Why did Dot (Juno Temple, the woman who gets kidnapped) tell Witt Farr (Lamorne Morris, police officer who helps her) that this isn’t her first getaway, considering that she’s trying to hide her criminal past/previous identity?

I understand it obviously served as a reveal to the audience confirming she did have some kind of prior criminal involvement, but why would she say it to that police officer, especially when she then subsequently ran away and pretended the whole thing never happened?

  • @DABDA
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    41 year ago

    I don’t have a good answer for your question but I’m pretty frustrated with this season so far. I’m used to Coen brothers’ work having eccentric characters but these people seem more like cartoons than actual humans.

    At the start of that scene Witt (ostensibly a trained police officer) has just escaped from automatic rifle fire and made it to the gas station. Instead of going inside for cover he decides to stand completely in the open, silhouetted under the overhead lights, looking out at the pitch black field where he knows the threat is coming from and will be completely invisible. Even just standing behind a gas pump or pillar would have given more of an impression that he didn’t want to be shot.

    Obviously it was just supposed to be for comedic effect but why would the station attendant even bother standing straight up to blast the air-horn?

    We don’t know her past or willingness to kill, but clearly Dot has some kind of training and would know enough to either finish off Ole Munch or at least restrain him after he was on the ground. And she was entirely too casual about walking on broken glass, especially after the immediate threat was already over.

    I have issues with the personalities and even accents of almost everyone but I’ll forego bitching more than I already have.

    • @SomeasyOP
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      21 year ago

      I had similar thoughts!

      I guessed that Witt was trying to be noble and stand guard defending Dot and the shopkeeper, but it was still pretty stupid. It also doesn’t make sense to me that he just wanted to thank her and wasn’t concerned that she was a criminal and somewhat responsible for the situation he was in. He strikes me as a character that will die trying to be a hero, but actually mess things up for other people with his naivety. Especially since Dot was the one telling him what to do instead of the other way round, he was clueless.

      The shopkeeper was even more of an unbelievable bonehead, but I guess that kind of has precedence in Fargo.

      But by far my biggest gripe from the first 2 episodes released, was the traps that Dot set up in her house, how they didn’t even seem to work that well (if Wayne could avoid the sledgehammer without even knowing about it, couldn’t a skilled killer like Munch also?), the fact that she would risk her family getting killed by them accidentally, and how casual Scotty and eventually Wayne were about it too. It just doesn’t make any sense and I felt like previous seasons haven’t been that hard to believe before.

      • @DABDA
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        21 year ago

        If the next episode opens with Dot & Wayne getting arrested for injuring a firefighter responding to the fire caused by the exposed live wire in the kitchen I’ll be very happy :D

  • @[email protected]
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    19 months ago

    Just finished the season and by far the worst of all five. Don’t know what are imdb voters smoking because the season is s 6/10, the last episodes maybe 7/10.

    About your question, I think is just exposition, but is something she could say to calm down the officer.