Women Are the Ones Who Knock on ‘Ozark’ (2024)

As Netflix continued expanding its library of original programming, the 2017 debut of Ozark followed in the footsteps of House of Cards and checked off an essential box for the streamer: the antihero drama. The series premiere finds mild-mannered accountant Marty Byrde (Jason Bateman) staring down the barrel of a gun after his business partner is caught skimming money off a Mexican drug cartel, and then saving his own life by proposing a money laundering operation in the Lake of the Ozarks. And so Marty uproots his family from Chicago to Missouri, where he soons discovers that an act borne out of self-preservation might actually be a secret calling: Turns out, he enjoys breaking bad—pun very much intended.

In the Mount Rushmore of television’s male antiheroes—Tony Soprano, Walter White, Omar Little, Don Draper—Marty’s amoral trajectory most closely resembles that of Heisenberg. But while Ozark shares plenty of surface-level similarities with Breaking Bad, the show adds its own unique touches. For starters, Marty’s wife Wendy (Laura Linney) becomes complicit to the money laundering scheme from the jump, and it takes all but three episodes before their kids, Charlotte (Sofia Hublitz) and Jonah (Skylar Gaertner), are let in on the secret. It’s not exactly smooth sailing, but the Byrdes adjust to their new normal. The family that launders money together, stays together.


But one other tweak to the formula is what truly separates Ozark from Breaking Bad, and the antihero subgenre as a whole. Even though Marty proves to be resourceful, he’s mostly content to just run the numbers. The Byrde patriarch isn’t anyone’s idea of a good person, but he also isn’t getting his own hands dirty. Instead, the compellingly corrupted soul of Ozark is Wendy, whose Lady Macbeth act becomes more gripping—and reprehensible—with each season.

Far from being horrified by Marty’s actions in working for a cartel, Wendy becomes the public face of their operation and all that it entails. With a background in Chicago politics, she transforms the legitimate side of the business, including a riverboat casino, into a reputable local institution before forming a political foundation in the family’s name. Wendy’s big-picture view is using the capital from money laundering to influence national politics, but the character’s justification that doing the wrong thing now will lead to the right outcome down the road conceals an insatiable craving for power at any cost. Wendy has signed off on multiple assassinations in the series—including against her own brother, Ben (Tom Pelphrey), marking a harrowing point of no return. Ozark might’ve begun with Marty as its Walter White analogue, but heading into its endgame, Wendy is the one who knocks.

Subversion has long been a characteristic of the antihero drama, and by giving female characters like Wendy a spotlight historically reserved for men, Ozark is subverting the genre itself. That storytelling choice extends to the series’ answer to Jesse Pinkman. Upon arriving in the Ozarks, the Byrdes cross paths with Ruth Langmore (Julia Garner), a local whose family is routinely mixed up in petty crimes. But Marty sees potential in Ruth, taking her under his wing and showing her, if not a better way of living, then a more forward-thinking life of crime. The series’ X factor and undisputed MVP, Ruth’s unassuming appearance—she’s short, baby-faced, and sports curly blonde hair—belies an explosive temper and arguably the foulest mouth on television. But what has made the character truly resonate is the fact that beneath her profane bark, Ruth is extremely intelligent—her anger stems in part from knowing that she’s been dealt a poor hand in life—and in her own way, full of empathy. Ruth is fiercely protective of her comparatively innocent cousins and sees the good in people even if they can’t see it themselves—including Ben, whom she falls in love with in Season 3 before Wendy has him killed. Of Ozark’s three Primetime Emmy wins, two belong to Garner for her breakout performance, and it wouldn’t be surprising if she added a third for herself later in the year.

While Marty remains a central figure in Ozark’s final season, Wendy and Ruth continue to occupy the show’s most fascinating real estate. Following the revelation of Ben’s death—and Ruth, iconically, referring to Wendy as a “f*cking bitch wolf”—Marty’s former protégé has decided to forge her own path by teaming up with local heroin producer Darlene Snell (Lisa Emery). (Darlene is yet another example of Ozark’s uniting philosophy—a secondary villain also happens to be a woman, and who seizes control of a drug empire by poisoning her husband for being too soft.) But switching jobs isn’t liable to end well when your old employer is a cartel, and one of the people standing in your way was willing to kill her own brother.

The ongoing tension between Wendy and Ruth—and the other characters needing to choose their allegiances—has propelled Ozark to thrilling new heights as it enters the first half of its fourth and final season. Without future seasons to worry about, it feels like anybody could end up in a body bag—or, more likely given that the Byrdes own a funeral home, tossed in a crematorium to avoid an evidence trail. (This is not a joke: For the second year in a row, the only spoiler note Netflix gave out for press was to not reveal “all character deaths.”)

