My Blog List
Popular Posts
-
Danny Boyle's latest is a real showstopper. Following the relative conventionality of his recent output (Slumdog Millionaire, 127 Ho...
-
To open up my Twilight Zone marathon, a familiar parable about a genie in a lamp. Arthur Castle is a pawnbroker struggling to pay the ...
-
Monsters, along with District 9 and Moon is another recent reminder of how rich a genre the Sci-Fi is. I expect there to be allegorical ...
-
From celebrated director Guillermo del Toro and co-author Chuck Hogan comes The Strain, a modern day take on the vampire myth that combines ...
-
I had genuine faith (please don ’ t mention the irony) that Ridley Scott's return to the genre that defined his early career would ...
-
First of all, I haven't read the graphic novel, despite being within feet of it, and I was wondering whether to postpone my viewing unti...
-
For a film about John Dillinger, the charismatic and audacious one man crime wave, Public Enemies is a remarkably understated biography of h...
-
Drive is a wonderfully minimalist title, and one which not only describes, but encapsulates the very existence of Ryan Gosling's vacan...
-
5 years since Ultimatum seems like a reasonable enough amount of time to start the studio machine up again and squeeze more life out ...
-
'Those people are our neighbours.' This episode is one of the most terrifying ever written for the Twilight Zone - and there isn&...
Total Pageviews
Sunday 6 December 2009
A Serious Man
The trademark Coen palette of oddness and the unnatural natural seems to be at its most apposite in A Serious Man, as Jewish professor Larry Gropnik struggles to comprehend the series of fantastic personal catastrophes his faith continually tells him is natural. Divorced by his wife and encumbered by a troubled brother, Larry is increasingly subjected to these fantastic misfortunes, all tightly structured by the Coens around visits to three rabbis and his son’s approaching bar mitzvah. A professor of physics, his appeal to mathematical proofs yield no concrete answers and neither do the po-faced and bizarre counsels of the three rabbis, and after each meeting Larry has his faith tested, in his commitment to be A Serious Man. As this series of misfortunes slides further worse as he has nightmares, those not even resolved fortunately, and the tragic and the farcical clash to darkly comic degree, at one point Larry’s property lawyer having a heart attack only feet away from him. The dilemma of attributing misfortune to cosmic coincidence or steadfastly believing in a teleological resolution is one that drives Larry to despair, and which makes for a beguiling conclusion. Michael Stuhlbarg gives a suitably incredulous performance as the everyman continually asking the question ‘why me ?’, and the rest of the cast do a fine job as oblivious colluders and the rabbis with meaningless answers, the first one he visits reminiscent of Paul Dano’s zaniness in There Will Be Blood. One of my favourite and best films of 2009.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
It's nice to see you have more reviews on your blog. Looks good. I've updated mine recently too, with a couple of brief reviews/comments!
ReplyDeleteA Serious Man looks and sounds intriguing, I may try to watch it if I get the chance. Coen brothers films are usually fascinating and funny (in the balck sense). I have still to see No Country for Old Men but I remember a lot of the older movies like Miller's Crossing which was not a 'funny' one! Thanks for the insight.