About
the time they wrapped The Big Lebowski and were
gearing up for its European premiere at the 1998 Film Festival,
the Coen brothers were already talking aboutttheir
next movie. But which one would it be? The hairdresser project?
To The White Sea their WW2 movie with Brad Pitt? Or,
most preposterous of all, their adaptation of Homer's ancient
classic, The Odyssey? The latter seemed bizarre even by the
Coens' natural standards, and even they seemed to think it amusing,
cracking jokes about how great it would be to see spelt out:
"Based upon the Odyssey by Homer" in (their words) "big, crumbly
letters".
Astonishingly,
this is the movie they went on to make (although the big crumbly
letters have made way for a stately black-and-white title card,
in the style of a silent movie dialogue frame). And Homer's
fable was indeed the starting point for O Brother Where
Art Thou?. As Joel puts it, "this project's been in
the works for 3,000 years, ever since Homer started yapping
about it". The result is a lively and funny, Depression-era,
fantasy-musical-comedy that as is the Coens' wont
blurs several movie genres together, with a superb script and
a terrific team of actors.
Heading
the cast is George Clooney, wryly sending up his matinee-idol
image as the film's Clark Gable-style hero, Everett Ulysses
McGill (whose fondness for hairnets and Dapper Dan hair grease
is a running joke throughout).
McGill
is shackled to a chain gang, ostensibly for his part in a major
bank robbery. But by using his powers of persuasion he gets
two bird-brained fellow prisoners Pete (John Turturro)
and Delmar (Tim
Blake Nelson) to join him in making an escape bid.
The
carrot he uses to entice them is a story of hidden gold
the proceeds from the robbery and the two dimwits happily
throw themselves in with him. Once they escape, a wise, blind
railway worker helps them on their way, accurately predicting
some of the sights they will see over the next few days. But
it is his final words which prove to be the most prophetic.
"You will find a fortune," he tells them, "but not the fortune
you seek."
The
title comes from Preston Sturges' 1941 film Sullivan's
Travels, in which Hollywood producer Joel McCrea longs
to make an epic film about poverty and hardship. Dressed as
a tramp, he goes under cover in the first part of town to research
the film, to be called O Brother, Where Art Thou?.
With
its jaunty humour, the film is also likely to be compared
to Frank Capra, whose most popular work was his lighter, Depression-era
fare, and not the 1946 Christmas fantasy It's A Wonderful
Life, which was deemed too simplistic for sophisticated
post-war audiences. The Coens' film is surprisingly light
for them too, being closer in tone to the physical farce of
their underrated comedy The Hudsucker Proxy
than the tight, dry writing showcased in Barton Fink,
Fargo and Miller's Crossing.
Anyone
put off the Coens' trademark cerebral sense of humour, which
sometimes borders on calculated, will be surprised at how
warm and almost spontaneous the whole film feels especially
in scenes with Tim Blake Nelson as the cretinous, lovable
Delmar. And to power things along, the score features an infectious
mix of bluegrass and spirituals re-recorded, arranged and
in one case even written by country singer T Bone Burnett.
"Music became a very prominent feature very early on in the
writing," says Joel, "and it just became more so as we went
along. There are very few scenes in the movie that don't have
an in-screen musical element to them."
In
fact, the music actually dictated the Coens' decision to set
the film in the deep south of America, where location filming
around the Mississippi area took them to perfectly preserved
rustic backwaters, with names like Yazoo City and D'Lo. "Early
on," says Ethan, "the issue of music began to inform our thinking
about it, and that argued for a southern setting. One other
thing that conspired to make it southern was the early idea
of making the characters chain-gang refugees."
"The
two things came together at the same time," adds Joel. "It all
coalesced around the idea of doing a relatively contemporary
version of The Odyssey, but in this region, with bluegrass music."
Who
else but the Coen brothers could conceive of such a thing?
And who else could hope to pull off? O Brother, Where
Art Thou? is yet another dazzling entry in peculiar
CV, occupying the divide between mainstream and arthouse.
It's the real thing. It's bona fide.
Damon
Wise
|






| Cast
|
George
Clooney, John Turturro, Tim Blake Nelson, Daniel Von Bargen,
John Goodman, Chris Thomas King |
| Producer |
Ethan
Coen |
| Prod
co |
Working
Title |
| Running
time |
102
minutes |
|
|