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The Whole Durn Human Comedy: Life According to the Coen Brothers

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01 March 2022

The Coen Bros. have attracted a wide following and been rewarded with Oscars and other honors. Some of their films are cult favorites and box office hits, such as Fargo, The Big Lebowski, and No Country for Old Men. Yet the team of filmmaking brothers remains misunderstood in some circles. Ethan and Joel Coen deliberately unsettle conventional expectations and raise disturbing questions about human nature while mischievously mixing film genres and styles. Their films display shocking tonal shifts as they blend comedy and drama and, most controversially, comedy and violence. This potent mélange of themes and stylistic approaches makes the Coens’ films adventurous, unpredictable probes into contemporary social anxieties. As brilliant satirists, they are heirs to Preston Sturges and Billy Wilder. But they resist easy definition and raise the ire of some critics who like films to fit more comfortably into preexisting formats. Film historian and critic Joseph McBride — author of acclaimed biographies of Frank Capra, John Ford, and Steven Spielberg, along with critical studies of Orson Welles, Ernst Lubitsch, and Wilder — jousts with the Coens’ detractors while defining the filmmakers’ freshness and originality. The quirkily individualistic Coens are the kind of personal filmmakers the increasingly conglomerated American cinema rarely fosters anymore, and this critical study illuminates their artistic personalities and contributions.

PERFORMING ARTS / Individual Director ( see also BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Entertainment & Performing Arts), Individual film directors, film-makers, PERFORMING ARTS / Film / History & Criticism, PERFORMING ARTS / Film / Genres / Comedy, Film history, theory or criticism, Film: styles and genres

“A marvelous and unexpected critical study of the Coen brothers from one of the great historians of American cinema. In The Whole Durn Human Comedy, McBride sets himself the task of uncovering the humanist core in a body of films too often disparaged as aloof and ironic.”—Rob King, Professor of Film and Media Studies, Columbia University, US
A Note to the Reader; Introduction: The Taciturn Two; 1. Heartless Cynics?; 2. “The Pleasure of Mixing Things Around”; 3. Caricature and Empathy; 4. A Grand Design; 5. Skewed Perspectives; 6. “In the Beginning There Was Fear”; 7. “This Cockeyed Caravan”; 8. “Magic * Mirth * Mystery” in The Ballad of Buster Scruggs; Filmography; Selected Sources on the Coen Brothers; Index.