âJustifiedâ recap: Pieces on a board
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A couple of weeks ago, I complained a bit that this season was pushing Raylan Givens off to the side too much. It wasnât a big deal. This is still one of my favorite shows. But I hoped things would get slightly back to basics. But now that weâre starting to settle into an elaborate dance where Quarles, Raylan, Boyd, and Limehouse (all representing different interests) are jockeying for position and trying to get under one anotherâs skins, the big picture of the season is starting to become clearer, and those early episodes are starting to feel more necessary. For this season to work, weâve got to forget how good Raylan is at everything. Heck, heâs got to forget just a little bit. Now that heâs reeling in the wake of losing Winona, the guyâs primed to seem like heâs out of it right before he has a big, inevitable comeback.
Tuesday nightâs episode featured more than enough Raylan, including scenes where he fought the impression that he was a dirty marshal, bought off by Boyd; refused to deal with the fact that his father appears to be sinking into dementia; and soured his relationship with Tim by pushing his fellow marshal to get information from the FBI that landed everybody in hot water. (It was great fun to see character actor Stephen Tobolowsky turn up as the FBI agent who wants Raylan out of the bureauâs business.) But this episode also nailed down just whatâs up with Quarles, the mysterious man whoâs been tugging so many strings this season, for reasons not yet clear. We understand roughly what his plan with the Oxy is, and we get why heâs using Harlan as his base of operations, but we donât yet have a motivation for what heâs doing, not like we did with Mags last season.
By and large that hasnât mattered. The writers have gone in the opposite direction of Mags, probably because she was such a larger-than-life figure that to do anything even close to her would have had the slight whiff of copycatting. Mags was, in many ways, the bruised heart of Harlan, risen up out of the muck to defend the things she thought of as âher own,â whether her three sons or the place she loved so much. Quarles is a businessman, snappily dressed and perfectly coiffed, who arrives from out of town, mostly to turn Harlan into a money-making machine. But thatâs all weâve known about him beyond some intriguing hints dropped here and there, like that guy he kept chained up to a bed and went in to beat up every day. âThe Man Behind The Curtainâ (which, interestingly enough, was also the name of the big âvillainâ reveal episode from the third season of âLostâ) gives us many more shades to Quarles. At one time, he was seen as the chosen one to succeed the big boss of the Detroit mob. Something went wrong, however, and now heâs forced to kowtow to the bossâ âidiotâ son, who sets Quarlesâ teeth on edge for many, many reasons. At the same time, we learn that Quarles has a habit of beating up male escorts, something that could point in a number of messed-up psychological directions and might hint at the identity of the guy on the bed (whoâs apparently dead, if Wynnâs talk about how itâs hard to paint over blood is any indication).
Weâve known all this time that Quarles has a bit of a hair-trigger temper, and weâve known that Raylan underestimates him a bit. This episode, shows just how dangerous Quarles could be if backed into a corner, and in this situation heâs got both Raylan and Boyd doing the backing. He doesnât deal with Raylan just yet, though he tells his boss that the marshal can be dealt with in ways that donât involve killing him. In the case of Boyd, however, he figures out a way to turn the county sheriff â a career man named Napier â who heads into the bar Boyd just reopened under his cousinâs name and shuts the place down for a minor fire code violation.
Itâs fun to watch these guys circle one another. Theyâre smart, yes, but where Raylan and Quarles seem itchy to have an all-out brawl, their calm demeanors masking some need to dish out violence and pain, Boyd is more reserved and withdrawn. He takes his time and goes to Limehouse to figure out if the sheriff is in anybodyâs pocket. And when he realizes that Quarles is trying to institutionalize Crowder hatred, Boyd decides that you can fight city hall if youâve got the right guy sitting in the sheriffâs chair. Which is how he approaches the mining company manager from last season (played by the great Jim Beaver) and asks him to run for sheriff, in the wake of being laid off by the mining company. Itâs a great idea, but itâs not hard to imagine how angry Quarles will be if Boyd tries to seriously mess with his master plan (which necessarily involves the sheriff turning a blind eye to the Oxy operation while still running everybody else out of town).
Quarles isnât out, though. Heâs got an âold friendâ down in Tulsa, Okla., who turns out to be none other than Gary, Winonaâs ex-husband, whoâs now pitching snake oil in the form of booklets heâll sell to the gullible to outline his plans for turning repossessed homes into cash. Quarles sidles up to him after the presentation and takes him to the bar, turning him into what seems like a fast friend. Then Wynn shows up, and Gary â whoâs hiding out under a different name â realizes whatâs up. Whatever it is canât be good for the guy, and thatâs where we cut to black.
âCurtainâ is an episode that mostly exists to make sure all of the pieces are at the right place on the showâs board as the season hits its midpoint, but itâs a remarkably assured version of that sort of episode. Itâs easy to make these sorts of episodes feel mechanical, like the writers are pushing the characters around, rather than letting the characters do their own walking. But âCurtainâ is vivid and funny and shot through with great scenes just dripping with conflict. Something big is coming to Harlan, and Iâm not sure everybodyâs going to have what it takes to survive it.
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-- Todd VanDerWerff
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