A sharp, darkly funny crime anthology with standout seasons, memorable villains, and a distinctive Midwestern voice. It’s one of FX’s best prestige dramas, especially when it balances bleak violence with deadpan absurdity and moral chaos.
92% ★★★★★ (470,373)
Fargo
Where to watch: Hulu
TV Show · Crime · Drama
2014 · ★ 92% (470K)
Consequence comes knocking.
Starring: Juno Temple, Jennifer Jason Leigh, David Rysdahl
Overview
A close-knit anthology series dealing with stories involving malice, violence and murder based in and around Minnesota.
Production
26 Keys Productions, The Littlefield Company, Mike Zoss Productions, MGM Television, FX Productions
Cast
Juno Temple, Jennifer Jason Leigh, David Rysdahl, Joe Keery, Lamorne Morris, Richa Shukla Moorjani, Sam Spruell, Sienna King, Dave Foley, Jon Hamm
Where to watch
Hulu
Curator Review
Verdict
A sharp, darkly funny crime anthology with standout seasons, memorable villains, and a distinctive Midwestern voice. It’s one of FX’s best prestige dramas, especially when it balances bleak violence with deadpan absurdity and moral chaos.
Best for
Fans of smart crime anthologies
Viewers who like dark humor mixed with violence
People who enjoy prestige TV with strong seasonal arcs
Audiences drawn to eccentric characters and regional flavor
Skip if
You want a single ongoing story with one core cast
You dislike bleak violence or abrupt tonal shifts
You prefer fast, straightforward plotting over digressive storytelling
Anthology format and season-to-season reinvention frustrate you
Overview
Fargo is a rare anthology series that feels both self-contained and unmistakably of a piece. Noah Hawley turns the Coen brothers’ sensibility into television: small-town politeness curdling into absurd brutality, ordinary people making catastrophic choices, and criminals who are often as funny as they are dangerous. The result is stylish, literate, and frequently surprising.
Worth noting
The series is at its strongest when it leans into its blend of crime, comedy, and existential dread. Seasons 1, 2, and 5 are especially well-regarded, with Season 1 setting the template, Season 2 expanding the scope in a more ambitious period setting, and Season 5 returning to top form with a brisk, suspenseful cat-and-mouse structure. Season 3 is solid but a touch looser, while Season 4 is the most divisive and generally the least essential.
Bottom line
Even at its uneven points, Fargo remains a premium example of how to do anthology television with style and purpose. It rewards viewers who like meticulous writing, strong performances, and stories that can pivot from comic to horrifying in a single scene.