1-20 of 61 articles from 2009 « Prev | Next »
12 November 2009 2:57 AM, PST | The Guardian - Film News | See recent The Guardian - Film News news »
In this week's edition, the Coen brothers chat about bringing their childhood into their new masterpiece A Serious Man, while newcomer Daniel Barber reveals what it was like to direct Michael Caine in revenge thriller Harry Brown. Plus, reviews of Michael Haneke's The White Ribbon and Roland Emmerich's disaster movie 2012.
Joel and Ethan Coen's new film, the suburban comedy A Serious Man, moves away from the menace of No Country for Old Man and Fargo to examine one ordinary, middle-class, middle-American Jewish man's quest to understand why his life has started unravelling. They tell Jason Solomons why it took so long for them to get around to mining their own upbringing for a film.
Next up is director Daniel Barber, whose feature film debut Harry Brown centres on a retired Marine who decides to dispense some vigilante-style justice to the young thugs who killed his friend. He »
- Jason Solomons, Xan Brooks, Jason Phipps, Observer
2 November 2009 1:29 AM, PST | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
Starring: Michael Stuhlbarg, Richard Kind, Fred Melamed, Sari Lennick
Director: Ethan and Joel Coen
Release Date: October 2, 2009
Running Time: 105 mins.
MPAA Rating: R
Distributor: Focus Features
- - -
Up until A Serious Man, I don't think many would call Ethan and Joel Coen serious men. Looking at Fargo, Burn After Reading, and Raising Arizona, it's clear the Coens prefer to brandish their wickedly black, and sophisticated humor than make forays into stone-faced dramas. Even last year, when the two adapted Cormac McCarthy's heavily philosophical masterpiece No Country For Old Men, the film came out darkly sardonic. This makes their latest film so fascinating. Yes, there is still humor, but it's also heavily meditative and profound.
The cast is largely made up of unknown faces. The protagonist, Larry Gobnik, is played by Michael Stuhlbarg. He's a Jewish physics professor in the mid-west in 1967. His son is a unambituous pothead, »
- blakecgriffin@gmail.com (Blake Griffin)
2 November 2009 1:29 AM, PST | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
Starring: Michael Stuhlbarg, Richard Kind, Fred Melamed, Sari Lennick
Director: Ethan and Joel Coen
Release Date: October 2, 2009
Running Time: 105 mins.
MPAA Rating: R
Distributor: Focus Features
- - -
Up until A Serious Man, I don't think many would call Ethan and Joel Coen serious men. Looking at Fargo, Burn After Reading, and Raising Arizona, it's clear the Coens prefer to brandish their wickedly black, and sophisticated humor than make forays into stone-faced dramas. Even last year, when the two adapted Cormac McCarthy's heavily philosophical masterpiece No Country For Old Men, the film came out darkly sardonic. This makes their latest film so fascinating. Yes, there is still humor, but it's also heavily meditative and profound.
The cast is largely made up of unknown faces. The protagonist, Larry Gobnik, is played by Michael Stuhlbarg. He's a Jewish physics professor in the mid-west in 1967. His son is a unambituous pothead, »
- blakecgriffin@gmail.com (Blake Griffin)
2 November 2009 1:29 AM, PST | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
Starring: Michael Stuhlbarg, Richard Kind, Fred Melamed, Sari Lennick
Director: Ethan and Joel Coen
Release Date: October 2, 2009
Running Time: 105 mins.
MPAA Rating: R
Distributor: Focus Features
- - -
Up until A Serious Man, I don't think many would call Ethan and Joel Coen serious men. Looking at Fargo, Burn After Reading, and Raising Arizona, it's clear the Coens prefer to brandish their wickedly black, and sophisticated humor than make forays into stone-faced dramas. Even last year, when the two adapted Cormac McCarthy's heavily philosophical masterpiece No Country For Old Men, the film came out darkly sardonic. This makes their latest film so fascinating. Yes, there is still humor, but it's also heavily meditative and profound.
