Justified (TV series)

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Justified is a 2010 FX Network series; a modern western, based upon the character of US Marshal Raylan Givens, a recurring character in the works of pulp fiction writer Elmore Leonard.

The series stars Timothy Olyphant (Deadwood, Damages), as Givens, a Cowboy Cop in pretty much every sense of the phrase. The series revolves around Marshal Givens who, in the pilot episode, gives a Miami gun runner he was investigating for a savage murder, twenty-four hours to leave town or else be killed. A broad daylight western-style showdown - where the gun runner pulls his weapon first and makes Raylan's shooting "justified" - quickly follows and leaves Givens in deep trouble with his superiors over the publicity said shooting receives in the media.

To "reward" Raylan for stopping the arms dealer, the Marshal is reassigned to Lexington, Kentucky. Now back in his native Harlan County, the place where he grew up, Raylan must deal with his duties as Marshal (protecting witnesses, tracking fugitives, and arresting bad guys) while dealing with his ex-wife, his estranged criminal of a father, and the dysfunctional and criminal Crowder family (including former coal mining buddy Boyd Crowder (played by ex-The Shield star Walton Goggins), Boyd's sister-in-law turned girlfriend Ava, and the murderous Bennett clan, headed by the charming but evil Mags Bennett.

The series is a mixture of stand-alone episodes and Story Arc; most notably being Raylan's attempt to reconcile with his adulterous ex-wife Winona, Boyd's attempt at redemption after nearly being killed at Raylan's hands (and the subsequent love triangle between him, Raylan, and Ava), the scheming between Boyd and Raylan's respective fathers (both part of the leadership caste of Harlan's criminal underworld), the attempts by a Miami drug cartel to get revenge on Raylan for killing the gun-runner from the pilot, the machinations of the Bennett clan (a group of pot sellers in a long-standing feud with the Givens family) who are trying to exploit the the fact that a mining company seeks to set up shop in Harlan, and the attempts by the "Dixie Mafia" to expand their criminal operations into Harlan County.

The series has gotten much acclaim for its successful emulation of the writing style of Elmore Leonard, unlike some previous attempts to adapt his works for TV and movies.

Also, the hat. Good lord, the hat.

Not to be confused with the tropes.

Tropes used in Justified (TV series) include:


  • Absentee Actor: Rachel and Tim both make sporatic appearances in season one and two due to the actors only being signed for certain number of episodes.
  • Absurdly Sharp Blade: Limehouse' meat cleaver, which he uses to chop off Quarles' left arm in "Slaughterhouse."
  • Abusive Parents: Both Raylan and Boyd have abusive fathers, though they go about it in different ways.
    • Tim half-jokingly states that he regrets that his father died while he was in basic training, since it robbed him of his chance to come back and shoot him.
    • Mags takes a ballpeen hammer to her son Coover's hand when he displeases her.
    • Quarles' father pimped him out as a child to get money for heroin.
  • Affably Evil:
    • Mags Bennett.
    • Doyle doesn't come across as particularly evil compared to his brothers. He is a dirty cop to start with, but after the death of Coover he just wants to protect his family.
  • Amateur Sleuth: When two drug dealers under his protection are murdered, Boyd cannot call the police, so he investigates their deaths himself. He tries to be methodical about it and even considers the forensics of the scene. Luckily for him, there was a witness who can identify the killer.
  • Ambiguously Gay: Tim Gutterson.

"You try flirtin'?"

  • An Arm and a Leg: Quarles has his arm cut off by Limehouse during the climatic battle of the season finale, and ends up bleeding on the slaughterhouse floor.
  • And That's Terrible: Boyd's apology to Ava. "For years I lusted after you, and I was far from subtle. Well, that was wrong."
  • Anti-Hero / Anti-Villain: Trying to figure out just where Boyd stands is bound to give you a headache.
    • Mags Bennett is more clearly an Anti-Villain, though how much sympathy you have for her varies.
  • Anyone Can Die: Bo Crowder in Season One, Coover, Mags, Doyle, and Aunt Helen in Season Two.
    • Seemingly Johnny Crowder in Season One and but season two reveals he got better
    • Goodbye, Devil. Try not to double-cross Boyd in your next life.
    • Goodbye, Gary. You should have left the country like Raylan told you to.
  • Archnemesis Dad: Raylan and Boyd's respective fathers qualify as well.
  • Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: episode 2
    • -"Now let me get this straight; he took your gun, your badge, your car...and your hat.
  • Bar Brawl: These are fairly common.
  • BFG: Boyd seems to have a certain fondness for these

I always say, if you're gonna be a bear, you might as well be a grizzly. But this my friends is a Ko-di-ak!

