Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
James Martin, S.J.May 13, 2010

Just posted in our online Culture section, a review of the new series "Justified" by Carolyn Buscarino. I've not seen it, but this review makes me want to do so.

Use it or drop it,” U.S. Deputy Marshal Raylan Givens calmly warns a jumpy criminal as they face off, guns drawn, on a deserted road under the blazing sun, in an early episode of FX’s new drama “Justified.”

Straight-arrow Givens (Timothy Olyphant) always offers the bad guy a choice—to leave town, drop his weapon or take his chances against Givens’s lightning-fast draw. But choices have suddenly narrowed for Givens himself, who escaped hardscrabble coal-mining, moonshining and meth-cooking in Kentucky 20 years ago, only to find himself forcibly reassigned there after shooting a Miami mobster at point-blank range (justifiably, says Givens to internal affairs and his skeptical new boss, played by a dryly bemused Nick Searcy).

Givens is perhaps the first hero—he literally wears a white hat—in FX’s pantheon of popular antiheroes (think “The Shield,” “Damages,” “Nip/Tuck” and “Rescue Me”), but he’s no one-dimensional Saturday matinee lawman. The son of a small-time con artist and an ex-con, Givens rebelled by pinning a badge on his chest, though he’s not above using skills learned at his daddy’s knee, say, to cajole a reluctant witness or cut through the white-supremacist gospel spouted by a coal-mining buddy and suspected criminal Boyd Crowder (a creepily effective Walter Goggins, who dazzled in “The Shield”).

Read the rest here.

James Martin, SJ

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

Pope Leo said that if the teen “had come all the way to Rome, then (the pope) could come all the way to the hospital to see him.”
A Reflection for Tuesday of the Eighteenth Week in Ordinary Time, by Molly Cahill
Molly CahillAugust 04, 2025
As emergency workers searched for survivors and tried to recuperate the bodies of the dead, Pope Leo XIV offered his prayers for people impacted by the latest shipwreck of a migrant boat off the coast of Yemen.
Catholic News ServiceAugust 04, 2025
The Archdiocese of Miami celebrated the first Mass for detainees at “Alligator Alcatraz,” the Trump administration’s controversial immigrant detention center in the Florida Everglades.