Coen Brother Movies: From Worst To Best

Coen Brother Movies - From Worst To Best

With ‘Hail, Caesar!’ the Coen Brothers (Joel, 1954, and Ethan, 1957) have delivered their 17th film in 32 years (‘Blood Simple’ arrived in 1984). While certainly not their best it’s got plenty to enjoy. There is not much story to speak off, but the long film production sequences at the fictional Capitol Pictures (featured also in ‘Barton Fink’) offer plenty of fun. Then there’s the cast… Clooney is great as moviestar Baird Whitlock, and Josh Brolin is solid in the lead. Only Scarlett Johansson still can’t act. Yes, the camera does love her, but I just never believe a word she says…

The Coens’ first eight films were significantly better than their later eight (I don’t know why exactly, but I always divide their movies in series of eight films) My personal top 3 consists of movies that belong to their first wave of eight films. With ‘Hail, Caesar!’ they have started a new sequence in my mind of again eight movies. Considering their ages 62 and 59 and considerable speed in filmmaking they should be able to complete their third wave and round off their careers with 24 films canned in total. A terrific prospect because they still got it as far as I’m concerned.

So how do I rank all their movies? As follows.

17. A Serious Man (2009)
16. True Grit (2010)
15. Intolerable Cruelty (2003)
14. Blood Simple. (1984)
13. The Ladykillers (2004)
12. Inside Llewyn Davis (2013)
11. Hail, Caesar! (2016)
10. Raising Arizona (1987)
09. Burn After Reading (2008)
08. The Hudsucker Proxy (1994)
07. The Man Who Wasn’t There (2001)
06. Barton Fink (1991)
05. O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000)
04. No Country For Old Men (2007)
03. Fargo (1996)
02. Miller’s Crossing (1990)
01. The Big Lebowski (1998)

Indeed, the Dude abides.

Inside Llewyn Davis

Inside Llewyn Davis

De 16de film van de Coen Brothers is weer een pareltje. Het is wel een vreemde rit, maar dat zijn er wel meer in het oeuvre van de Coens. Van alle voorgaande films lijkt deze nog het meeste op ‘Barton Fink‘. Net als in die steengoede film volgen we een artistiek figuur die in niets minder dan een hel terecht komt. In ‘Barton Fink’ was deze metaforische hel Hollywood, ditmaal is het de folk muziek scene van New York City in de strenge winter van 1961. En eveneens net als in Fink worden de gebeurtenissen al snel bizar, en eindigt het met een scene die je met de ogen doet knipperen en waar je nog lang over na kunt filosoferen.

Ook heeft ‘Inside Llewyn Davis’ wel behoorlijk wat weg van ‘O Brother, Where Art Thou’ want een belangrijke hoofdrol is weggelegd voor de muziek. De recording sessie waarbij Llewyn meewerkt aan opname van de hit singel ‘Please Mr. Kennedy‘ van collega Jim (geweldige rol van Justin Timberlake, wie had verwacht dat die ooit in een Coen Brother film zou belanden?), is al even hilarisch als de opname van ‘Man of Constant Sorrow’ door the Soggy Bottom Boys in ‘O Brother’. De film bevat op dit komische hoogtepunt na nog meer humor (wat verwacht je anders van Joel en Ethan?), toch toont ‘Inside Llewyn Davis’ hoofdzakelijk de sombere kant van het leven van een singer-songwriter. Davis wil beroemd worden maar niet te commercieel. Hij is niet goed genoeg, en zit zichzelf behoorlijk in de weg bij het realiseren van zijn complexe ambities. Uiteindelijk zit hij letterlijk vast in zijn deprimerende wereldje – tot het beklemmende aan toe. Lof verdient de geweldige acteur Oscar Isaac voor het perfect vertolken van het titelkarakter, alsook de piekfijne jaren 60′ settings die zo van een platenhoes van Simon & Garfunkel lijken te komen.