The cast is largely made up of unknown faces. The protagonist, Larry Gobnik, is played by Michael Stuhlbarg. He's a Jewish physics professor in the mid-west in 1967. His son is a unambituous pothead, »
- blakecgriffin@gmail.com (Blake Griffin)
2 November 2009 1:29 AM, PST | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
Starring: Michael Stuhlbarg, Richard Kind, Fred Melamed, Sari Lennick
Director: Ethan and Joel Coen
Release Date: October 2, 2009
Running Time: 105 mins.
MPAA Rating: R
Distributor: Focus Features
- - -
Up until A Serious Man, I don't think many would call Ethan and Joel Coen serious men. Looking at Fargo, Burn After Reading, and Raising Arizona, it's clear the Coens prefer to brandish their wickedly black, and sophisticated humor than make forays into stone-faced dramas. Even last year, when the two adapted Cormac McCarthy's heavily philosophical masterpiece No Country For Old Men, the film came out darkly sardonic. This makes their latest film so fascinating. Yes, there is still humor, but it's also heavily meditative and profound.
The cast is largely made up of unknown faces. The protagonist, Larry Gobnik, is played by Michael Stuhlbarg. He's a Jewish physics professor in the mid-west in 1967. His son is a unambituous pothead, »
- blakecgriffin@gmail.com (Blake Griffin)
2 November 2009 1:29 AM, PST | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
Starring: Michael Stuhlbarg, Richard Kind, Fred Melamed, Sari Lennick
Director: Ethan and Joel Coen
Release Date: October 2, 2009
Running Time: 105 mins.
MPAA Rating: R
Distributor: Focus Features
- - -
Up until A Serious Man, I don't think many would call Ethan and Joel Coen serious men. Looking at Fargo, Burn After Reading, and Raising Arizona, it's clear the Coens prefer to brandish their wickedly black, and sophisticated humor than make forays into stone-faced dramas. Even last year, when the two adapted Cormac McCarthy's heavily philosophical masterpiece No Country For Old Men, the film came out darkly sardonic. This makes their latest film so fascinating. Yes, there is still humor, but it's also heavily meditative and profound.
The cast is largely made up of unknown faces. The protagonist, Larry Gobnik, is played by Michael Stuhlbarg. He's a Jewish physics professor in the mid-west in 1967. His son is a unambituous pothead, »
- blakecgriffin@gmail.com (Blake Griffin)
2 November 2009 1:29 AM, PST | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
Starring: Michael Stuhlbarg, Richard Kind, Fred Melamed, Sari Lennick
Director: Ethan and Joel Coen
Release Date: October 2, 2009
Running Time: 105 mins.
MPAA Rating: R
Distributor: Focus Features
- - -
Up until A Serious Man, I don't think many would call Ethan and Joel Coen serious men. Looking at Fargo, Burn After Reading, and Raising Arizona, it's clear the Coens prefer to brandish their wickedly black, and sophisticated humor than make forays into stone-faced dramas. Even last year, when the two adapted Cormac McCarthy's heavily philosophical masterpiece No Country For Old Men, the film came out darkly sardonic. This makes their latest film so fascinating. Yes, there is still humor, but it's also heavily meditative and profound.
The cast is largely made up of unknown faces. The protagonist, Larry Gobnik, is played by Michael Stuhlbarg. He's a Jewish physics professor in the mid-west in 1967. His son is a unambituous pothead, »
- blakecgriffin@gmail.com (Blake Griffin)
2 November 2009 1:29 AM, PST | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
Starring: Michael Stuhlbarg, Richard Kind, Fred Melamed, Sari Lennick
Director: Ethan and Joel Coen
Release Date: October 2, 2009
Running Time: 105 mins.
MPAA Rating: R
Distributor: Focus Features
- - -
Up until A Serious Man, I don't think many would call Ethan and Joel Coen serious men. Looking at Fargo, Burn After Reading, and Raising Arizona, it's clear the Coens prefer to brandish their wickedly black, and sophisticated humor than make forays into stone-faced dramas. Even last year, when the two adapted Cormac McCarthy's heavily philosophical masterpiece No Country For Old Men, the film came out darkly sardonic. This makes their latest film so fascinating. Yes, there is still humor, but it's also heavily meditative and profound.