  • Batter Up: Raylan gave Dickie Bennett his signature limp with a baseball bat in their younger days.
  • Bavarian Fire Drill: Dewey, of all people, manages to pull one off when he robs two criminals who previously ripped off an illegal drug shipment. When a clothing store does not have any ski-masks he buys a cheap suit and a cowboy hat and tricks the criminals into thinking that he is 'Raylan Givens, US Marshal'.
  • Big Bad: Bo Crowder in season one. Subverted in the finale when it turns out the real threat is the Miami drug cartel.
    • In season 2, this is double subverted with Mags. When she steps down from the weed business it looks like either Boyd or Dickie Bennett will take over, until Mags comes back in the second to last episode looking for vengeance for Coover's death.
    • Big Bad Ensemble: Robert Quarles, and his Bigger Bad, Theo Tonin. Elston Limehouse is also around, though what side he's on at a given moment varies wildly. And of course there's Boyd.
  • Big Damn Heroes: Art and the SWAT team in the Season 2 finale.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Mags Bennett. She starts off seeming like a kindly but mischievous pot-seller, but turns out to be one of the most ruthless criminals in the entire state.
    • The nice looking friendly nurse who flirts with Raylan sells human organs on the black market and is a stone-cold killer.
  • Blond Guys Are Evil: Took long enough but Season 3 gave us Quarles, the mobster from Detroit, as a new Big Bad
  • Book Ends: The main events in the second season starts and ends with a glass of Apple Pie.
    • Both series also end with the same piece of music, "You'll Never Leave Harlan Alive" by Brad Paisley.
  • Boom! Headshot!:
    • How Doyle Bennett meets his end.
    • Quarles likes to shoot people in the head when he is using his sleeve gun. The gun probably is not very powerful and he is close enough to his victims to get an easy headshot.
  • California Doubling: Pennsylvania is used for the Appalachian shots but it is very obvious to anyone from southeast Kentucky that it is in fact not Kentucky, the mountains are different and any scene in Lexington is almost laughable because the geography is so different.
  • Calling the Old Man Out: An utterly magnificent example of this trope as Boyd Crowder goes all Badass Preacher on Bo during church service, in a way that gets the crowd roaring their approval.
    • Raylan gets his own turn, too. It involves bullets.
  • Can't Get Away with Nuthin': When Winona steals some money from the evidence locker and goes to the bank to test if it's real, the bank is promptly robbed. When the money is recovered, it is scanned into the Secret Service database where it raises red flags and causes an investigation.
  • Casting Gag: James LeGros interacting with Timothy Olyphant is a big one, why? James played the character of Raylan Givens years before Tim in a direct-for-tv adaptation of the novel Pronto.
  • Catch Phrase: When Boyd says, "Fire in the hole!", you'd better start running...
    • Also, the frequently used, "This is Deputy US Marshal Raylan Givens. I'm gonna need an ambulance...and a coroner."
  • Chained to a Bed: Poor Brady. Also, Quarles at the end of "Measures."
  • The Charmer: Raylan is really popular with women. To the point where in Season 3, Art suggests using the bartender as a witness against Quarles for threatening Raylan until Raylan tells him the bartender's a woman and Art immediately groans because he knows Raylan has slept with her.
  • Chekhov's Gun: Walt McCready's watch, introduced in "The Moonshine War", becomes a major plot point eight episodes later.
    • Limehouse's meat cleaver in season three also served this role.
  • The Chessmaster:
    • Boyd becomes this after the events of season one. He stops being reckless and starts to carefully consider his actions and the resources at his disposal. Being one of the few criminals in the area with working brain cells kind of helps, but he can give a master of deceit like Mags Bennett a run for her money. If he feels that he cannot win, he changes the game to one where he has the advantage.
    • Limehouse is portrayed as one in Season 3. His community has survived for more than a century by always knowing where all the dangerous pieces are located and maneuvering around them.
  • Church Militant: Boyd becomes one after his near death experience, though his father murdering his fellow converts causes him to realize that he only became one to fill the void in his life after renouncing white supremacy and has since toned down his beliefs in order to avoid getting more people killed because of his fanaticism
  • Da Chief: Art Mullen.
  • Clear My Name: Raylan is accused of Gary's murder. The whole matter is dropped however, after Lexington can't find the murder weapon, and the FBI won't reveal who told them Raylan is a Dirty Cop
  • Cold Sniper: Tim Gutterson.

Art: Hell of a shot. Did you consider what might have happened if you missed?
Tim: I can't carry a tune, I don't know how to shoot a basketball, and my handwriting is barely legible, but I don't miss.

  • Corrupt Hick
  • Cowboy Cop: Pretty much the entire premise, with a hat to match.
  • Crapsack World: Harlan County represents this big time. It's a major motivation for Raylan leaving town like he did when he was young and the motivation of several one-off characters, as far as the need to escape from the town, either professionally or through crime drives their actions.
  • Chronic Backstabbing Disorder: The Crowders have a tendency to back stab people and each other.
    • Johnny and Boyd hijack a truck of drug making supplies belonging to Bo and Boyd betrays Johnny soon after.
    • When Bo finds out that Johnny betrayed him he shoots him and makes it look like Johnny went after Ava
    • When some criminals try to betray Boyd during a robbery, he turns the tables on them and they end up blowing themselves up with a bomb meant to kill Boyd. The beautiful part is that Boyd saw it coming the second they shanghaied him into the robbery.
    • When hired by the mining company to buy up land for them, Boyd figures out why the land is valuable and makes a deal with Arlo and Mags Bennett to sell the land to the company for a small fortune.
    • The only people Boyd seems unwilling to backstab are Raylan and Ava. When he fights Raylan he does so face to face.
    • Arlo betrays Bo Crowder to the Marshals and then turns around and betrays them to Bo. Then he betrays Raylan to Bo and gets shot in the leg for it.
    • And then to finish off Season 3, Johnny Crowder indirectly betrays Boyd to the Marshals (he holds Boyd responsible for getting him in his wheelchair) by telling Limehouse about Devil's murder. It backfires however, when Arlo takes the blame for the murder instead.
  • Dangerous Workplace: Wynn Duffy's office-trailer. Raylan has already roughed him up and threatened him there, and Donovan showed up one night with a gun, looking for Quarles.
  • A Date with Rosie Palms: Dewey is kicked out of Boyd's camp for being an 'onanist'. Good thing, too, as it ends up saving his life!
  • A Day in the Limelight: Rachel in "For Blood or Money".
  • Death Wail: Boyd when he discovers the dead bodies of his "church".
  • Deep South: The U.S. Census Bureau considers Kentucky part of the South (though not everyone does), and Harlan displays all the usual characteristics. It should be noted however that Justified gives a rather more nuanced version of the South than usual, as not everyone is a dumb-as-bricks racist redneck, and even some of the more redneck characters are quite intelligent. Those characters who are dumb rednecks are usually stupid because they're drug abusers rather than because of their Southern accents.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Da Chief is fluent in snark, and Raylan has at least a conversational grasp of the language.
    • Raylan's fluency greatly increases in the third season.

Raylan: (after a thug pulls a knife, Raylan puts his hand on his piece) Shit. I forgot my knife.

