Fargo
Fargo
Screenplay by William Richert
Joel Cohen
Ethan Cohen
Produced by Ethan Cohen
Directed by Joel Cohen
Cast List:
Frances McDormand Marge Gunderson
William H. Macy Jerry Lundegaard
Steve Buscemi Carl Showalter
Peter Stormare Gaear Grimsrud
Harve Presnell Jerry's Father-In-Law
Kristin Rudrud Jean Lundegaard
John Carroll Lynch Norm Gunderson
The following text fades in over black:
"This is a true story. The events depicted in this film took place in Minnesota in 1987. At the request of the survivors, the names have been changed. Out of respect for the dead, the rest has been told exactly as it occurred. "
FLARE TO WHITE
FADE IN FROM WHITE:
Slowly the white becomes a barely perceptible image: white particles wave over a white background. A snowfall.
A car bursts through the curtain of snow.
The car is equipped with a hitch and is towing another car, a brand-new light brown Cutlass Ciera with the pink sales sticker showing in its rear window.
As the car roars past, leaving snow swirling in their dirft, the title of the film fades in.
"FARGO"
Green highway signs point the way to "MOOREHEAD, MINNESOTA/FARGO, NORTH DAKOTA". The roads for the two cities diverge. A sign says "WELCOME TO NORTH DAKOTA" and another just after says "NOW ENTERING FARGO, ND, POP. 44,412".
The car pulls into a Rodeway Inn.
HOTEL LOBBY
A man in his early forties, balding and starting to paunch, goes to the reception desk. The clerk is an older woman.
CLERK
And how are you today, sir?
MAN
Real good now. I'm checking in – Mr. Anderson.
The man prints "Jerry Lundega" onto a registration card, then hastily crosses out the last name and starts to print "Anderson."
As she types into a computer:
CLERK
Okay, Mr. Anderson, and you're still planning on staying with us just the night, then?
ANDERSON
You bet.
HOTEL ROOM
The man turns on the TV, which shows the local evening news.
NEWS ANCHOR
... whether they will go to summer camp at all. Katie Jensen has more.
KATIE
It was supposed to be a project funded by the city council; it was supposed to benefit those Fargo-Moorehead children who would otherwise not be able to afford to attend a lakeshore summer camp. But nobody consulted city controller Stu Jacobson...
CHAIN RESTAURANT
Anderson sits alone at a table finishing dinner. Muzak plays. A middle-aged waitress approaches holding a pot of regular coffee in one hand and decaf in the other.
WAITRESS
Can I warm that up for ya there?
ANDERSON
You bet.
The man looks at his watch.
THROUGH A WINDSHIELD
We are pulling into the snow-swept parking lot of a one-story brick building. Broken neon at the top of the building identifies it as the Jolly Troll Tavern. A troll, also in neon, holds a champagne glass aloft.
INSIDE
The bar is downscale even for this town. Country music plays on the jukebox.
Two men are seated in a booth at the back. One is short, slight, youngish. The other man is somewhat older, and dour. The table in front of them is littered with empty long-neck beer bottles. The ashtray is full.
Anderson approaches.
ANDERSON
I'm, uh, Jerry Lundegaard –
YOUNGER MAN
You're Jerry Lundegaard?
JERRY
Yah, Shep Proudfoot said –
YOUNGER MAN
Shep said you'd be here at 7:30. What gives, man?
JERRY
Shep said 8:30.
YOUNGER MAN
We been sitting here an hour. I've peed three times already.
JERRY
I'm sure sorry. I – Shep told me 8:30. It was a mix-up, I guess.
YOUNGER MAN
Ya got the car?
JERRY
Yah, you bet. It's in the lot there. Brand-new burnt umber Ciera.
YOUNGER MAN
Yeah, okay. Well, siddown then. I'm Carl Showalter and this is my associate Gaear Grimsrud.
JERRY
Yah, how ya doin'. So, uh, we all set on this thing, then?
YOUNGER MAN
Sure, Jerry, we're all set. Why wouldn't we be?
JERRY
Yah, no, I'm sure you are. Shep vouched for you and all. I got every confidence in you fellas.
They stare at him. An awkward beat.
JERRY
... So I guess that's it, then. Here's the keys –
CARL
No, that's not it, Jerry.
JERRY
Huh?
CARL
The new vehicle, plus forty thousand dollars.
