To celebrate the release of the new Coen brothers movie THE LADYKILLERS tomorrow, this is a special edition of Film Babble Blog’s Listomania dedicated to the work of Joel and Ethan Coen.
This is a career re-cap of sorts with Coen bros. lists, quotes, fun facts, and other whatnot leading up to my review of their newest that will be posted tomorrow.
Okay then... First up:
BASIC FILMOGRAPHY AND GUIDE TO THIS POST
BS: BLOOD SIMPLE (1984) RA: RAISING ARIZONA (1987)
MC: MILLER'S CROSSING (1990)
BF: BARTON FINK (1991)
HP: HUDSUCKER'S PROXY (1994)
F: FARGO (1997)
TBL: THE BIG LEBOWSKI (1998)
OBWAT: O BROTHER WHERE ART THOU? (2000)
TMWWT: THE MAN WHO WASN'T THERE (2001)
IC: INTOLERABLE CRUELTY (2003)
LK: THE LADYKILLERS (2004)
THE COEN BROTHERS REPERTORY ROLE CALL 1984-2004:
Steve Buscemi: MC, BF, HP, F, BL
Campbell, Bruce: HP, F, IC, LK (2 small parts and 2 as "soap actor on TV" - all 4 un-credited)
Blake Clark: IC, LK
George Clooney: OBWAT, IC
Charles Durning: HP, OBWAT
John Goodman: RA, BF, BL, OBWAT
Holly Hunter: BS, RA, OBWAT
John Mahooney: BF, HP
John McConnell: MC, OBWAT, LK
Frances McDormand: BS, RA, F, MWWT
Jon Polito: MC, BF, HP, BL, MWWT
Stephen Root: OBWAT, LK
Tony Shalhoub: MC, BF, BL, MWWT
Hallie Singleton: MWWT, LK
Peter Stormare: F, BL
Billy Bob Thornton: MWWT, IC
John Turturro: MC, BF, BL, OBWAT
M. Emmet Walsh: BS, RA
COEN BROS. FUN FACT FORUM:
The line "if a frog had wings it wouldn't bump its ass a-hoppin'" appears in 2 Coen Bros. flicks - RA (1987) & HP (1994)
Musicians Aimee Mann (as the nihilist's girlfriend) and Jimmie Dale Gilmore (as Smokey - the league bowler who insists that he "wasn't over the line") make brief but notable cameos in BL (1997)
In RA (1987) Nicholas Cage works at Hudsucker Industries - an obvious connection to their later film HP (1994)
In MC there's a building called the Barton Arms another obvious connection to a later film.
F (1996) says at the beginning "This is a true story - the events of this film took place in Minnesota in 1987..." This is totally false. They made the whole thing up! Those damn pranksters!
Editor Roderick Jaynes - listed as a member of BAFTA (The British Academy Of Film and Television Arts) was nominated for F (1996) and praised for his work on BS and BF (I know its confusing - see above code will ya?), but was found out upon his Oscar nomination to being a fabrication by the Coens. That's right, Jaynes never existed. They created the name because when editing BS (1984) they thought there were too many Coens in the credits already.
In IC (2003) Judge Marva Munson played by Isabell O'Connor finds in favor of Rex Rexroth (Edward Herrmann) in the Divorce trial proceedings leaving his wife (Catherine Zeta Jones) literally out in the cold. In LK (2004) Marva Munson (Irma T. Hall) is unkowingly duped into being a front for a heist. Why the same name? Are the characters related or the same person at different points in their lives? Maybe they just like the name. Who knows?
3 LOST OR FORGOTTEN OR OBSCURE OR JUST IGNORED COEN OR COEN RELATED FILMS:
CRIMEWAVE (1985): Hard to find movie at most videostores and unavailable on DVD. Written by the Coen brothers but directed by Sam Raimi. "We prefer it lost" - Joel Coen to Uncut Magazine (May 1998).
THE NAKED MAN (1993): Ethan Coen co-wrote this oddity with director J Todd Anderson.
BAD SANTA (2003): Ethan Coen executive produced and came up with the story with Joel Coen.
COEN BROTHERS ON DVD - WHAT SHOULD YOU BUY AND WHAT SHOULD YOU WAIT FOR THE SPECIAL EDITION OF?
BS (1984): BUY IT - This currently available Universal DVD contains the director's cut that was theatrically released in 2000 plus a commentary by Kenneth Loring of Forever Young Films and a great old school trailer. I seriously doubt we'll get any more material on the Coen's debut movie so go ahead and get it.
RA (1997): WAIT FOR THE SPECIAL EDITION - This paltry disc from 2oth Century Fox has no extras and being that it is a comic masterpiece and the flick that busted the Coens into the mainstream somewhat it deserves better. Much better. Hold out until the powers that be grant this a special edition. It's got to happen.
MC (1990) - BUY IT
BF (1991) - BUY IT
HP (1994) - WAIT FOR THE SPECIAL EDITION
F (1996) - BUY IT Good new 2003 special edition was worth waiting for. It has a new documentary "Minnesota Nice", a commentary by Roger Deakins, and a cool Charlie Rose appearance by the Coens along with Frances McDormand. Shame on you if you don't already own this.
BL (1998) -WAIT FOR THE SPECIAL EDITION
TMWWT (2001) - BUY IT This contains one of the funniest DVD commentaries ever with Joel, Ethan, and Billy Bob Thornton tracking the "Ed nod" and adding lots of witty insight into an otherwise stoic, dry, and slow film. Also contains a few brief inessential deleted scenes - just a couple of hair-cut examples that were rightfully cut. Definitely a strong Coen Bros film that gets better every viewing. Get it and watch it with the commentary and try not to agree.
IC (2003) - BUY IT The most commercial outting yet by our indie duo comes with a decent DVD transfer and a number of outtakes - really bloopers and unused footage. The Coen Brothers apparently don't think of "deleted scenes" in the same way that most of us do judging by their DVDs.
THE COEN BROTHERS IN THE ROUND
Evelle (picking up a bag of balloons): Do these blow into funny shapes and all?
Grocer: Well, no, unless round is funny.
- From RA.
According to the IMDB: "The Coens frequently focus on round spinning objects. The hat in Miller's Crossing, bowling balls and tumble-weed in BL, hair pomade tins in OBWAT...or UFO and a car wheel in TMWWT." To that we can add the hula hoops in HP (1994). I loved the touch that when Charles Durning re-appears as the ghost of Hudsucker, his halo spins like a hula hoop lit up around his head.
The Barber shop pole and the contrasting haircut head-shots in MWWNT are other notable circular examples. The bowling balls that the IMDB mentions in BL provide many opportunities for shots involving rolling roundness. The best and most unique shot comes from a montage in which we got a barrell view of a spinning bowling alley as a ball rolls down the lane. That's right - it's a point-of-view shot from the finger hole on a bowling ball! I'm still not exactly sure how they pulled that off.
Part of the Coens style in scene set-up is to display extreme close-ups of inanimate objects. In BF (1991) our protagonist rings the desk bell at the hotel and we get a shot of the bell as it boings thoughout the lobby and slowly stops vibratingly buzzing - beyond beautiful. In the world of Coen cinema round isn't just funny - it's hilarious!
Check back tomorrow for the Film Babble Blog Review of THE LADYKILLERS.
More later...
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