  • Dirty Coward: Dicky Bennett. SO MUCH.
  • Dirty Cop: The sheriff of Harlan County in the first season is working for the drug cartel that wants Raylan dead
    • Doyle Bennett is corrupt in all matters pertaining to his family though he is implied to be a decent sheriff otherwise. He probably would have been worse but Mags likes to keep a low profile and has her family stay out of criminal activity not related to their marijuana growing operations.
    • The new sheriff of Harlan County is also dirty and is in Quarles' pocket.
    • Out with the old, in with the new. Harlan's fourth onscreen sheriff tips off a criminal of an upcoming arrest on his first day in office.
  • Disney Villain Death: Coover when he chases Loretta to the mine shaft, leading to Raylan having to shoot him, letting him fall down the pit in Brother's Keeper.
  • Disposable Sex Worker: Quarles has a history of torturing and killing male prostitutes.
  • Dissonant Laughter: In season three, when Duffy reports to Quarles that Raylan went after their Oxy clinic, Quarles just laughs. Duffy is quite perplexed.
    • In "Slaughterhouse," Quarles emits wheezing laughter as he lies on the slaughterhouse floor bleeding, telling Raylan that it was actually Arlo who killed the trooper.
  • Damsel in Distress: Ava tends towards this.

Raylan: You do seem to have a penchant for getting abducted.

  • Domestic Abuse:
    • Ava's husband. At least, until she shot him in the heart with a hunting rifle while he was eating supper.
    • Arlo beat Raylan's mother which is another reason why Raylan despises him so.
    • The black community of Noble's Holler has always acted as a safe refuge for white women who fled their abusive husbands and boyfriends. As a side-effect Limehouse now has a network of informants throughout the area who are grateful for the kindness they and/or their mothers were shown.
  • Drink Order: Kentucky bourbon, and only Kentucky bourbon.
  • Driven to Suicide: Mags Bennett at the end of Season Two. Getting shot by the teenage girl she genuinely liked, and finding out that all her boys except Dickie are dead forces her to break out that special drinking jar of hers... the one laced with poison.
  • Drowning My Sorrows: Just about everyone gets a turn or two at this, though Raylan and Ava are particularly prone.
    • The first couple of episodes of season two showed Boyd do this in order to cope with life as a law abiding civilian as well as the guilt from his various past crimes.
  • Enforced Method Acting: While filming the pilot episode, Walt Goggins kept the various temporary racist tattoos that the character Boyd had on during the entire time he filmed the episode in order to channel the disdain he received from strangers into his performance. Timothy Olyphant was not made aware of this until filming of the pilot began, when he invited Walt out for dinner and was horrified when he saw that Walt didn't have the tattoos removed after that day's filming wrapped.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: one second season episode has a pregnant inmate escaping from her pregnancy checkup with the help of two men hired by the baby's father. She thinks they're going to hand the baby off to the father, although it turns out that the father's plan was selling the baby and killing her. One of the two, a former EMT, was unaware of the second part, and when the other guy tries to get him to cut the baby out, he goes after his compatriot with a scalpel.
    • Theo Tonin was so angered when he learned that Quarles' father was pimping him out that he arranged for 14 year-old Quarles to kill his father.
    • Duffy is clearly disgusted with Quarles' proclivity for torturing male prostitutes. In "Slaughterhouse," Duffy admits to Raylan that he was behind the tip on Brady's murder, although YMMV as to whether it was motivated by altruism. Duffy may have merely wanted Quarles arrested.
  • Evil Matriarch: If Mags Bennett didn't qualify as one before, crippling her son Coover's hand with a ball peen hammer should remove all doubt.
  • Executive Meddling: Walt Goggins was only supposed to be in the pilot and was killed off in the original script for the episode. Thankfully, once the series was picked up by FX, Goggins was signed up for the second half of the season and a new ending made showing that he survived, due to Raylan purposely missing Boyd's heart when he shot him in the chest.
  • Expy: Some fans consider Raylan to be one of Olyphant's Deadwood character.
    • Assistant Deputy Goodall is an expy of Karen Sisco, another character from Elmore Leonard novels who got a (short-lived) TV series, and was played by the same actress, Carla Gugino. In fact, as mentioned in "Cut Ties," Goodall is her married name, with no mention of her maiden name (thus potentially making it a Lawyer-Friendly Cameo). She even has a scene using the baton that Karen Sisco used in the film.
  • Failed a Spot Check:
    • Wynn Duffy in regards to Quarles, he should have searched under his sleeves....
    • Tanner Dodd fails to spot that the step stool he is about to step on is rigged with a land mine
  • Faux Affably Evil: Bo Crowder.
    • Quarles of Season 3 (the mobster from Detroit) seems to be this as well.
    • Unless you count that scene with his son on the phone, then he may be Affably Evil
  • Fearless Fool: Raylan really likes to get way over his head sometimes - he gets the shit beaten out of him twice in the series after he provokes fistfights (first with two grown men when he's drunk, the second time with Coover).
    • He does it again in season 3, this time pulling a gun on Limehouse at Noble's Holler. It doesn't take a genius to figure out this can end with a dozen shotguns pointed at you. It's probably the only time in the series so far Raylan is afraid.
    • Art pretty much expects that Raylan will get himself killed because of this.
  • Feuding Families: The Bennett-Givens feud started during Prohibition when a Bennett thought a Givens had sold him out to the cops and killed him in revenge. Almost a century later there are suspiciously few Bennetts and Givens left in Harlan County. The women of the two families had kept a truce going for the last fifteen years but over the course of the second season it begins to heat up again. It ends with all but Raylan, Arlo, Doyle's two young unseen children and Dickie dead, and the latter in prison. In the second season's final five minutes, Raylan and Mags end the feud "as it should have ended years ago," by shaking hands over glasses of Mag’s home-made moonshine with Raylan unaware that Mags has poisoned her own glass.
  • Five-Bad Band: Boyd's gang, forming towards the end of season 2.
  • Freudian Excuse: Raylan and his relationship with his crime boss father has been implied as one of the main reasons why Raylan is as tightly wound as he is.
    • Quarles' father pimped him out as a child to get money for heroin. As an adult, Quarles tortures male hustlers in a twisted attempt to process the abuse.
  • Friendly Enemy:
    • Raylan and Boyd dug coal together when they were 19. Which would make them Enemy Miners. Which would be an apt description of their situation in "Bulletville."
    • Mags and Raylan are always incredibly friendly (or failing that, respectful at least) towards each other, even at their worst. The final scene of Season Two is them sharing a drink. Raylan is unaware that Mag's has laced her own glass - and only her own glass - with poison.
  • Full-Frontal Assault: Quarles strips naked before torturing Donovan, whom he is holding captive in his bathroom. Also, while Boyd's prisoner at Audrey's, Quarles opens his robe to annoy Jimmy. After Jimmy leaves the trailer, Quarles wraps a chain around Minerva's neck and threatens to strangle her, while his robe is still open.
  • Gambit Pileup: Season 3 seems to be rapidly turning into one between Boyd, Quarles, and Limehouse all running their own agendas.
  • Generation Xerox: Like his father, Quarles is a drug addict and a man with no qualms about depravity.
  • Good Ol' Boy: A lot of the residents of Harlan County.
  • Groin Attack: When a not-that-reformed-criminal attacks Raylan with a taser, Raylan turns things around and tases him in the nuts.
  • The Gunfighter Wannabe: A few wannabe gunfighters want to test themselves against Raylan but it does not go well for them.
    • In season 3 Fletcher likes to test himself against men known for their gun skills. He places a gun on the table, has a third party count down from 10 and the person who can grab the gun the fastest gets to shoot the other guy. Fletcher cheats
  • Guns Akimbo: Both Raylan and Quarles end up dual wielding pistols but do not actually get to fire. They do it because they have to cover multiple people and have no one to watch their back.
  • The Gunslinger
  • Hanging Judge: Judge Reardon, in an, erm, Justified example. He’s famous for giving extreme sentences. He privately tells Raylan the reason is due to one of his first cases on the bench, where he gave an obviously dangerous man a light sentence due to sympathy: that man killed a six-year-old child shortly after, something that haunts Reardon still.
  • Hannibal Lecture: Donovan storms into Duffy's trailer and threatens to kill Quarles for murdering his friend Brady. Quarles talks down Donovan by telling him about how his father forced him into prostitution as a young man, and how Theo Tonin adopted him. Donovan lowers his gun, and a tearful Quarles embraces him as he starts crying. Unfortunately, we see Donovan bound and gagged in Quarles' bathroom at the end of the episode, suggesting that Quarles plans to torture and kill him just as he did Brady.
  • Heel Faith Turn: Deconstructed: while Boyd becomes a born again Christian after his near death experience, the show has taken great pains to leave viewers guessing whether or not Boyd's redemption is legit or or just him channeling his evil into less destructive outlets.
  • Hilarious Outtakes: Some for Season 2 here.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: "Ice Pick" Fletcher from "The Gunfighter" loves to play a game with his victims. He places a gun in front of them, orders a third person to count to ten, and stabs his victim in the hand when he goes for the gun. When he tries this against Raylan, he yanks the tablecloth, Fletcher gets his icepick stuck in the table, and Raylan shoots him full of holes.
  • Hookers and Blow: The local brothel has become a prime location to buy illegal drugs.
    • When Boyd captures Quarles he chains him up in a trailer and to keep him docile he provides him with a supply of pills and two hookers to keep him company
  • Ho Yay: In addition to the listings on the YMMV page, it's invoked in "Save My Love," after Raylan describes his trust/hate relationship with Boyd.