The cast is largely made up of unknown faces. The protagonist, Larry Gobnik, is played by Michael Stuhlbarg. He's a Jewish physics professor in the mid-west in 1967. His son is a unambituous pothead, »
- blakecgriffin@gmail.com (Blake Griffin)
2 November 2009 1:29 AM, PST | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
Starring: Michael Stuhlbarg, Richard Kind, Fred Melamed, Sari Lennick
Director: Ethan and Joel Coen
Release Date: October 2, 2009
Running Time: 105 mins.
MPAA Rating: R
Distributor: Focus Features
- - -
Up until A Serious Man, I don't think many would call Ethan and Joel Coen serious men. Looking at Fargo, Burn After Reading, and Raising Arizona, it's clear the Coens prefer to brandish their wickedly black, and sophisticated humor than make forays into stone-faced dramas. Even last year, when the two adapted Cormac McCarthy's heavily philosophical masterpiece No Country For Old Men, the film came out darkly sardonic. This makes their latest film so fascinating. Yes, there is still humor, but it's also heavily meditative and profound.
The cast is largely made up of unknown faces. The protagonist, Larry Gobnik, is played by Michael Stuhlbarg. He's a Jewish physics professor in the mid-west in 1967. His son is a unambituous pothead, »
- blakecgriffin@gmail.com (Blake Griffin)
2 November 2009 1:29 AM, PST | The Movie Fanatic | See recent The Movie Fanatic news »
Starring: Michael Stuhlbarg, Richard Kind, Fred Melamed, Sari Lennick
Director: Ethan and Joel Coen
Release Date: October 2, 2009
Running Time: 105 mins.
MPAA Rating: R
Distributor: Focus Features
- - -
Up until A Serious Man, I don't think many would call Ethan and Joel Coen serious men. Looking at Fargo, Burn After Reading, and Raising Arizona, it's clear the Coens prefer to brandish their wickedly black, and sophisticated humor than make forays into stone-faced dramas. Even last year, when the two adapted Cormac McCarthy's heavily philosophical masterpiece No Country For Old Men, the film came out darkly sardonic. This makes their latest film so fascinating. Yes, there is still humor, but it's also heavily meditative and profound.
The cast is largely made up of unknown faces. The protagonist, Larry Gobnik, is played by Michael Stuhlbarg. He's a Jewish physics professor in the mid-west in 1967. His son is a unambituous pothead, »
- blakecgriffin@gmail.com (Blake Griffin)
29 October 2009 9:55 PM, PDT | SoundOnSight | See recent SoundOnSight news »
A Serious Man Directed by Joel Coen The Coens are getting positively prolific these days, treating their hardcore fans with a movie a year, and with their latest release, A Serious Man they have taken the comedic strand of their work into uncharted waters to deliver possibly their most haunting and certainly their most personal work to date. Introduced in person in their characteristically succinct manner at this year's Lff, the film, after a mysterious prologue set in a nostalgic Shtetl alights in late 1960's Minnesota. Jewish professor - and I only stress the Jewish status as it is instrumental to the film's chutzpah - Larry Gopnik (Michael Stuhlbarg) is not having a good month. After taking tests for a mystery medical ailment Gopnik is accosted by a disgruntled South Korean student who subsequently attempts to discredit his reputation with anonymous letters to the tenure committee after Gopnik failed him in a critical test. »
- Ricky
15 October 2009 10:37 AM, PDT | BuzzFocus.com | See recent BuzzFocus.com news »
Press Release Los Angeles, CA – (October 15, 2009) – Showtime and acclaimed Emmy® Award-winning television and film producer John Wells (ER, The West Wing, Southland, Third Watch, Far From Heaven, Showtime's An American Crime) are bringing Shameless, the long running British series to American television starring Emmy® Award-winner and Oscar®-nominee William H. Macy (Door to Door, Fargo, Pleasantville, The Cooler). Showtime has ordered a pilot for this one-hour drama tracing the lives of a very unconventional family which will be executive produced by Wells and the series’ original creator and Emmy® Award-winner Paul Abbott, one of Britain's most critically and commercially successful television producers. The announcement was made today by Robert Greenblatt, President of Entertainment, Showtime Networks Inc. The pilot will be shot in December. “We are honored to be bringing arguably the best American and British television producers together for this unique look at a very ... »
- Buzzfocus Staff
11 October 2009 10:20 AM, PDT | HollywoodChicago.com | See recent HollywoodChicago.com news »
Chicago – “A Serious Man” isn’t the story of Joel and Ethan Coen’s lives. But you might not necessarily know it. While the brothers continue to turn their films into Hollywood gold, this 1967-set black comedy is among the more personal projects in their repertoire.
