Lester was originally a mediocre and cowardly middle-aged man. He was used to being mocked by his wife. He was bullied by his high school classmates when he was nearly forty years old. Until he met the killer in the emergency room, his life changed. The killer awakened his inner demon.
After watching the previous episodes, I have always felt a sense of irritability. Lester knew that Molly suspected him to investigate him, but he just avoided blindly and had no countermeasures. Chaz couldn't bear his elder brother, and complained to him again in the hospital, saying that he was a big burden, he was incompatible with the people around him, and he seemed to be missing a muscle and couldn't perceive other people's emotions. When I watched the drama, I suddenly understood this role. Originally, this role was not a logically rigorous criminal. His life has been underestimated by others, and I shouldn't watch this drama with the mentality of expecting a perfect crime. Chaz's words seemed to help Lester connect the tendon, and the demon in his heart turned into action. He framed his younger brother, used his work to lure customers into stubbornness, and even when he met a killer again and offended the killer, he easily sacrificed his wife's life as a cover for himself. He became a villain with no feelings for life. What an annoying person.
The killer is also a nasty person, disregarding life. He not only completes the task of killing, but even the superior demonic mentality, playing with the psychology of ordinary people, and dragging them into sin. He just met Lester in the emergency room for the first time, and went nosy to kill, tempting Lester to sin step by step. He has no feelings for life, thinking that this is a world where the weak eats the strong, and he is the strong one. He arrogantly threatened a cowardly patrolling policeman, and eventually died at the hands of the policeman.
This is a movie with slow progress and unpleasant viewing process.
View more about Fargo reviews