Raylan: While he has tried to kill me, and I have shot him, and imprisoned him, and I wouldn't be surprised if our paths again cross in such a manner, he has had my back on two occasions: once was the last day I was in the mine, and the other not so long ago.
Carol: My. Sounds like a love story.

  • Hypocrite: Ava. Throughout the series, Ava has struck back against abusive men, killing her abusive husband Bowman as well as Delroy. However, as a madame, she has no qualms about slapping around Ellen May when she erroneously thought Ellen May betrayed her.
  • Idiot Ball: Winona really should have know that any money stored in the evidence locker would have its serial numbers recorded specifically to catch anyone who might try to steal it.
    • Let's not even get started on Gary dealing with the Dixie Mafia not once, but twice. It was stupid enough to borrow money from a shady loanshark in the first place but at least he tried to work out a deal with the loanshark and it was Wynn Duffy who escalated things. However, dealing with Wynn Duffy AGAIN and trying to get him to kill the very man who saved your sorry butt the last time you got in trouble takes idiocy to a whole new level.
    • Arlo has a lifetime of criminal experience and knows all the players in the Harlan County criminal community really well. There is no excuse for him failing to realize that Dickie Bennett would recognize that it was Arlo who helped Boyd rob Dickie's big drug deal. Given the bloody history between the families he put himself and his wife in mortal danger.
    • However, in the scene afterward, Arlo points this out, stating that he is nervous that Dickie made him. He still does not do anything about it until it is too late.
    • Boyd did a good job capturing Quarles. Unfortunately, he had a couple of Oxycontin addicts guard him, and left a nice bottle in the room. Not to mention putting him on a "chain" long enough to strangle them with - while standing.
  • Incredibly Lame Pun: A groan worthy in Thick as Mud. Raylan and Rachel are pursuing a hospital nurse who is probably taking out kidneys from victims. Raylan calls him "Lawrence Nightingale". Rachel isn't amused by the slightest.
    • Raylan reacts poorly to an after-action report that says he "disarmed" Quarles.
  • Informed Attractiveness: Happens constantly with Ava in the first season, less so in the second one.
  • Instant Sedation: Averted when Dewey is injected with a tranquilizer in prison. The tranquizer is injected by a trained doctor directly into a blood vessel in the neck and Dewey is still able to get up an trash around the room for a while before losing consciousness.
  • Internal Affairs: After Raylan for the Miami shooting, though they quiet down after the first season.
  • In the Blood: This is a major concern for both Raylan and Boyd since they both rebel against the life of crime their families have been leading for generations. Neither wants to Turn Out Like His Father. Raylan is more successful in this than Boyd.
    • In 'Debts and Accounts' Raylan finds some peace because he realizes that he broke the law because he is in love with Winnona and not because he is an outlaw like his father. Boyd has the opposite realization and starts to rebuild the Crowder gang. He even tells Johnny:

Boyd: It's in your blood.

