy father-in-law has no respect for him. He cheats customers at the car dealership where he works. And now he's hired a bumbling duo to kidnap his wife--a plan that goes horribly awry, leading to homicide. Enter Marge Gunderson, one of the most fabulous movie cops in film history. The very-pregnant Marge--played marvelously by Frances McDormand in an Oscar-winning and career-defining performance--just goes about her everyday business, eating (in nearly every scene), talking to the people in the community, and examining bloody corpses as if no day is different from the next. A multiple murder in the small town of Brainerd, Minnesota--home of Paul Bunyan, as the sign claims--seems to have little effect on her. Yet she has an innate cop sense--she is very, very good at her job and determined to solve the case in her offhanded manner.
FARGO is yet another offbeat, highly entertaining film from the Coen brothers (BARTON FINK, BLOOD SIMPLE). The film is nearly colorless; instead, director of photography Roger Deakins washes the screen in the blinding white of the snow, occasionally breaking for the drab grays and browns of police uniforms and winter jackets. Carter Burwell's score further enhances the slow, steady pace of this oddly funny and compelling film. The Coens have once again populated their film with a slew of bizarre characters, with outstanding performances delivered by all, particularly the edgy William H. Macy, the quietly luminous McDormand, the nearly psychotic Steve Buscemi, and the oh-so-cold Peter Stormare.
FARGO is yet another offbeat, highly entertaining film from the Coen brothers (BARTON FINK, BLOOD SIMPLE). The film is nearly colorless; instead, director of photography Roger Deakins washes the screen in the blinding white of the snow, occasionally breaking for the drab grays and browns of police uniforms and winter jackets. Carter Burwell's score further enhances the slow, steady pace of this oddly funny and compelling film. The Coens have once again populated their film with a slew of bizarre characters, with outstanding performances delivered by all, particularly the edgy William H. Macy, the quietly luminous McDormand, the nearly psychotic Steve Buscemi, and the oh-so-cold Peter Stormare.