Now, we have to get into the finale, where in plot driven limited event series, it's more important than ever to stick the landing, because that's what people are going to remember. Sadly, I was let down by this ending, which I thought handled three things in completely backwards, unsatisfying fashion, which is all the more disappointing because I mostly loved the show until that point. I'm going to have get into this here, so read no further if you don't want to know spoilers. First, after setting Malvo up as the devil himself for nine weeks, he turned out to be way too easy to kill in the last episode. But overall, fine, if that's the way they wanted to do it, I guess it's a minor complaint on my part. Second, Lester's fall through the ice and subsequent death was wholly unsatisfying to me, because I desperately wanted to see him arrested and dragged away kicking and screaming, forced to face up to what he did instead of going out very nearly on his own terms (sure, he probably didn't want to fall through the ice, but at that moment he'd obviously made up his mind to die running away if he had to, so it was anti-climactic). And third, (and this was the worst), Molly, our heroine, is completely and utterly shortchanged in this finale by having no part in the action in either Lester or Malvo's comeuppance. After doing all the police work herself and finally being recognized for being right last week, she was pushed to the side so that her loser husband Gus, of all people, who ordered her to stay put, can go and take care of Malvo himself, to redeem his cowardly actions at the beginning of the season. Worse still, he's the one who finds the tapes of Lester's involvement and handily presents them to her, so that she has virtually no part in the resolution of her own case.
I was pretty infuriated by that, as Molly was clearly the hero of this series until the last episode, in which she was tossed away in favor of redeeming Gus, who I really had no desire to see redeemed (he could have died himself for all I cared about his character), and to have her grudgingly accept being ordered to "stay put" so that her man can go out and be the hero was like rubbing salt in the wound. Badly, badly done, Hawley. Marge Gunderson would not have stood for that shit, let me tell you. So, despite the amazing production values, incredible acting, mostly good writing, and colorful characters, I was so upset by the ending of the series that I'm ultimately conflicted on whether to recommend it. I fully loved the vast majority of the show, so does a bad ending ruin the entire thing? There are plenty who were satisfied by how things wrapped up of course, so I feel that I have to grade it on the whole and not by how sucker-punched I felt by the finale, and for that I've got to give it close to top marks (I even liked it better than True Detective overall). But if I was on that writing staff, boy would I have blown a fuse at the decision to sideline the only woman in the cast and protagonist of the show in favor of all manly action so that the "little wife" can stay home and be protected. Oh, but let's go ahead and make her chief as a pat on the back. Ugh, it still stings a week later.
Grade for the whole season: A-
Grade for finale: D