JERRY
Yah, but the deal was, the car first, see, then the forty thousand, like as if it was the ransom. I thought Shep told you –
CARL
Shep didn't tell us much, Jerry.
JERRY
Well, okay, it's –
CARL
Except that you were gonna be here at 7:30.
JERRY
Yah, well, that was a mix-up, then.
CARL
Yeah, you already said that.
JERRY
Yah. But it's not a whole pay-in-advance deal. I give you a brand-new vehicle in advance and –
CARL
I'm not gonna debate you, Jerry.
JERRY
Okay.
CARL
I'm not gonna sit here and debate. I will say this though: what Shep told us didn't make a whole lot of sense.
JERRY
Oh, no, it's real sound. It's all worked out.
CARL
You want your own wife kidnapped?
JERRY
Yah.
Carl Stares. Jerry looks blankly back.
CARL
... You – my point is, you pay the ransom – what eighty thousand bucks? – I mean, you give us half the ransom, forty thousand, you keep half. It's like robbing Peter to play Paul, it doesn't make any –
JERRY
Okay, it's – see, it's not me payin' the ransom. The thing is, my wife, she's wealthy – her dad, he's real well off. Now, I'm in a bit of trouble –
CARL
What kind of trouble are you in, Jerry?
JERRY
Well, that's, that's, I'm not go inta, inta – see, I just need money. Now, her dad's real wealthy –
CARL
So why don't you just ask him for the money?
Grimsrud, the dour man who has not yet spoken, now softly puts in with a Swedish-accented voice:
GRIMSRUD
Or your fucking wife, you know.
CARL
Or your fucking wife, Jerry.
JERRY
Well, it's all just part of this – they don't know I need it, see. Okay, so there's that. And even if they did, I wouldn't get it. So there's that on top, then. See, these're personal matters.
CARL
Personal matters.
JERRY
Yah. Personal matters that needn't, uh –
CARL
Okay, Jerry. You're tasking us to perform this mission, but you, you won't, uh, you won't – aw, fuck it, let's take a look at that Ciera.
MINNEAPOLIS SUBURBAN HOUSE
Jerry enters through the kitchen door, in a parka and a red plaid Elmer Fudd hat. He stamps snow off his feet. He is carrying a bag of groceries which he deposits on the kitchen counter.
JERRY
Hon? Got the growshries.
VOICE
Thank you, hon. How's Fargo?
JERRY
Yah, real good.
VOICE
Dad's here.
DEN
Jerry enters, pulling off his plaid cap.
JERRY
How ya doin', Wade?
Wade Gustafson is mid-sixtyish, vigorous, with a full head of gray hair. His eyes remain fixed on the TV.
WADE
Yah, pretty good.
JERRY
Whatcha watchin' there?
WADE
Norstars.
JERRY
... Who they playin'?
WADE
OOOoooh!
His reaction synchronizes with a reaction from the crowd.
KITCHEN
Jerry walks back in, taking off his coat. His wife is putting on an apron. Jerry nods toward the living room.
JERRY
Is he stayin' for supper, then?
WIFE
Yah, I think so... Dad, are you stayin' for supper?
WADE
(off)
Yah.
DINING ROOM
Jerry, his wife, Wade and Scotty, twelve years old, sit eating.
SCOTTY
May I be excused?
JERRY
Sure, ya done there?
SCOTTY
Uh-huh. Goin' out.
WIFE
Where are you going?
SCOTTY
Just out. Just McDonald's.
JERRY
Back at 9:30.
SCOTTY
Okay.
WADE
He just ate. And he didn't finish. He's going to McDonald's instead of finishing here?
WIFE
He sees his friends there. It's okay.
WADE
It's okay? McDonald's? What do you think they do there? They don't drink milkshakes, I assure you!
WIFE
It's okay, Dad.
JERRY
Wade, have ya had a chance to think about, uh, that deal I was talkin' about, those forty acres there on Wayzata?
WADE
You told me about it.
JERRY
Yah, you said you'd have a think about it. I understand it's a lot of money –
WADE
A heck of a lot. What'd you say you were gonna put there?
JERRY
A lot. It's a limited –
WADE
I know it's a lot.
JERRY
I mean a parking lot.
WADE
Yah, well, seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars is a lot – ha ha ha!
JERRY
Yah, well, it's a chunk, but –


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