    • Mags seems to have genuine concern over this for her sons. She realizes Coover and Dickie are both irresponsible, irredeemable criminals, and Doyle is a corrupt cop, but she says she has hope for Doyle's sons and wishes to keep them out of the family business. Based on the events of the last episode of Season 2, this is unlikely.
  • Invulnerable Knuckles: Averted with Delroy. After Delroy beats up Ellen May, Ava notices that his knuckles are scuffed up.
  • Ironic Echo: "It was in the glass, not in the jar..."
  • Jerkass: Mags Bennett's kids, Coover in particular.
  • Jurisdiction Friction: The Marshals have very specific jurisdiction when it comes to criminal matters and Raylan tends to stretch it or just go outside it. Usually the other law enforcement agencies are fine with it since they still get credit for closing the case but in season 3 Raylan ends up in the middle of a major FBI investigation and has to lie through his teeth to justify his actions.
  • Karma Houdini: So after three seasons of being a murderer, a drug dealer, an extortionist, and a bank robber, what does Boyd Crowder get? Nothing. And after being his accomplice not to mention beating up a prostitute in a prostitution ring she now runs, what does Ava get? Nothing. Justice is served.
  • Lawyer-Friendly Cameo: Carla Gugino appeared in season 3 as a character who is clearly supposed to be Karen Sisco, the Elmore Leonard character she played in a short-lived TV series -- but due to licensing issues, the name is never mentioned (she's referred to as "Assistant Deputy Goodall," which is a married name).
  • Light Is Not Good: The fair-complexioned Quarles is a ruthless villain. Raylan once referred to him as a "big-toothed albino-looking son of a bitch." When Quarles and Duffy walked into the bar where Raylar was bouncing, the bartender said Quarles looked like an "albino deer."
  • Low Speed Chase: "Blaze of Glory" ends on one of these, between a U.S. Marshall with a bum knee and an old man dying of emphysema. The latter has taken off his oxygen tank, both because it's slowing him down and he's entertaining death as an option, and the Marshall is trying to get it back to him.
  • Mad Bomber:
    • Boyd is an explosives expert and he really enjoys himself when he gets to blow up stuff
    • Lemuel Becket might seem like a harmless grandfather but he sells black market rocket launchers and builds bombs for his customers. He even rigged his workshop with land mines in case one of his customers tries to rob him.
  • Missing Mom: Raylan's mother is dead, and buried in the front yard of his childhood home. Her grave is next to ready-and-waiting plots and already-carved headstones for him and his father. For some reason, this used to creep him out as a child.
    • In "Slaughterhouse", Quarles tells the two boys that he never got to know his mother, since she died when he was very young.
    • Although Bo was a prominent character in the first season, Boyd's mother is almost never mentioned.
  • Mistaken for An Imposter: After Dewey Crowe dresses up as Raylan to rob some criminals in "The I of the Storm":

Raylan: Deputy Marshal Raylan Givens. I'm gonna need you to stop right there, hands where I can see 'em.
Cutter: I ain't falling for that shit again! *opens fire*

