Mr. Wrench and Mr. Numbers

Wes Wrench and Grady Numbers, mostly known as Mr. Wrench and Mr. Numbers, are fictional characters of the FX television series Fargo, most prominently appearing as antagonists in the first season. The characters, portrayed respectively by Russell Harvard and Adam Goldberg, were often highlighted as one of the stand-outs of season one by critics.[1][2][3]

Mr. Wrench and Mr. Numbers
Fargo character
Mr. Numbers (Adam Goldberg, left) and Mr. Wrench (Russell Harvard)
First appearance"The Rooster Prince" (2014)
Last appearance
Created byNoah Hawley
Portrayed byRussell Harvard and Adam Goldberg
In-universe information
OccupationHitmen

The characters later briefly re-appear as two unnamed children in the season two finale "Palindrome", set many years before the first season, with Wrench appearing again as a recurring character in season three, set four years after season one.

Relationship and character overviews

1979–2006

As shown in the season 2 finale, Numbers and Wrench were friends from childhood, growing up somewhere in the American midwest. Although Numbers did not have a hearing impairment, he learned sign language so as to communicate with his friend. One day, when the two were playing baseball, they were attacked by two older boys, but the fight was interrupted by Hanzee Dent.

The two are committed hitmen, who will perform what is asked of them no matter the circumstances. Mr. Numbers is killed by Lorne Malvo after a long pursuit, which involved killing an innocent man who looked similar to Malvo, in the sixth episode of season one, "Buridan's Ass". Later, Wrench is seen cuffed to his hospital bed, Malvo, rewarding him for coming the closest to killing him that anyone ever did, gives him the key to his restraints and says, "if you still feel raw about things when you heal up, come see me."

2010–2016

Wrench reappears in the season 3 episode "The Law of Inevitability", sitting next to Nikki Swango on a prison bus. Manacled together, they escape from the back of the bus, pursued by Yuri Gurka, who later runs off after his ear is lost to an axe, thrown by Wrench; Nikki and Wrench kill the other assassin pursuing them. The two later venture to points unknown in a car provided by Paul Marrane, whom they meet at a bowling alley. They go on to attempt to blackmail V. M. Varga by breaking into his semi-tractor trailer and stealing sensitive information. Nikki and Wrench ambush Varga and his crew when they come to pay ransom, though Varga escapes. The two part ways, and Nikki gives Wrench the briefcase full of money. She is later killed while trying to kill Emmit Stussy, the brother of her deceased lover Ray Stussy, whom she blamed for his death. Five years later, Wrench tracks down Emmit and kills him.

Production

Writer-creator Noah Hawley, a part-time Austin resident who lives near Texas School for the Deaf, cited his own neighborhood encounters with sign language as the inspiration for the “Mr. Wrench” character: a deaf assassin who uses his command of American Sign Language as a means of menace toward his targets and of private communication with his partner Mr. Numbers.[4] Hawley has described Harvard as “magnetic and charismatic” in the role of Mr. Wrench,[5] and ended up extending the character’s appearance in the series.[4] Hawley deliberately modeled the pair's appearance after Ratso Rizzo and Joe Buck from the film Midnight Cowboy.[4]

Goldberg was cast after previously working on Hawley's TV series The Unusuals, Goldberg said; "That was just a straight up offer. Every once in a while there’s a guy like Noah [Hawley] who sees something in me that maybe even I don’t necessarily see."[6]

During the five-month shoot in Calgary, Alberta, Harvard and the show’s ASL manager, Catherine MacKinnon, worked closely with Goldberg on translating the pair’s dialogue into the most effective ASL exchanges for their scenes.[7]

Reception

The characters and the performances of Goldberg and Harvard were well received by critics,[1][2][3] with Alan Sepinwall of HitFix, "the relationship between Goldberg and Harvard feels unlike any criminal twosome of its type I've seen before, even in the midst of a show that is otherwise cleverly rearranging familiar pieces of the movie and other crime stories."[8]

Tim Goodman, TV critic for The Hollywood Reporter, wrote, "Encapsulating everything that is joyously weird about Fargo, the killers are the dangerous — and deaf — Mr. Wrench (Russell Harvard) and his partner and translator, Mr. Numbers (Adam Goldberg)... Already I want a separate series that centers around Mr. Wrench and Mr. Numbers."[9]

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gollark: Humans are better at this, with a little practice.
gollark: v1 literally had to have a hardcoded patch to stop it not noticing instant loss/win situations.
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gollark: AI v2 is very depth constrained minimax with a simple heuristic I wrote.

References

  1. Poniewozik, James (April 14, 2014). "Review: In FX's Fargo, the Devil Goes Up to Minnesota". Time. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  2. Ryan, Maureen (April 15, 2014). "'Fargo' Review: A Frosty Treat from the Frozen North". The Huffington Post. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  3. Seitz, Matt Zoller (April 15, 2014). "Seitz on FX's Fargo: Misanthropic, Ruthless and Very Smart". Vulture. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  4. Sullivan, Becky (June 1, 2014). "In 'Fargo,' A Deaf Actor Gets His Chance To Be Wicked". NPR. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  5. Roe, Dale (April 28, 2014). "Austinites Noah Hawley and Russell Harvard provide 'Fargo' with plenty of heat". Austin American-Statesman. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  6. Amatangelo, Amy (July 15, 2016). "Adam Goldberg on His Dark New Netflix Film, Rebirth and The Jim Gaffigan Show". Paste. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  7. Fienberg, Daniel (May 6, 2014). "Interview: 'Fargo' Co-star Adam Goldberg on ASL Challenges and Calgary Cold". HitFix. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  8. Sepinwall, Alan (April 15, 2014). "Review: FX's 'Fargo' Reinvents the Coen Brothers Movie As Something New and Wonderful". HitFix. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  9. Goodman, Tim (April 11, 2014). "Fargo: TV Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
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