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WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
Whither the Coen Brothers?
O Brother, Where Art Thou?, directed by Joel Coen,
written by Ethan Coen and Joel Coen
By David Walsh
10 February 2001
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Joel and Ethan Coen have collaborated on eight films since
1984, the former writing and the latter directing. By no stretch
of the imagination could any of the films be considered entirely
or even largely successful. Nearly every work has been marred
by bursts of mean-spiritedness and cynicism, an inappropriate
jokiness, that tend to undercut and detract from the more truthful
or compelling moments. Yet virtually every one of the films has
had a feature or the hint of a feature that suggested that the
Coens might be on to something, or might at least be capable of
being on to something.
Raising Arizona (1987), their second featurefollowing
the overheated gothic film noir, Blood Simple (1984)was
often genuinely funny and Miller's Crossing (1990) an interesting
reworking of Dashiell Hammett's Red Harvest. Barton
Fink (1991), with its cartoon leftist writer in Hollywood
during the 1930s, coming into contact with the real America,
in the form of a psychopathic salesman, represented a low point.
Fargo (1996), despite its caricatures and its bloody subject
matter, had a certain humanity to it, principally due to the performance
of Frances McDormand.
The Coens' latest film, O Brother, Where Art Thou?,
is not a great leap forward, but still ... one can see something,
far away on the horizon perhaps, that might represent an insight
or an attempt to gain one.
The film is threaded with conceits. The title to begin with,
a reference to Preston Sturges' remarkable Sullivan's Travels
(1941), in which a director of Hollywood comedies suddenly decides
to make a serious film with the proposed title of
O Brother, Where Art Thou? Then there is the straight-faced
assertion in the credits that the film is based upon
Homer's The Odyssey. ( Sullivan's Travels was itself
a reference to another classic, Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan
Swift.) Of course, that the film is itself the creation of two
brothers gives the title another twist. Our leg is being pulled
in various directions at once.
In a quasi-mythical Mississippi of the 1930s, Ulysses Everett
McGill (George Clooney) escapes from a prison farm with two companions,
Pete (John Turturro) and Delmar (Tim Blake Nelson). Ulysses' tortuous
effort to make his way home to his wife Penny (Holly Hunter) and
his batch of daughtersa journey he dupes his two fellow
escapees into undertaking by promises of a hidden fortuneforms
the substance of the film. Along the way the three encounter a
modern Cyclops (a vicious one-eyed Bible salesman), a trio of
Sirens (seductresses washing clothesand singing of courseby
a stream) and a corrupt politician whose given name is Menelaus
(nicknamed Pappy), in addition to a blues man who claims to have
sold his soul to the devil ( à la blues legend Robert
Johnson), the manic depressive gangster Baby Face Nelson, a terrifying
lawman hot in pursuit and a gathering of Ku Klux Klansmen. They
also, unbeknownst to themselves, become hit recording artists,
a fact that helps save their bacon in the long run.
Our heroes undergo setbacks and minor triumphs, disasters and
near-disasters, even scrapes with deathone thing after another.
Through it all they manage, more or less, to sustain their essential
naiveté, goofiness and optimism. Everything is larger than
life and not intended to be particularly convincing. Clooney's
character, a self-styled pater familias and, in his
own mind, the only one of the three capable of abstract
thought, sticks in the memory as a pretty likable and attractive
character.
I think the most pleasant surprise, however, is the relative
absence of malice in the film. I feared the worst, as the denouement
approached and all the possibilities of the townsfolk turning
into some monstrous mob of rednecks loomed. It doesn't
work out that way. Indeed the Coens go out of their way to provide
a rather softhearted (and somewhat contrived and simplistic) ending,
with the Klan chief ridden out of town on a rail. Popular culture
saves the day! In it, somehow, America proves to be at its best.
Any film that treats the Depression, chain-gangs, farm foreclosures,
the Klan, lynchings, corrupt politicians, hypocritical Bible salesmen,
etc., etc., is worth looking into. If only in the vaguest sense,
there must be a sensibility in operation that has at least done
preliminary work.
