|
Director: Joel Coen, Ethan Coen
Cast: Michael Stuhlbarg, Richard Kind, Fred Melamed, Sari Lennick, Adam Arkin, George Wyner
Run Time: 105 minutes
Country: USA
Year: 2009
Language: English
Rating: PG (Coarse language, violence, sexually suggestive scene)
Joel and Ethan Coen are at the top of their game, equally at
home in serious drama and madcap comedy, working with
the biggest stars in the world or unfamiliar talent. Hot on
the heels of No Country for Old Men and Burn After Reading,
they’ve switched gears again to deliver a pitch-perfect comic
drama that takes them back to their roots in Minnesota – a
place they haven’t shot in since 1996’s Fargo. Dry, hilarious
and gloriously absurd, A Serious Man, a Special Presentation
at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival®, takes the
Coens all the way back home.
It’s 1967: Larry Gopnik (Michael Stuhlbarg) wants to be
taken seriously, but he’s assailed on all sides by disrespect. At
home, his children steal from his wallet and his wife pesters
him for a divorce. She has fallen for their hippie-styled friend
Sy Ableman (Fred Melamed) and his empty, feel-good mantras.
Worse, Larry’s unemployed brother has annexed his couch and
the family’s only bathroom. And it’s no better at work. Larry’s
up for tenure at his college but a disgruntled student threatens
to sabotage his reputation. Desperately clinging to his sanity,
Larry seeks counsel from the wise and elusive Rabbi Nachtner
(George Wyner). But to get to Nachtner, he has to endure the
First Rabbi, and then the Second.
Working with a crack team of actors drawn from Yiddish
theatre, the Coens keep the story driving forward and the
complications piling up. Blessed with a cosmic sense of life’s
absurdities, A Serious Man is sharp, precise and superbly
structured. Even the contrast of cinematographer Roger
Deakins’s composed images and the story’s increasing chaos
is held in perfect balance. But above all, this is a philosophical
cry to the heavens, told in sophisticated schtick.
“A tart, brilliantly acted fable of life’s little cosmic difficulties, a
Coen brothers comedy with a darker philosophical outlook than
“No Country for Old Men” but with a script rich in verbal wit.”- Michael Phillips Chicago Tribune
Reviews: www.metacritic.com/video/titles/seriousman
Official site www.filminfocus.com/focusfeatures/film/a_serious_man/

|