  • Mob War:
    • With both Dickie Bennett and Boyd Crowder trying to gain control of the criminal underground in Harlan County things quickly descend into violent conflict.
    • The Dixie Mafia has a passing interest in the area and when Quarles takes charge they move in full force. This puts them into conflict with Boyd's new gang and things quickly turn violent.
  • Mr. Fanservice: Between the hat and the accent and the long, long legs. . . I'll be in my bunk.
    • Quarles also qualifies. Neal McDonough has a brief nude scene in "Guy Walks Into a Bar," and a shirtless scene in "Coalition."
    • Fan Service: Why hello there, Joelle Carter.
      • Not to say that Natalie Zea ain't nothing short of a looker, neither.
  • Mutual Kill: Raylan almost convinced two criminals to drop their guns and surrender to him when they realize that only one of them will be able to make a deal for immunity and the other will go to prison for a long time. They turn on each other and before Raylan can stop them, they shoot each other. One dies instantly and the other sustains a fatal wound.
  • Never Bring a Knife to a Gun Fight: Inverted to spectacular effect in the third season finale. Quarles loses his sleeve gun - and the arm it's attached to - to Limehouse's gigantic butcher knife.
  • Never Speak Ill of the Dead: Boyd. Despite Bo's countless evil actions in life, Boyd speaks of his late father respectfully. Also, Boyd spoke of the late Devil as a friend, even though he was forced to kill Devil in self-defense.
  • Nice Hat: A simply marvelous hat. The episode he loses it is even called “Hatless.”
  • No-Holds-Barred Beatdown: Boyd is on the receiving end of one in Bulletville.
  • No-Paper Future: Dewey gets a glimpse of this when he has to raise a lot of money real fast and quickly realizes that the places he is capable of robbing don't carry much cash anymore. Even a strip club does not have much cash on hand at ten in the morning.
  • Not So Different: A major theme with Raylan and Boyd.
  • The One Who Made It Out: Another major theme. Many characters dream of leaving and starting a better life somewhere else, but few follow through with it.
    • Faced with either working in the coal mine for the rest of his life or becoming a criminal like his father, Raylan Givens manages to escape Harlan and become a U.S. marshal, and is understandably irked when assigned to the Kentucky office at the beginning of the series.
    • Bowman and Ava Crowder wanted to get out of Harlan and vainly hoped that as a local football star Bowman would get a college scholarship and ultimately play professionally. After Ava kills Bowman she has a chance to leave Kentucky but decides to stay.
    • Mags Bennet's main motivation is providing her grandchildren with the opportunity to go to college and get away from the criminal life she and her sons are living. Even she later gives up on the latter.
  • Only a Flesh Wound: Generally averted though some Made of Iron characters should take more damage.
    • Arlo gets shot in the leg in each season and takes some time to recover from each wound
    • Boyd survives being shot in the pilot episode but is in the hospital for a long time. While Raylan might not have actually wanted to kill him, he still shot for the center of mass and did not try any fancy shoulder or hand shots. Boyd is simply lucky to have survived.
    • This is played straight at the end of "Bloody Harlan" only to be then subverted in the following episode. After being shot, Raylan should be on his way to a hospital rather than walking and talking to people. However, three weeks later he is shown to be still in a lot of pain from the wound, restricted to desk duty and unable to perform his usual Quick Draw and Improbable Aiming Skills feats
  • Organ Theft: In season 3 a group of criminals sell organs on the black market. However, they primarily harvest the organs from the recent corpses of convicts who died in prison rather than then by stealing them from living people. They have access to the prisoner's medical records and use people trained in this type of operation. The one time they operate on a live person it is a ruse to make the victim think that they took his kidneys so he steal for them. All they did was make a couple cuts and sutured them up
  • Outside Context Villain: Quarles initially appears as this with his big plans and the ability to turn people like Wynn Duffy and Devil to be his accomplises. However, both Raylan and Boyd quickly figure out what type of villian he is and invert the trope on him revealing him to be too Wrong Genre Savvy to understand how they are beating him.
  • Perfect Poison: The unidentified poison that Mags puts in her "special" cider glass, which kills in a few minutes or less. Even the Medical Examiner is unable to identify its presence in a man killed by it, although the corpse in question has had time to decompose.
  • Pretty Little Headshots: Played straight Season 2 Ep 2, and horribly subverted in Season 2 Ep 3.
  • Quick Draw:
    • Raylan combines this with Improbable Aiming Skills. Subverted in the beginning of season 3 when his injuries wound make it impossible for him to quickly draw his gun
    • Quarles uses a spring-loaded sleeve gun device to quickly get his gun and shoot people before they realize what is happening.
  • Rape as Backstory: Quarles' father pimped him out as a child to get money for heroin. Quarles also has a history of violence against male hustlers which has strong sexual overtones.
  • Rape as Drama: Heavily implied with Quarles but not shown on screen. Several episodes in season three either show or make reference to Brady, naked and bound to a bed in Quarles' house. In "Guy Walks into a Bar," Quarles strips naked and walks into a bathroom where Donovan is bound and gagged, strongly suggesting that Quarles has sexual violence in mind.
    • In "Slaughterhouse," Duffy tells Raylan that Quarles has a thing for young boys, again strongly suggesting that Quarles sexually abuses his captives.
  • "The Reason You Suck" Speech: Raylan delivers an amazing one to Dickie Bennett before shooting him and hauling him back to jail for breaking into Loretta's place to find Mags's money banked with Limehouse.
  • Redemption Failure: Boyd Crowder tries to go straight but circumstances keep pointing him back toward a life of crime.
  • Refuge in Audacity: Raylan falls into it with his stunts. Once, a bullet with his finger prints on is found at a crime scene - he explains that the likely perpetrator could leave the bullet there, since during their previous meeting, Raylan dropped it onto him and said that the next one is going to be a lot faster. Even the pretty hostile investigator on the case calls it the most awesome thing he ever heard.
  • Rousing Speech: Boyd gives one against the sheriff in Quarles' employ during a town hall meeting and it's quite effective. People in Harlan have very long memories when it comes to their struggle against the coal mines and Boyd knows perfectly how to tap into that sentiment.
  • Sadistic Choice: If you work for Limehouse and you fail him, you either risk losing the flesh in your hand, or walk away promising to never fail him again, or else....
  • Salt and Pepper: Though a subversion, this occurs whenever Raylan and Rachel work together, especially seen in "Long in the Tooth" where they discuss their differences outright. Raylan tends to be the laidback one while Rachel is more strict.
  • Scary Black Man: Limehouse might not look particularly scary but his methods and the way he talks are terrifying.
  • "Seen It All" Suicide / Driven to Suicide: Surprisingly, Mags.
  • Self-Made Orphan: When Theo learned that young Quarles was being sexually abused, he arranged for 14 year-old Quarles to kill his father. Afterwards, Theo adopted Quarles as a son.
  • Sharp-Dressed Man: Quarles, contrasting heavily with the more simple dressed criminals from Harlan.
  • Ship Sinking: Raylan/Ava, as season two has paired Ava up with Boyd while moving Raylan and Winona (his ex-wife) to the verge of reconciliation.
    • Raylan and Winona have been sunk yet again midway through Season 3, but since she's having his baby, only time will tell if it's going to stick this time.
  • Shirtless Scene:

Art: "Are you cold standing out here?"
Raylan: "Why?"
Art: "Because I can't keep from staring at your nipples."

  • A Simple Plan: Most of the criminals we meet are convinced their plans can go off without a hitch. Boyd seems to be the only one who knows better...
  • Small Town Boredom: A lot of characters seem to suffer from this.
  • Social Services Does Not Exist: Averted with Loretta, who is placed in foster care after her father's death. Played straight with Noble's Holler, where battered women have sought refuge for generations in the absence of regional domestic violence centers.
  • Southern Hospitality: Raylan may shoot you, but he'll still be polite. Many residents of Harlan County operate on the same principle, most notably Mags.
  • Stupid Crooks: One of the show's biggest draws is watching a hyper-competent cop dealing with amateur, dumbass criminals that sometimes reach Fargo-levels of stupidity. It contrasts greatly with people that completely avert this trope - Limehouse, the Crowders, the Bennetts or the Dixie Mafia.
  • Talkative Loon: After going off his medication, Arlo storms into Noble's Holler, talking to himself in a deranged manner.
    • At the end of "Guy Walks into a Bar", Quarles is talking to himself in an agitated, disorganized manner as he snorts drugs and disrobes.

