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re: The Coen Brothers

Posted on 8/23/25 at 8:39 pm to
Posted by Lester Earl
3rd Ward
Member since Nov 2003
288631 posts
Posted on 8/23/25 at 8:39 pm to
My mom made me audition for Miller’s Crossing
Posted by PowerTool
The dark side of the road
Member since Dec 2009
22918 posts
Posted on 8/23/25 at 9:24 pm to
quote:

I can't disagree to much with your list, but I just wanted to say that I think Miller's Crossing is the most rewatchable. What a great flick. Jesus,Tom...


I think so. I was talking to a friend about the Raymond Chandler novel "The Glass Key," and he asked if I had seen Miller's Crossing - apparently somewhat based on the Glass Key. Ended up watching it several times all the way thru.
Posted by TheBeezer
Texas
Member since Apr 2013
1982 posts
Posted on 8/23/25 at 10:13 pm to
No Country for Old Men is clearly their best movie. The Big Lebowski is their best comedy.
Posted by thenza
Member since Sep 2013
1441 posts
Posted on 8/23/25 at 10:18 pm to
The only child role I remember is the whiny, crying, fat, Italian kid.
Posted by Fun Bunch
New Orleans
Member since May 2008
128054 posts
Posted on 8/23/25 at 10:48 pm to
quote:

That’s exactly how this works.


Wrong
Posted by Willie Stroker
Member since Sep 2008
15731 posts
Posted on 8/24/25 at 11:16 am to
quote:

Perfect tier:
Raising Arizona
Miller's Crossing
Barton Fink
Fargo
Big Lebowski
O Brother, Where Art Thou
True Grit
Ballad of Buster Scruggs

Good list, but not perfect. No Country for Old Men 100% belongs there.
Posted by rebelrouser
Columbia, SC
Member since Feb 2013
12830 posts
Posted on 8/24/25 at 1:18 pm to
Swap No Country for Old Men with Barton Fink, and I agree.
Posted by nealnan8
Atlanta
Member since Oct 2016
4015 posts
Posted on 8/24/25 at 6:45 pm to
quote:

My mom made me audition for Miller’s Crossing

The I will assume that you are from the New Orleans area. I had a friend who lived in the apartment building (Barton Arms in the movie) where the last murders took place. This was on St. Charles, at the corner of either Fern or Burdette on the river side. The Coens painted the entire exterior of the building for that one scene. When they were finished, they repainted it back to the original color. Turns out that they were not happy with the scene, and the next week, they repainted it again.
Posted by LittleJerrySeinfield
350,000 Post Karma
Member since Aug 2013
10373 posts
Posted on 8/24/25 at 10:33 pm to
O, Brother is my favorite. Maybe my favorite movie of all time. Every character is so great. Plus it led to a revival of traditional/bluegrass music.
Posted by genuineLSUtiger
Nashville
Member since Sep 2005
77199 posts
Posted on 8/24/25 at 10:51 pm to
Raising Arizona is a masterpiece.
Posted by GeauxLSUGeaux
1 room down from Erin Andrews
Member since May 2004
25602 posts
Posted on 8/24/25 at 11:09 pm to
quote:

I’m not trying to dis that movie. I just don’t love it the way I do Raising Arizona, Big Lebowski, their other fun movies.


That's crazy because it pisses all over Big Lebowski, pun intended.
Posted by TigerMyth36
River Ridge
Member since Nov 2005
41072 posts
Posted on 8/25/25 at 8:43 am to
How could you tell Bridges was great? They shot the movie with a bag of marbles in his mouth.
Posted by Dire Wolf
bawcomville
Member since Sep 2008
39945 posts
Posted on 8/25/25 at 8:53 am to
quote:

I actually really like Hail Caesar.



it was a failure of marketing. It was marketed as kind of kidnap thiller but really just a day in the life of a 50s movie studio head. It is B tier Coen's but i really like it
Posted by Ace Midnight
Between sanity and madness
Member since Dec 2006
94815 posts
Posted on 8/25/25 at 9:05 am to
quote:

It was marketed as kind of kidnap thiller but really just a day in the life of a 50s movie studio head. It is B tier Coen's but i really like it


It almost plays like a Wes Anderson film at times. From a source material standpoint, it is more alike than different from L.A. Confidential, although the POV and tone make them dramatically different stories.

It also echoes (although somewhat less absurdly) some of the issues the Coens covered in Barton Fink. Not the writer's block portion (in the hotel), but Hollywood politics.

I think it will age well. I think folks will re-evaluate it and based on the quality of the components - the film just tried to do a little too much and fell short of its own ambitions. However, on its own, it is still very enjoyable. I think the problem is - most Coen films, especially the comedies, are immensely rewatchable. I'm not sure Hail Caesar! will ever be in that same category.
This post was edited on 8/25/25 at 2:29 pm
Posted by Dire Wolf
bawcomville
Member since Sep 2008
39945 posts
Posted on 8/25/25 at 9:17 am to
quote:

Burn After Reading is probably my 2nd favorite comedy all time (Dr Strangelove #1). I feel like it's routinely underrated. Malkovich drunk raging in a downward spiral for the 2nd half of the movie makes me laugh in every scene.



I honestly do not know why people don't rate it higher. One of my favorite movies. Pitt, Malkovich and Clooney are all great in it.

Posted by SammyTiger
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Feb 2009
78331 posts
Posted on 8/25/25 at 9:30 am to
I also really liked Hail, Caesar!

I feel like Alden Ehrenreich is king of being good in good movies that ultimately flop.

Posted by H-Town Tiger
Member since Nov 2003
60829 posts
Posted on 8/25/25 at 9:55 am to
quote:

Really really good tier:
Blood Simple
Hudsucker Proxy
Ladykillers
No Country for Old Men
Burn After Reading
A Serious Man


Posted by iwyLSUiwy
I'm your huckleberry
Member since Apr 2008
40826 posts
Posted on 8/25/25 at 10:56 am to
quote:

What an amazing run


Agreed. But the agreement ends about there. Your tiers are terrible

quote:

Tried to watch Inside Llewelyn Davis but I got bored.


Posted by Fewer Kilometers
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2007
37937 posts
Posted on 8/25/25 at 11:00 am to
quote:

Tried to watch Inside Llewelyn Davis but I got bored.


Inside Llewyn Davis is top tier. I'd put the soundtrack up there with O Brother, Where Art Thou
Posted by HueyLongJr
Member since Oct 2007
964 posts
Posted on 8/25/25 at 12:18 pm to
quote:

Raymond Chandler novel "The Glass Key,"


Hate to be that guy, but The Glass Key is a Hammett novel.
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