Tag Archive: Coen brothers


CHANNEL FOUR IN UTOPIA

Jessica Hyde (Fiona O’Shaughnessy) is a blast in Utopia

There are plenty of things to admire in Channel 4’s slick new drama Utopia written by Dennis Kelly. I won’t attempt a plot summary; suffice to say it involves a ‘MacGuffin‘ of global proportions and plenty of fuel for conspiracy theorists everywhere.

Episode 1 opened with two cold-blooded killers in a comic shop and closed with a gruesome torture scene. This level of brutality will put off the squeamish but this is really nothing we haven’t seen in any Tarantino movie or in The Coen Brothers’ No Country For Old Men. I don’t really see what all the fuss it about. It’s shocking, of course, but that’s the nature of violence whether on or off-screen. If it’s right for the story, and it is here, then it is justified. Continue reading

SOMETHING MORE THAN NIGHT

HE WALKED BY NIGHT  directed by Alfred Werker (USA, 1948)

walk“The streets were dark with something more than night”, wrote Raymond Chandler in the introduction to his short story collection, Trouble Is My Business.

This could be the tag line for practically any of the American Noir movies of the 40s and 50s.

In these films, the criminals and killers lurk in the shadows pursued by upright, squeaky clean agents of the law.

The good versus evil is literally represented in black and white terms with a moralising tone that often makes the films quaint and faintly comical. They are a far cry from the many shades of grey in today’s cynical police procedurals. Continue reading

2011 IN REVIEW : MOVIES

I had fun compiling a list of best British cult movies but putting together a year’s best of list is a taller order as I don’t actually go the cinema that much these days.

I tend to be a little over dependent on DVDs and downloads which often means I miss stuff or see things late.

I just about managed to put together a top ten, however, although keen-eyed buffs will note that some of these were actually released in 2010.

1. Tree of Life. 

Terrence Malick’s epic was panned by some and booed at Cannes but for ambition, scope and sheer beauty movie experiences don’t come much better than this. Continue reading

THE DUDE ON A HORSE

The Dude as The Duke

When I heard that The Coen Brothers were doing a remake of the John Wayne classic True Grit, my first reaction was “I’ve got a bad feeling about this” ( to coin the catchphrase of Bollo The Gorilla from The Mighty Boosh)

This trepidation was based on the fact that my least favourite Coens film to date is The Ladykillers which was a pale imitation of the original Ealing Comedy with Tom Hanks hamming up the role immortalised by Sir Alec Guinness.

But after learning that Jeff Bridges  was taking the Wayne part of Rooster Cogburn I started to come around to the idea.

Continue reading

A SERIOUS MAN

Jews are just like everybody else. Only more so.”- Dorothy Parker

What’s great about The Coen Brothers is that they never repeat themselves or pander to popular taste. They make movies they want to and are not afraid to mystify their audience. This is not done with any arty farty pretentiousness but out of a realisation that life doesn’t provide the easy solutions or self contained narratives that more mainstream cinema presents.

After their star-studded comedy ‘Burn After Reading’, the easy option would have been to repeat the anarchic slapstick formula and laugh all the way to the bank. The Coens preserve their reputation for independence, innovation and all round strangeness with their latest movie ‘A Serious Man’.

Set in 1967 in the American mid-west, it centres on the Jewish subculture which has obvious connections with the Coens own upbringing. Although their own father – like the main character- was a University professor Ethan & Joel deny that it is intended as an autobiographical film. And as the disclaimer indicates  (“No Jews were harmed in the making of this motion picture”), it is an affectionate portrayal of this largely hidden community.

The movie is deliberately un-star-studded as it features a largely unknown cast. At its centre is Michael Stuhlbarg as Larry Gobnik, a physics professor, who encounters a catalogue of mishaps that turn his safe suburban existence upside down.

We first see him having a medical check up after which he is told he has no health worries. Later he receives a phone message from the doctor which refers to ‘unjust results’.  As the Kaftaesque series of minor catastrophes mount up, he becomes increasingly desperate. His domestic and professional life begins to fall apart and his attempts to get help from a legal advisors and rabbis fail to provide a solution.

His life could be seen as a metaphor for an unjust fate. Believers might argue that this was some sort of penance for past sins committed but it really just shows that however righteous and unselfish you are, terrible, tragic things can befall you anyway.

His increasingly desperate cry is “I haven’t done anything” and it is far from clear how we, the viewers, can interpret his plight. Is it the wrath of God or simply the consequence of his being a man incapable of overcoming setbacks?

Also, what are we supposed to make of the opening scene (in Yiddish) in which a wife suspects the man her husband has befriended is a dybbuk (a malevolent ghost) and plunges a screwdriver into his chest to prove her point?  The Coen Brothers, in typically enigmatic fashion, have said that they chose this scene not because it had any link with what followed but because it set the right tone.

What’s the message behind a Rabbi’s tale of a Jewish dentist who discovers the message ‘save me’ written on the teeth of a non Hebrew patient?

Like the God Larry appeals to, there are many questions and no answers. The sum total of the advice he receives is to let the mystery be and try to get a sense of perspective is.

This great movie is further proof (as if you needed it) that The Coen Brothers stand head and shoulders above other film makers working today.