Rating: 4.0/5.0
That gamut is growing into a serious catalog with “Burn After Reading,” 2007 best-picture Oscar winner “No Country for Old Men,” “The Ladykillers,” “O Brother, Where Art Thou?,” “The Big Lebowski,” “Fargo” and “Raising Arizona” now under their yamakas over the course of two decades.
While the yamaka is designed to signify deference to god, “A Serious Man” pays homage to the Coens’ culture in an authentically Jewish way. But this is more than just one of the more Jewish films you’ve seen since “Schindler’s List”. “A Serious Man” is powered by a highly internal script and actors who externalize a series of very unfortunate events. »
- adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
9 October 2009 8:09 AM, PDT | The Scorecard Review | See recent Scorecard Review news »
Directed by: Ethan Coen & Joel Coen
Cast: Michael Stuhlbarg, Richard Kind, Fred Melamed, Aaron Wolff
Running Time: 1 hr 45 mins
Rating: R
Release Date: October 9, 2009
Plot: A man (Stuhlbarg) whose life is slowly falling apart in 1967 seeks wisdom from his local rabbis.
Who’S It For? This is open to anyone who wants to experience a film that is thought provoking, and almost soul searching. It is not a “black comedy,” as some have said. This is a realistic drama, but it never has a dull moment.
Expectations: I had not seen the trailer before hand. But when the Coen Brothers are involved, no preview should be necessary.
Click Here to read Allen’s interview with Michael Stuhlbarg
Scorecard (0-10)
Actors:
Michael Stuhlbarg as Larry Gopnik: With the world constantly turning away and leaving him behind in the ruins that are fragments of his pride, this constantly cornered character never rings untrue. »
- Nick Allen
7 October 2009 12:55 AM, PDT | CinemaSpy | See recent CinemaSpy news »
A Serious Man boasts all the hallmarks of a typical Coen brothers film, including delightful meanderings away from the central plot, quirks in dialogue and facial expressions, and random events that have a dramatic effect on the lives of its characters. But for all its resemblance to the average picture from Joel and Ethan Coen, their latest offering is their most challenging, noncommercial work yet.
Set in a largely Jewish suburb of Minneapolis, Minnesota, A Serious Man reflects not only the Coens’ Midwestern roots, but it also focuses on their Jewish heritage. The film’s seemingly unrelated prologue is set in a 19th century shtetl in Europe, and religion figures prominently in both the daily lives of A Serious Man’s characters as well as its protagonist’s existential crisis. Resembling a 1960s retelling of Job’s trials, A Serious Man follows the tribulations of Jewish college professor Larry Gopnik »
2 October 2009 9:59 PM, PDT | BuzzFocus.com | See recent BuzzFocus.com news »
It is hard to imagine any two directors or writers in all of Hollywood who have been as consistently on their game as Joel and Ethan Coen. From Raising Arizona, to Fargo, to The Big Lebowski, to O Brother Where Art Thou, to No Country for Old Men, the Coens have shown that they are masters of their craft, and prolific ones at that, whether tackling the most serious and disturbing of material, ridiculous humor, or everything that somewhere falls in between. A Serious Man marks their latest accomplishment in filmmaking. It is one of those films that falls in between, taking a serious look at a particular character and his family, while taking time to let the humor of life’s often inane situations find its way to the surface. As comparisons seem unavoidable, A Serious Man may not go down as the Coen Brothers’ “best” film to date, »
- Bill Jones
2 October 2009 9:22 PM, PDT | HollywoodChicago.com | See recent HollywoodChicago.com news »
Chicago – In our latest comedy/drama edition of HollywoodChicago.com Hookup: Film, we have 50 admit-two passes up for grabs to the Chicago screening of the highly anticipated new film “A Serious Man” from Oscar-winning directors Joel and Ethan Coen!
