I was a little late getting into Justified, and my only excuse is that there was a lot of other good TV on at the time. Also, it’s a little darker and grittier than my normal fare. Of course, eventually I picked up the blu-ray box set (with the flask). It took me a few years to finish the series, and I confess I didn’t always give it my undivided attention, but I really liked what I saw.
Someday I’ll watch it again.
When I heard that Timothy Olyphant was returning to the character for a Justified revival, I thought it was a joke. When I heard it was real but that Nick Searcy wasn’t invited, I was disappointed. But still intrigued. Sure, the title Justified: City Primeval sounds kinda corny, but it is taken from one of Elmore Leonard’s non-Raylan novels sans the subtitle, High Noon in Detroit.
The first two episodes of City Primeval dropped last week.
It opens, much like the original series, in Florida with Raylan in conflict at an outdoor cafe. This time, however, he’s not going to shoot anyone, justified or not, because it’s his teenage daughter Willa (Vivian Olyphant) sitting beside him. She’s been kicked out of another school and he’s supposed to deliver her to a camp for troubled teens.
Don’t worry. Raylan still gets to be cool.
While on the road a couple of Detroit thugs try to carjack them, rear-ending Raylan’s sedan enough to pop the trunk. They take their eyes off the US Marshal long enough for him to pull a loaded shotgun from within, and that takes care of that. Except Willa misses her boat, and the two of them have to go to Detroit for Raylan to testify.
Once again, our favorite fish is out of water.
The morning of the trial someone firebombs the judge’s (Keith David) car. Raylan and Willa end up on his bad side in the courtroom, but later the judge requests that Raylan investigate his attempted murder. In a clever twist, the would-be assassin is caught relatively quickly (thanks to some help from a local militia, natch), but the judge gets himself killed by someone else later that night. The Marshals can’t know that, though, so Raylan and Willa are further detained and we are entertained.
“This is how we do it in Detroit.”
So far audience reactions are mixed. Those who take the time to write reviews, of course, are the superfans who have seen the original series many times and bound to fixate on any little flaw. Critics have been more generous, for whatever that’s worth. With the coming drought of new material, the studios need every new thing to be the best thing ever and the critics are in their back pocket. Is it a perfect continuation of Raylan’s story? Heck if I know. But I was entertained enough by the first episode to anticipate the second.
What I like:
Raylan is still effortlessly cool, bemused, and wrathful as the situation requires. In the Oklahoma Wildman (Boyd Holbrook) he seems to have a worthy antagonist, even if no one will ever be able to compete with Walton Goggins’s Boyd Crowder. Setting the show in Michigan is fun for me, and I’ve spent enough time in and around Detroit to say everything feels right. Throw in a reference to Faygo pop and it’ll be perfect.
What I don’t like:
Casting Olyphant’s real-life daughter makes sense on paper. Obviously, she’s his little girl and looks the part, and they play off each other well. The kid’s not a bad actress, either. Unfortunately, her babydoll voice is difficult to understand. I don’t think I’ve heard anyone sound like her outside of a 1930’s film. So far there’s been nothing overtly political, but I’m afraid there are some subtle hints that things will take a turn. And the content is more adult than the earlier show.
Still, when there’s so little that’s new and worth my time, I think I’ll keep watching until given a good reason to stop.