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Finally. Finally the
Coen Brothers getting back to what they do best--a symbolic, intellectual
movie that is both entertaining and utterly dense at the same time.
Harkening back to Barton
Fink and Fargo, A Serious Man combines the mysticism of the former and
the plot devices of the latter. Not that there's anything wrong with
some of their other "serious" movies, but this one just
felt like a Cohen Brothers' classic.
Larry Gopnick is clearly cast in the roll of Job. He is a man put
upon by his wife, his children, his students, his brother, his bosses
and just about everyone around him. And he must suffer these trials
all the while wondering why he, as a serious man, is being put through
these trials. He goes to rabbis for answers; he gets stoned with his
beautiful neighbor looking for answers. He even considers taking a
bribe from a student in order to overcome his problems. It's all very
biblical in its Jobiness. I'm not familiar enough with the story to
get into detail, but I have a recollection that Job, despite his trials
increasing in ridiculousness, must take them on while remaining stoic
because he understands that this is God testing his metal and that
he is satisfying God by not questioning but merely surviving. The
problem is, this isn't the bible, and real people like Larry have
mortgages, daughters who need nose jobs, sons who need Bar Mitzvahs
and wives who kick them out of their own houses to move in their smarmy,
fat bearded boyfriends.
The interesting part, and one that I know the Coen Brothers looked
into, but I'm too stupid/lazy to, is that Larry is a physics teacher.
Thus the argument of religion versus science. How can a man of science
truly believe that he is being cursed by God or some other supernatural
power? After all, he is a serious man, and not one that is flaky and
believes in such nonsense as supernatural film flammery. I'm sure
there is also some principal of physics at play here, as it's just
like the Coen Brothers to mix their biblical stories with a scientific
theory. Brilliant! So, as a man of science, he tries to see his rabbi
for some sort of logical explanation. Because that's what scientists
do. After being stymied in his attempt to see the "senior"
rabbi, he is adrift. The funny part is that his son, who finds all
his answers in weed, eventually gets that meeting with the senior
rabbi after his Bar Mitzvah, and we see that there is no answer to
anything and that in fact the rabbi has little more advice for him
than to “be a good boy.” So much for the wisdom of the ages.
Meanwhile our man of science and man of waning faith wrestles with
a moral conundrum in the form of that aformentioned bribe given to
him by a student for a passing grade. This money burns a hole in his
soul. How could a serious man accept that which he did not earn? But
how could a serious man live at a hotel called the Jolly Roger separate
from his family with his schizoid brother, cuckolded and broke? While
he looks for an answer from faith, what he truly needs is to be that
serious man and close ranks. The end, in typical Coen Brothers’ fashion,
is ambiguous in the fact that despite Larry deciding to man up and
be that serious man, his trials, just when they seem to be at an end,
only amplify to a deafening crescendo in the closing minute of the
film. Is this the answer then? Go against what one knows is right
and take the “easy” way out of one’s trials and be struck down by
God? Or is it all a matter of that scientific theory that I know nothing
about (but he and the Coen Brothers probably do)? Whatever the case,
it seems that fate and/or scientific theory has a hand in what is
going to happen with Larry and no matter what decisions he makes,
what advice he gets and how serious a man he turns out to be, something
or somebody has it out for him.--and has it out for him bad. [Amazon
on Demand via Roku]
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