Quarles: When people will conspire to keep you down, you will reach for the edge. They will lean the heel of their boots on your fingers and you just keep fighting, scratching and pulling. And just when you think you've reached the top of the mountain they changed the rules. So what do you do? You don't quit. You don't run. You don't stick that gun in the back of your throat. You realize that you're wrong. You're wrong in thinking that you had already won. True victory is when you crush your opponent so completely that he realizes he was wrong in opposing you from the beginning. You claw your way back into the fight. And you stand atop the mountain.

  • Tampering with Food and Drink: Mags has a "special" cider glass tainted with deadly poison, which she uses to kill in the first episode of season 2.
  • Those Wacky Neo-Nazis: Boyd's little band of misfits from the first episode.
  • Throw It In: Raylan's accusation that Boyd wasn't really racist and was simply a con man who was pretending to be racist in order to gain flunkies was not in the original script for the pilot. It was added on the fly by Olyphant after talking to Walt Goggins and seeing how he was struggling with the racist monologue he had to recite during their characters first meeting in the pilot.
  • Token Minority: Rachel Brooks. A twofer if you count women as a minority, which, in law enforcement, they are.
  • Too Dumb to Live: Dewey certainly qualifies and it constantly amazes Raylan and Boyd that he is still alive.
    • The three robbers who want Boyd's help in causing a mine cave-in to cover up their robbery of the payroll also qualify since they fully intend to double cross him afterwards. They obviously Did Not Do Research since they did not know what happened to other people who crossed Boyd.
    • Coover Bennett lacks the criminal smarts of his mother and brothers and makes so many blunders that his mother decides to punish him by breaking his hand with a hammer. After helping them dispose of a dead body he starts cashing in the dead man's government checks and wears a watch he took from the corpse in front of the man's daughter. He dies because of this.
    • Dickie Bennett, meanwhile, thinks it's a good idea to restart the Bennett-Givens feud over Raylan killing Coover and start a new one with Boyd Crowder for control of the Harlan County underworld at the same time. In both cases he is defying the direct orders of his mother and, not content to merely defy Mags, he also implies that he has her blessing in what he's doing. All of this is after he thought it would be a good idea to steal a shipment of oxycontin from the Dixie Mafia, and only by the grace of God and Raylan Givens was he spared the wrath of Wynn Duffy for it.
    • Gary Hawkins qualifies for hiring Wynn Duffy and the Dixie Mafia to kill Raylan. If Raylan hadn't stepped in, Duffy was going to kill Gary for being a loose end that needed tying up. Given his past experience with Duffy, Gary has absolutely no excuse for not knowing better than to have anything to do with them.
    • Fletcher Nix apparently never considered that attempting his quick-draw trick on someone who he knows has been investigating his crime scenes might backfire.
    • Devil. In spades. He knows how brutal and cutthroat Boyd is yet still thinks it's a good idea to try and turn on him for control of crime in Harlan. Predictably, Boyd kills him.
      • He proves himself particularly incapable by putting together a plan that consists of recruiting Boyd's own cousin and then sitting down at a kitchen table with Boyd and telling him that he's about to kill him. Even if Johnny goes along, what are the chances that Boyd doesn't just shoot them first?
    • Tanner Dodd thought it would be a good idea to rob a paranoid bomb maker and failed to check for booby traps before trying to retrieve the money.
  • Trademark Favorite Food: It's a bit too early to tell, but Raylan does seem awful fond of ice cream. To the extent that he once tracked down a fugitive, then left him to his own devices while he went next door to Baskin-Robbins. In his defense, he had gotten said fugitive's word that he'd stay put. He didn't.
    • It's not too early: in the novels Raylan still loves his ice cream cones.
    • Let's not forget the fried chicken!
    • We learn in "Slaughterhouse" that Errol loves Limehouse' marinated pork tongue.
  • Tranquil Fury: Raylan, in the first scene of the show, threatens, shoots, and kills a Complete Monster mobster with serene equanimity.
    • And again after his father betrays him and had planned to shoot him and hand him off to the Miami goons and has the nerve to call him "son".

Raylan: Don't. Don't you call me that.

    • Lampshaded at the end of the first episode with Raylan's ex-wife's speech to him.

Winona: Oh Raylan. You do a good job of hiding it, and suppose most folks don't see it, but honestly, you're the angriest man I've ever known.
Raylan: simply looks stunned

    • Mags Bennett is also shown to be capable of this, and thanks to exceptional acting by Margo Martindale, it is terrifying.
  • True Companions: Boyd's gang. Boyd and Ava deeply love each other, and Boyd sees Arlo as a father figure. Arlo also sees Boyd as a son, taking the fall for killing Devil in "Slaughterhouse.
    • Subverted with Johnny, who turns out to be a traitor at the end of "Slaughterhouse.
  • The Unfavorite: Coover. Becomes clear in "For Blood or Money" when Mags breaks his hand with a hammer as punishment to Dickie. This is the focus of a large portion of the episode "Brother's Keeper" in which he is openly insulted by his mother in the opening scene. Then later in the episode he snaps when Dickie taunts him on this subject, and chases Loretta to the mineshaft, where he is shot by Raylan. Even after Coover's death, Mags' only concern is that she will lose Loretta.
    • Dickie becomes this to Mags after Coover's death. She feels that he betrayed the family and cuts him out of the money they are getting from the mining company. She gives him control of the marijuana business as consolation but promises control of all other criminal activities to Boyd Crowder.
      • At the end of "Bloody Harlan" Mags finds out that Dickie is alive and under arrest but instead of trying to help him, she chooses her other sons over him even though they are dead. She kills herself to be with them again.
      • Best summed up by Mags' reaction to the news of the climax. Raylan walks into her house and tells her Doyle is dead. Mags says "Doyle?" and her disappointment is very evident.
      • Compounded the next season when Dickie looks for the money from the sale and is given a cooler with a few hundred dollars and a bundle of receipts. Mags had millions given to Loretta
  • Urban Legend:
    • Raylan is investigating a group of criminals engaged in Organ Theft and people don't take it seriously because they know that the stories of people waking up in a bathtub missing a kidney are just an urban legend. The criminals in question use much more realistic methods.
    • The story of Limehouse hiding his money under the floor of the Noble's Holler church has been told and retold so many times that it reached the status of an urban legend in Harlan County. The Genre Savvy Limehouse might actually hide money there from time to time since no one believes the story anymore.
  • Vigilante Man: Boyd.

