A Serious Man-2009
Director Joel Coen, Ethan Coen
Starring Michael Stuhlbarg
Scott’s Review #582
Reviewed January 4, 2017
Grade: B
A Serious Man (2009) is a quirky, odd film that is a character study.
Directed by the Coen brothers who typically have an offbeat style to their films (No Country For Old Men-2007, and Fargo-1996 spring to mind), A Serious Man is no different, offering wonderful, richly written supporting characters.
The film, however, lacks the violence of other Coen Brothers films, instead, adding more humorous situations and an overall comical premise.
It tells the story of a Jewish Professor, Larry Gopnik (Michael Stuhlbarg), living in the 1960s, and has a string of bad luck. People close to Larry begin to drop dead all around him and he seems cursed with a string of bad luck.
The film centers around how he deals with crisis after crisis.
The first half of the film admittedly drags a bit, but the second part picks up nicely. The plot suddenly comes to a head rather quickly.
To stress, A Serious Man is a witty, dark comedy, so much of the dialogue is either tongue-in-cheek or dry.
The rabbis that Larry meets, combined with his son Danny and wife Judith are very funny and well-carved-out characters, many certain “types”.
The character of Larry also contained elements of the Larry David character on TV’s Curb Your Enthusiasm.
Also, for those cinema lovers who pay close attention to or have an appreciation for good set design, the film captures the 1960’s style (dress, furniture, cars), perfectly.
Oscar Nominations: Best Picture, Best Original Screenplay
Independent Spirit Award Nominations: 2 wins-Best Director-Joel and Ethan Coen, Best Cinematography (won), Robert Altman Award (won)