Marty’s passive attitude—or at best, apathy—to the ugliest aspects of his family’s line of work underlines the series’ uniqueness. Historically, audiences have had a prickly (and at times toxic) relationship with certain female characters in antihero dramas, primarily for the “crime” of reacting like any rational person would after discovering that their husband was, say, cooking meth. But Ozark flips the script by not just making sure that female characters aren’t overlooked, but by largely having them be responsible for the shocking narrative developments that make these kinds of dramas so irresistible to watch.

Of course, the life-or-death stakes in Ozark’s final season will seem quite familiar for television viewers with even a passing knowledge of The Sopranos or The Wire. But by embracing complex, morally conflicted female characters in various positions of power, Ozark has forced the antihero drama to evolve. There’s no reason why breaking bad should be a boy’s club—not when standout characters like Wendy Byrde and Ruth Langmore are just as willing to scheme, shout, and kill their way to the top.

Women Are the Ones Who Knock on ‘Ozark’ (2024)

FAQs

Was Wendy cheating on Marty? ›

Background. In Season 1, Marty and Wendy's relationship is strained as he has found out that she is cheating on him through a private investigator. They decide to stay together for the kids and Wendy helps Marty pack up everything overnight to move to the Ozarks after the cartel's threats.

Who is the woman Ruth visits in Ozark? ›

This person she goes to visit, now working in sunny Miami, is Rachel Garrison. Rachel was a key character in the first two seasons of Ozark, but hasn't been seen or mentioned in the years since.

Who is the owner of the blue cat in Ozark? ›

Rachel Garrison (portrayed by Jordana Spiro; main: seasons 1-2; recurring: season 4) is the owner of the Blue Cat hotel and bar and Marty's reluctant business partner.

Who is the female character in Ozark? ›

Beginning in 2017, Garner starred as Ruth Langmore in the Netflix crime drama series Ozark, opposite Jason Bateman and Laura Linney.

Why does Marty still love Wendy? ›

Marty's core belief is that he always puts his family first. He forgives Wendy's infidelity in the first season for the sake of his children. He's worked to ensure they stay a united front, even when Wendy goes off the rails and does what she wants behind his back.

Does Wendy sleep with Wilkes? ›

It's revealing, then, that sleeping with Wilkes in order to persuade him to use his leverage against a recalcitrant state senator is the thing that stops Wendy Byrde short, though whether it reveals more about the Byrdes or about the real people writing this show is open to debate.

Why did Ozarks end like that? ›

The final shot of the series has spawned debate on whether Jonah killed his parents along with the private investigator. Mundy clarifies that Jonah murdering a law enforcement agent was in fact the Byrdes' final punishment and the cinch to the Byrdes' curse.

Who kills Ruth in Ozark? ›

The scene in which Ruth dies—shot by Javi's mother Camila (Veronica Falcon)—was the final scene that the Ozark cast and crew filmed in the series. “It was really emotional, but everyone was there,” says Garner. “It meant a lot to me that Jason was directing it, because he started the show and he ended it.

Is Ozark based on a true story? ›

Ozark is pure fiction, but award-winning journalist Sam Quinones knows there's nothing fake about the drug cartels. He's been reporting on them for almost 20 years. “I didn't mean to be doing this this long, honestly,” he shares. “One story leads to another.”

How much does Julia Garner make per episode of Ozark? ›

Word on the street is that she made about the same amount per episode as her costars, Jason Bateman and Laura Linney, and according to Variety, both stars made a cool $300,000...per episode! So if we want to do that math, we're looking at at least $13.2 million for all four seasons of Ozark.

Who is the bad lady in Ozark? ›

Darlene Snell is the secondary antagonist of the Netflix series, Ozark, serving as one of the two secondary antagonists of Season 1 (alongside Jacob Snell), one of the two main antagonists of Season 2 (again alongside Jacob Snell), the secondary antagonist of Season 3, the central antagonist of first half and the ...

Did Cade abuse Ruth? ›

The programme-makers haven't explicitly made clear if there was any abuse but there are some hints including the way in which she flinches in season two as Cade walks into her bedroom while she's getting dressed. Or the instance with the prostitute, whereby Ruth procures a young hooker for Cade.

Who sent Marty the video of Wendy cheating? ›

Back in season one, Marty discovered his wife had been having an affair after he got a private investigator to spy on her. The private investigator sent a video showing Wendy having sex with her lover Gary “Sugarwood” Silverberg (Bruce Altman).

Was Marty cheating on his wife? ›

He carries on an affair with a stenographer named Lisa which he claims is a "release" that is necessary before going home to his wife and kids. Marty is a misogynist and quick to anger and occasionally violence. He feels an ownership over women.

Was Wendy abused by her father in Ozark? ›

Nathan is Wendy's alcoholic and abusive father, whom she left many years before. After his son, Ben, goes missing, Nathan goes to the Ozarks with his church group looking for answers.

Do Marty and Wendy end up together? ›

Marty and Wendy, Still Together

It seemed possible that Marty might leave Wendy or become collateral damage in her quest. But Mundy says the couple was just really testing the bounds of their marriage.

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