Art: "Maybe he's become some kind of vigilante."
Raylan: "Maybe he's Batman."

  • Villainous Breakdown: Dickie has been trying from the beginning to be the Big Bad but it's all for nothing when he breaks down sobbing and begging for his life when Raylan drags him out into the woods to die. Lucky for him, Raylan's conscience wouldn't let him do it. He does it again in the season finale when faced with an enraged Boyd seeking revenge for Dickie shooting Ava and begs Raylan, whom he has just been beating with a baseball bat no less, to stop him. What a bitch.
    • Robert Quarles seems to be starting one; he doesn't take it well when Boyd and then Raylan refuse his offers to work for him. When Raylan has his house seized and convinces his boss's son to cut off Quarles's money, he finally loses his cool and starts smashing things. Then he goes to Tulsa.
      • By the end of season three, Quarles has degenerated into a pathetic, desperate man in the throes of Oxycontin withdrawal. Friendless and emotionally agitated, he screams into his cell phone at Theo Tonin. "Slaughterhouse" shows him struggling to find enough money to pacify Theo. He carjacks a mother and her two sons, using the boys as hostages in an ill-conceived gambit to get $500,000 from Limehouse. It fails spectacularly.
  • Villainous Rescue: In "Bloody Harlan" Raylan is saved from getting beaten up by Dickie by a very, very pissed Boyd Crowder.
    • Speaking of Dickie, he gets saved from a couple of robbers by Limehouse.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: Boyd & Raylan, clearly.
  • Vote Early, Vote Often: Rigging an election in Harlan County is a complicated process since the residents are actually quite savvy to the usual tricks and tend to be swayed by populist rhetoric.

Boyd: "Harlan County elections ain't over till the dead have voted"

  • Wag the Director: Walt Goggins was able to score considerable creative control over his character Boyd, when the show's producers asked him if he would sign on for season one after filming the pilot. In particular, the character's transformation into a repentant Born-Again Christian was Walt's idea (along with the notion that Raylan would not believe that Boyd had reformed).
    • Some of the wagging may have been on Timothy Olyphant's part, considering that according to Goggins, he himself initially turned-down the role. He only agreed to take it after Olyphant sweet-talked him into it and came up with some major revisions to the character.
  • Weapon of Choice: Boyd loves his rocket launchers.
    • And Ava seems fond of her double barrel shotgun.
    • Quarles' sleeve gun also counts.
  • "Well Done, Son" Guy: Coover seems to suffer from an equivalent of this towards his mother.
    • The other Bennett brothers also suffer from this. Dickie seems to be the only one who stands up to Mags but in the end he just wants her approval and love. Doyle gets his mother's approval but this may be because he always takes her side and she in return tends to favour him and his children.
    • Doyle seems to be very similar in character to Dickie but in order to gain his mother's approval he suppresses his own feelings and urges. He wants Raylan dead as much as Dickie but will not follow up on it since his mother wants to keep peace.
    • The season 3 finale touches that with Raylan Givens himself. It's hammered home when Arlo confesses to killing a "man in the hat" (a state trooper, but he didn't know that) to protect Boyd.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: Boyd seems to be heading in this direction. Assuming he doesn't relapse back into villainy.
    • In season two there is a group targeting the mining company. Their lawsuit against the company is not going well so they decide to kill the company executive in charge and the judge.
  • The Western: A modern version.
  • What Could Have Been: According to the DVD for the season one finale, the original plan for the finale would have been for Boyd to visit the family of the white supremacist recruit that he murdered in the pilot in order to try and offer some form of restitution for the man's death. Raylan would trail him to Oklahoma in hopes of getting the family to help him trick Boyd into confessing to murder. Unfortunately for both, the family turns on both of them and tries (unsuccessfully) to kill them... with chainsaws.
  • US Marshal
  • We Want Our Jerk Back: Subverted: Boyd gets this a lot from his minion, when he renounced white supremacy (a philosophy he used solely to recruit his underlings). When called out on it, Boyd basically admits that he's not going back as far as outgrowing such atrocious behavior and just wants to be a straight-forward head of a crime syndicate like his dad.
  • You Have Outlived Your Usefulness:
    • Three criminals try to pull this on Boyd after he helps them rob the mine payroll and blow the mine up as a diversion. They get blown up instead
    • Arnett hadn't been making enough money on his properties for the Detroit mob so they send Quarles to Kentucky. Quarles gets Arnett's assistant to give Raylan information about Arnett's meeting with Fletcher. When subsequently Fletcher does not show up, Quarles shoots Arnett since he is no longer useful to mob. He then proceeds to shoot the assistant as well since he has no further need for her. This all happens in less than a minute and the suddenness and brutality of it cowed Wynn Duffy into submission.
  • You Wouldn't Shoot Me: Mags tells this to Loretta when she shows up at her house to kill her. She ends up getting shot in the leg.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: After Ralyan and Art rescue Donovan from captivity in Quarles' hotel room, we never hear about him again. Did he ever tell law enforcement about Quarles torturing him and holding him captive? Was he too afraid to talk to law enforcement? Where did he go? We never find out.
    • Quarles tells Gary that he has two children. When his family tries to reach him on his cell phone, we see a photo of Quarles' wife with two children. However, Quarles only ever talks about his son. Where is the daughter?