What that last-minute Justified: City Primeval plot twist means for the future of the series

Oh, you bet we’re talking about the Justified: City Primeval finale.

U.S. Marshall Raylan Givens might have left Harlan alive by the end of Justified, but it looks like Harlan might not quite be done with him yet.

Everyone’s favorite Kentucky-born lawman got a jolt at the end of Justified: City Primeval, this summer’s FX limited series that saw Timothy Olyphant return as Givens and plopped right into a Detroit-set crime thriller based on Elmore Leonard’s City Primeval novel.

While (spoiler alert) Givens lived to tell another tale by dispatching his latest foe Clement “The Oklahoma Wildman” Mansell up in Detroit and returned to Miami for a seemingly serene retirement, the series’ epilogue hinted that Givens’ Marshall days might not be over.

More: Ranking Raylan Givens’ top Justified villains ahead of City Primeval premiere

Out of nowhere, the show cuts to a Kentucky penitentiary where none other than original series lead Boyd Crowder (Walton Goggins), Givens’ ultimate rival, has broken out of prison with the help of a romantically invested guard (Ahna O’Reilly).

Yes, Crowder is officially on the run and is apparently heading to Mexico, and the last shot we see is Givens weighing whether or not to answer a call from the Lexington, Kentucky, U.S. Marshall’s office about Crowder’s escape.

The end of one limited series begs the question of a returning one: will we get another season of Justified with Givens intermingling himself in Crowder’s jaunt to Mexico? Could we really see an actual Justified revival?

Speaking with The Hollywood Reporter, Olyphan said that he wanted to make sure the big reveal would work because you just can’t bring Boyd Crowder back haphazardly.

“You don’t want the audience to feel [cheated], that they wanted to watch a whole season of that: ‘You put us through seven episodes to get to five minutes of Boyd?’” Olyphant told THR. “That was my one cautionary take. If we’re going to do this, we have to put more of ourselves into the rest of the show. We have to feel like the ending of this chapter would have been satisfying.”

How about that reunion between Raylan and Boyd? Olyphant sounds like he’s more than game to return and bring along some of the Justified: City Primeval characters with him.

“I can only tell you from my point of view, that if we are so lucky to get to do more, I feel like we could bring any cast member back from either incarnation of the show,” Olyphant said. “The world expanded. The writers deserve a tremendous amount of credit for taking this big swing.”

While nothing is set in stone, it does seem very possible that the old Justified crew might be getting the band back together for a new adventure somewhere down the road. It just depends on if FX is willing to greenlight more.

Ranking Raylan Givens’ top Justified villains ahead of City Primeval premiere

It’s a battle between two absolute legends for the top spot.

Over six seasons, deputy U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens made a lot of enemies. Some of them popped up for a single episode of Justified and were scattered to the wind. Others stuck around and wove themselves into the fabric of the show.

With Timothy Olyphant set to make his return in Justified: City Primeval, it’s as good a time as any to reflect on that lineup of villains who operated beneath Givens’ standard of the law and, for the most part, wound up shot. Justified evolved from a potential weekly procedural into an overarching story that took years to tell. And on the way, no shortage of brutes and scofflaws — both complex and one-dimensional — vied to control the criminal element of Harlan County, Kentucky.

So let’s talk about the bad guys.

This is an effort to rank the most memorable villains across six seasons of Justified. In order to qualify for the list, antagonists had to be both a threat to Givens and have an arc that spanned multiple episodes. Sorry, fedora/ice-pick guy, you’re out.

Characters are ranked by their overall threat to Givens with a large emphasis on how compelling they were to watch each Wednesday night. Nicky Augustine may have had access to Givens’ family, for example, but I doubt anyone was that consumed by a former Nickelodeon host as a crime lord.

Keep in mind the baseline here is pretty high. Almost everyone made for a great multiple-episode foil to Raylan Givens.

Except for Michael Rapaport, the world’s least convincing Floridian.