Throughout
its history Justified’s seasons
ranged from sensational (seasons two and six) to subpar (season five). Yet the
show always maintained a strong hold on its characters and setting. Rural
Harlan County, Kentucky hosted the mob and Marshals with equal aplomb. A bevy
of notable characters weaved their way in and out of the narrative, from Raylan’s
criminal father Arlo to aspiring drug lord Loretta to Dewey Crowe, the
malapropism machine. Characters met their fates in a variety of ways from the
tragic (Mags Bennett) to the dumb (Danny Crowe) to the explosive (poor Mr.
Picker). During its run, Justified showrunner
Graham Yost and his staff (and the spirit of Elmore Leonard) questioned whether
the show’s three central characters, Raylan, Ava, and Boyd could change their
lives and escape the pull of Harlan County.
This is how we should remember Raylan. |
The
final season revealed that Raylan Givens could leave Harlan behind. He
confronted the ghost of his father by breaking into his father’s shed—disappointed
when it did not reveal the horrors that he had always imagined. He rid himself
of his father’s land and eventually his grave. Raylan even managed to
demonstrate the slightest personal growth. In the pilot episode of Justified, Raylan had goaded a Miami
gangster into drawing his gun so Raylan could shoot him. In the series finale,
Raylan pursued a similar track with Boyd. He demanded that Boyd grab a pistol
so Raylan could pull down on him, ending their feud forever. Boyd refused and
instead dared Raylan to cross the line from lawman with a code to cold blooded
murderer. Raylan refused, instead allowing Boyd to live out the remainder of
his life in jail. As the finale jumped ahead it time, Justified wanted to remind the viewer that there was some things
Raylan couldn’t change. He had a new hat (won as a result of his confrontation
with young gunslinger Boon), but the same attitude. And no matter how hard he
tried, he still couldn’t make things work with his ex-wife Winona.
Ava
Crowder also won a better life for herself. Ava was a survivor. She survived an
abusive husband, aspiring outlaw fiancé, and prison (in one of the show’s least
advised arcs). When the series began, Ava had just murdered her abusive husband
Bowman. The pair had married out of high school and Bowman, a star football
player, promised her a life outside of Harlan. Bowman took his failures out on
Ava. Ava then dated Raylan and Boyd, plotting a way out of the poverty and
violence of Harlan. Continually thwarted in those efforts, Ava, blazed her own
path to freedom. In the final season, she shot Boyd, drew on Raylan, and stole
ten million dollars in cash. She escaped from Harlan in the back of a pet
grooming van. Although Raylan managed to track her down, he let her go,
fulfilling his promise, from the end of season five, to keep her (and her son)
safe.
Boyd
meanwhile completed his transformation from criminal for hire to self-styled
“outlaw.” As Raylan pointed out in their final scene together, Boyd’s had taken
to repeating himself. He began as a preacher and ended as one. Yet Boyd’s
journey was a bit more complicated. He began the series by espousing his
self-serving belief in white supremacy, but it was only a means to an end.
Boyd’s goals were always money, power, and cultivating his own legacy. His
exaggerated speaking style, his skill with explosives, and charisma all honed
his reputation. Why kill Mr. Picker when you can blow him up in a hotel room in
front of Wynn Duffy and Katherine Hale instead? Boyd’s ego allows Raylan to
fool him into thinking that Ava has died in the finale. When Boyd questions why
Raylan has come to tell him about Ava, Raylan responds that they dug coal
together—a common refrain throughout the series. Boyd believes it is this bond,
born out of their shared experience and carried out through years of antagonism
and a legendary rivalry that brought Raylan to visit him. Viewed through the
lens of his own legend, it makes all the sense in the world. Who is the great
Raylan Givens without his nemesis Boyd Crowder?
While
it rarely found itself discussed among the rarified air of Breaking Bad, Mad Men, or the other contenders for the “Best Show
on TV,” Justified managed to be
amusing, entertaining, and heartbreaking. The dialogue crackled. We laughed at
the stupidity of Harlan’s criminal element, felt sympathy for Raylan’s
colleagues as he piled up body after body, and witnessed the desperation and
poverty of Harlan County. And how people like Mags Bennett and Ellstin
Limehouse carved out lives for themselves when no one else could be bothered to
care. Even at its lowest moments Justified
was always fun to watch. And that’s how we should remember it.
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