Web Exclusives: More Film Review O Brother, Where Art Thou?


February 7, 2001:

O Brother, I love ya
Ethan ’79 and Joel Coen’s new movie shows their appreciation of the beauty of stupid human beings

By Wes Tooke ’98

In a movie year that has been largely defined by Hollywood’s unwavering devotion to the dull and the formulaic, Ethan ’79 and Joel Coen’s new film O Brother, Where Art Thou? qualifies as nothing less than a restoration of faith — proof that something good can emerge from southern California under even the bleakest circumstances.

Of course, the Coens have made enough interesting films over the last 15 years to make anything they release a bona fide event. And unlike many innovative filmmakers, they have been successful enough to gain complete creative control of their projects — they wrote, produced, and directed O Brother. Perhaps that explains why they have been able to avoid the Hollywood plague.

On the spectrum of Coen movies, O Brother feels closest in mood to Raising Arizona. It’s a caper without the intensity of Fargo or the surrealism of The Big Lebowski and Barton Fink. I fell in love with O Brother from the first frames, which may partially explain the film’s modest opening at the box office. After all, while I thought that the mainstream Fargo was an excellent movie, I thought that both Raising Arizona and Barton Fink were better — which puts me squarely on the lunatic fringe of both society and Coen brother fans.

The Coens set O Brother in the depression-era Deep South, which proves to be a perfect environment for their usual stylized dialogue. The plot is very loosely based on the Odyssey, but the relationship between O Brother and Homer doesn’t warrant close scrutiny — this is no Ulysses. Nevertheless, the homage adds depth to the film. George Clooney, the lead, plays his Ulysses as being paralyzed by visions of his own cleverness, and the Coens have created a riff on sirens and witches that would make even Joyce chuckle.

The setting also allows the Coens to employ perhaps their greatest gift, which is their amazing appreciation for the beauty of stupid human beings. O Brother is littered with some of the finest unintelligent people you will ever watch on screen. Remarkably, the Coens never resort to cheap tricks or condescension when detailing these characters; they instead seem to understand that truly dumb people have to do a lot of thinking to be that daft.

O Brother has so far met the usual critical reception granted to Coen brother films — with the possible exception of Fargo. Some reviewers love the film, and others say things so stupid that you immediately hope that the Coens will cast them in their next movie.

One of the more inane comments I read is that the jokes in O Brother lack a “payoff.” I suppose that if the reviewer meant payoff in the modern American sense of Mary rubbing sperm in her hair, then perhaps he had a point.

But if you think payoff is subtly brilliant dialogue — calling someone “dumb as a bag of hammers,” for example — or having bit characters filled with more life than five cardboard Freddie Prinze, Jr., romantic heroes stapled together, then you will find that O Brother contains as many rewards as any film released this year. The brothers have saved us once again.