LOS ANGELES – When Ethan Coen finished watching the first episode of "Fargo," the TV version, he mumbled his initial reaction: Yeah, good.
"When Ethan says, 'Yeah, good,' he's over the moon," said Billy Bob Thornton, who has worked with the Minnesota-raised Coen brothers on three films and stars as a mysterious, manipulative drifter in the Bemidji-set dramedy debuting Tuesday on the FX network.
The Coens have every reason to be ecstatic. The 10-part series, shot in Calgary, is as hilarious and harrowing as their 1996 thriller that earned them their first Oscar nominations and put them on the map as major Hollywood players.
" 'Fargo' is one of the American Film Institute's 100 greatest American movies and, remarkably, this new 'Fargo' fills those big snowshoes," said FX president John Landgraf, who previously brought "Rescue Me," "Justified" and "Louie" to the network. "It's one of the best things we've ever done."
It took a heck of an effort.
In 1997, just a year after the film's release, Bruce Paltrow ("St. Elsewhere") and Robert Palm ("Law & Order: Special Victims Unit") pitched a series adaptation to then-NBC president Warren Littlefield, who quickly signed up. To mark the occasion, the creators presented him with a snow globe featuring Marge bent over bloody snow next to a flipped-over car.
But then Littlefield got cold feet.
"The script was good, but it was a network television version of an iconic and brilliant film and my fear was we would disappoint the audience," he said. "I passed."