The distinctive ethics behind active and passive euthanasia within English law are also relevant. So there would be a voluntary presumption where Mary as an adult would be obligated to provide care and protection for her father. While the failure to act does not usually result in criminal liability, exceptions arise in situations such as a special relationship – e.g. Now I have an excuse to whip out stuff I learned during my law degree. Let’s assume this takes place in England (which it does). It turns out that Mary was fully aware that her father’s plans would likely result in his death, yet she didn’t go about stopping him. The Whydunnit was a really nice way to wrap up the episode. Still, who could have guessed that the Fargo patriarch was very much alive, only that his attempt to achieve immortality had gone horrifically wrong, leaving him in a vile state of undeath? We even got a deliciously animated fight scene between Gray and Mr Fargo’s corrupted soul, with the beautiful quality to match Ufotable’s work on the Fate franchise. Though congratulations if you did manage to guess it from the get go. For that reason, I thought the mystery premise was excellently constructed. They truly hid things under wraps, and I personally didn’t piece the mystery together right until the very moments leading up to Waver’s ultimate reveal. And the twist where Alec brutally died took me back to the drawing board. At times, I even wondered if all four parties had colluded in Mr Fargo’s death. Fortunately, the rabbit hole went much further than that. To be honest, when Mr Li first appeared on the screen, I was expecting things to play out like a Chinese villain cliché.