Joel Coen and Ethan Coen are the creators of “Raising Arizona,” “Fargo,” “The Big Lebowski,” “O Brother, Where Art Thou?,” “No Country for Old Men” and “Burn After Reading”. “A Serious Man” stars Michael Stuhlbarg, Richard Kind, Fred Melamed, Sari Lennick, Aaron Wolff, Jessica McManus, Peter Breitmayer and Alan Mandell.
To win your free pass to the Chicago screening of “A Serious Man” courtesy of HollywoodChicago.com, all you need to do is answer our question below. That’s it! This screening will be held on Tuesday, Oct. 6, 2009 at 6:30 p.m. in downtown Chicago. Directions to enter this Hookup and immediately win can be found beneath the graphic below.
- adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
2 October 2009 3:40 PM, PDT | Cinematical | See recent Cinematical news »
By: Monika Bartyzel, reprinted from the Toronto International Film Festival 9/12/09
This is the dark comedy that Joel and Ethan Coen have been working towards. A Serious Man is the culmination of their lives, reminiscent both of their own suburban childhoods in the '60s, and of their cinematic successes over the last twenty-five years. It grabs the magic of local flavor and charm we saw in Fargo with a cast widely filled with unknown names (that pack as much of a cinematic punch as any star-studded roster you can think of), to the rapidly escalating drama of Burn After Reading. A Serious Man is cohesive and slick from stem to stern. It's serious about the craft of storytelling, both in form and function, with a dedication to characterization, pitch-perfect performances, and a cinematic backdrop that is both severely nostalgic and completely immersive.
In many ways, A Serious Man is a modern-day Candide. »
- Cinematical staff
2 October 2009 6:25 AM, PDT | Reelzchannel.com | See recent ReelzChannel news »
Critics are going crazy for the Coen Brothers' A Serious Man, some even calling it their best movie. That's a bold statement, considering they made Fargo and The Big Lebowski. Oh, and 2007 Best Picture winner No Country For Old Men.
Today it opens in just six theaters:
* Pacific ArcLight Cinemas Hollywood, Hollywood
* The Landmark, Los Angeles
* Landmark Uptown Theater, Minneapolis
* Clearview @ 1st and 62, New York
* Landmark Sunshine Cinema, New York
* Lincoln Plaza Cinema 6, New York
Check the Focus Features site to see if and when it will be expanding near you.
"Like many Coen films, it has a huge streak of shaggy dog to it — working far better as thematic exploration than as a movie unto itself — but you sense how deeply and profoundly it all matters to the duo (something they haven't always displayed with other films)."
— Rob Vaux, filmcritic.com
"Joel and Ethan Coen mine their adolescences in »
- reelz reelz
2 October 2009 5:19 AM, PDT | Rope of Silicon | See recent Rope Of Silicon news »
Michael Stuhlbarg in A Serious Man
Photo: Focus Features Should I laugh? Should I cry? Should I feel sympathy? These are just some of the questions I was asking during and after watching the Coen brothers' latest film A Serious Man. It's one of those films I can't help but walk out with questions on top of questions. Loaded with priceless moments of dialogue essential to getting a clear picture of the film's intentions, A Serious Man demands your attention and is a picture that is sure to improve the more you see it.
Not being the scholarly religious type I had to read up to learn A Serious Man bears resemblance to the Old Testament Book of Job, and the brothers recognize this fact, but have since said it wasn't on their mind while writing the screenplay. Set in an unnamed Midwestern suburb in 1967, the selling point many critics »
- Brad Brevet
1-20 of 61 articles from 2009 « Prev | Next »
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