Equally, any film that pays tribute to such extraordinary music
must also bear examination. The Coens, with famed producer T Bone
Burnett in charge, have included gospel, country and bluegrass
tunes, some of them in original versions, some newly recorded.
Among those asked to participate in the making of the soundtrack
included Ralph Stanley, Gillian Welch, John Hartford, Alison Krauss,
Emmylou Harris, the Fairfield Four and Norman Blake.
Something is up here. The Coens are trying to figure out, it
would seem, what makes America tick, why, at almost the same instant,
it can be so backward and so sublime, so reactionary and so democratic,
so mad and so sane.
Unfortunately, they haven't gotten terribly far with their
deliberations. As soon as one expresses support for the appealing
elements in the films, all its weaknesses come leaping out at
one. There is still far too much contempt expressed for the filmmakers'
own creationsTurturro's moronic Pete is insufferable for
most of the film, and Nelson's Delmar is not all that much better.
The Coens pick and choose, indicating their own dramatic unclarity
as well as their susceptibility to the pressure of liberal public
opinion. Only Southern whites are permitted to be idiotic, the
blacks are more or less saintly or iconic. And there is no internal
coherence to the caricaturing. Ulysses, Pete and Delmar ham it
up outrageously when they record and later perform their version
of Man of Constant Sorrow. Other groups, singing country
or gospel, are treated respectfully. Since characterization has
no logic, much of the more extreme behavior loses its edge; it
simply seems arbitrary, quirky.
The truth is, I suspect, that the director and writer themselves
don't know what to make of an area that has produced so much beauty
and so much horror. By juxtaposing the two qualities, by playing
and juggling with them, they hope something will come out of it.
Occasionally it does, but not often and not consistently enough.
To the love of the music, to a feeling for the region's crazy
quilt character, to intuition about the social and emotional possibilities
that lie beneath the surface, needs to be added, I think, a deeper
understanding of all the historical experiences, especially since
the Civil War, that produced the explosive and complex set of
social contradictions making up the South.
Homer's Odysseus (Ulysses in Latin) was up against the fate
ordained for him by the gods on Mount Olympus. What's the thread
linking the obstacles in Ulysses Everett McGill's path? There
really isn't one, except insofar as they each represent one of
the Coens' gags. The various confrontations form a series of disconnected
set pieces. Because of that they lose strength, even become tedious,
repetitive. At times the obstacles take on a social dimension:
the fiendish lawman/pursuer, the Bible salesman, the Klansmen.
At other times, they have no particular content. The Sirens' sequence,
although pretty, seems entirely gratuitous. One feels the brothers
simply filling up space and killing time.
The real difficulty, I suspect, and it's bound up with the
current state of artistic affairs, is that the Coens still feel
the need to keep at a distance a coherent social critique. That
would be unfashionable. After all, one serious look at the South
in the 1930s, under conditions where such an ideological prejudice
was not at work, would surely convince anyone as bright as these
filmmakers that the central problem was the existing social order
in all its dimensions: banks, sheriffs, racists, politicians and
so forth. It certainly would have been possible to have retained
the chaos and yet have infused it with more of an organized sense
of the world and more of a protest. The narrativewhich one
is continually hoping will cohere and fully come to life, and
never doeswould have been something more than merely potentially
delightful. As it is, the film is made up of fragments, some convincing,
but too many that are irritating.
In praising the film, critic A.O. Scott in the New York
Times points out the presence in early twentieth century American
folk music of the longing for another world. The reviewer
notes intriguingly that The Big Rock Candy Mountain,
the song that is heard over the threesome's initial escape from
the prison farm, expresses a weary, heartfelt longing for
a life free of toil and injustice. O Brother, Where Art
Thou?' similarly offers a fairy-tale view of an America in which
the real brutalities of poverty and racism are magically dissolved
by the power of song.
This may in part be wishful thinking. It doesn't seem to me
the film has that consistently visionary quality, it too often
loses track of itself, gets derailed, finds itself at dead ends,
and even when it does aspire to that quality, too often O Brother,
Where Art Thou? falls back on somewhat facile means of resolving
the characters' dilemmas. Nonetheless, it would be interesting
to see what the director and writer might produce if they decided
once and for all not to take the line of least resistance.
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