Sterren op de J.H. Kash schaal: 4 uit 5

Miller’s Crossing (1990)


‘Up is down, black is white, and nothing is what it seems’

Directed by:
Joel Coen

Written by:
Joel Coen
Ethan Coen

Cast:
Gabriel Byrne (Tom Reagan), Marcia Gay Harden (Verna), John Turturro (Bernie Bernbaum), Jon Polito (Johnny Caspar), J.E. Freeman (Eddie Dane), Albert Finney (Leo), Mike Starr (Frankie), Al Mancini (Tic-Tac), Steve Buscemi (Mink), Richard Woods (Mayor Dale Levander)

‘I’m talkin’ about friendship. I’m talkin’ about character. I’m talkin’ about—hell, Leo, I ain’t embarrassed to use the word—I’m talkin’ about ethics.’ That’s how Italian crime boss Johnny Caspar (Jon Polito) begins his speech to Irish kingpin Leo O’Bannion (Albert Finney) in the opening of Miller’s Crossing. It immediately recalls the first scene of The Godfather, where undertaker Bonasera appeals in much the same way to Don Vito Corleone.

The favor Caspar asks of O’Bannion is permission to whack two-timing bookie Bernie Bernbaum (John Turturro). Leo refuses, since Bernie is the brother of Verna (Marcia Gay Harden), the woman he’s fallen in love with. Of course, Caspar wasn’t really asking permission—he was informing Leo as a courtesy, as he angrily makes clear after being turned down. Gangsters with ethics toward one another: that’s the foundation of Miller’s Crossing. When Leo breaks this unspoken code among the city’s corrupt rulers, the result is all-out war.

The theme of crooks with ethics is embodied in Leo’s right-hand man Tom Reagan (Gabriel Byrne), the film’s central character. He follows a personal code that only he fully understands. Though secretly having an affair with Verna, Tom – unlike Leo – believes Bernie should be handed over to the Italians. He knows that breaking the underworld code is bad for business. But Leo is stubborn, and their disagreement grows until Tom finally confesses the affair. Leo cuts ties, and Tom immediately shifts allegiance to Caspar. His motive, however, is not self-interest. Though finished with Leo, Tom’s loyalty to his old friend remains.

The web of deceit that quickly unfolds in Miller’s Crossing is complex enough to merit a second viewing. Adding to the intricacy are numerous characters referenced but rarely seen. Still, the story – drawn from Dashiell Hammett novels like ‘The Glass Key’ and ‘Red Harvest’, and infused with classic gangster and neo-noir elements – is masterfully told. The Coens integrate these influences into a killer script, ironically born from a period of writer’s block. Their trademark humor and eccentric characters are on full display, while the dialogue carries a poetic cadence that might even make Shakespeare jealous.

The plotlines themselves may not be original, but the Coens conjure a dreamlike world where, as the tagline promises, nothing is what it seems. The mood is unmistakably Irish – you can almost smell the whiskey. Carter Burwell’s haunting score, the gorgeous cinematography, and evocative settings all heighten the effect. The tone shifts effortlessly from cartoonish to brutally violent, without warning or transition.

The cast is uniformly excellent. Gabriel Byrne makes Tom a sympathetic bastard it’s hard not to root for; if I had to trade places with a Prohibition-era gangster, I’d pick him without hesitation. The supporting roles are just as strong, with John Turturro delivering a powerhouse turn as Bernie, a spineless schemer whose lack of ethics drives the story. Miller’s Crossing also reinvents the use of hats and overcoats. Not that there’s any hidden meaning – there’s nothing’s more foolish than looking for meaning in a hat.

Features a terrific cameo from the Coen’s friend Sam Raimi as a trigger happy cop.

Rating:

Quote:
Tom Reagan: Nobody knows anybody. Not that well.

Trivia:
The Coen Brothers suffered writer’s block while working on the script for Miller’s Crossing. They took a three-week break and wrote the script for their next movie Barton Fink during that time, about a writer with writer’s block. There are two references to Barton Fink in this film. The first one is the name of Tom Reagan’s residence called ‘The Barton Arms’. The second is a newspaper article that reads ‘Seven Dead in Hotel Fire’.