What Happened to The Coen Brothers?

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  • @Locadel2003
    @Locadel2003 Год назад +167

    The whole chase scene in "Raising Arizona" is still one of the funniest sequences I have ever watched

    • @BigPalf71
      @BigPalf71 Год назад +5

      Such a great film

    • @jeremybowers3181
      @jeremybowers3181 Год назад +3

      And it STILL holds up today!!.....,"just drive fast."...."aghhhhhhhhhh!!!!" Epic.

    • @justinmanser7525
      @justinmanser7525 Год назад +2

      "Don't forget the Huggies!"

    • @ianashby1449
      @ianashby1449 Год назад +1

      Also love bad santa

    • @emilioa.2365
      @emilioa.2365 Год назад +1

      So much deeper than people give it cred it for.

  • @wstine79
    @wstine79 Год назад +97

    I love The Big Lebowski, Fargo, and Oh Brother, Where Aren't Though. Their dark comedies are my favorite. But, their best movie is Garfield.

  • @Jared_Wignall
    @Jared_Wignall Год назад +43

    Fargo is my favorite film they’ve made. One of my favorite comedies with some of the best dialogue and acting in a film. I love their movies and hopefully they will reunite to make another film together. Thank you for the video!

    • @wet-read
      @wet-read Год назад

      Check out the show, too. First season. Very good IMO.

  • @austins.2495
    @austins.2495 Год назад +25

    O Brother is such a fever dream, a true classic.

  • @jamiekramer8244
    @jamiekramer8244 Год назад +17

    A Serious Man is as sublime a film as can be made.
    *Edit: Thanks for making this one gang🙏🙏

  • @briandain8432
    @briandain8432 Год назад +9

    I was 8 when I saw Raising Arizona, it was the earliest I can remember hearing my typically stoic Father laughing out loud. Thanks to this Video I'll probably watch the Blu-ray of Big Lebowski and then Burn After Reading, another movie that made my Dad Laugh Out Loud.

  • @VaiOr6
    @VaiOr6 Год назад +52

    All their movies are just great, even their weaker ones! The Coen Brothers are the definition of cinema! Hopefully they will return as a duo one day

  • @barbiquearea
    @barbiquearea Год назад +64

    Small nitpick on Kumiko the Treasure Hunter. The girl it was based on Takako Konishi did travel to the US, first to Minnesota and then to North Dakota where she sadly passed away. The reason everyone believed she came to the US in search of the missing briefcase of money from Fargo was due to the media spinning this narrative when they reported on her death in 2001.
    They made up this idea that she believed the Coen Brothers film was real and she came to the states explicitly to search for the money. It didn't help that Takako had gone to a police station and pointed to an area on a hand drawn map asking the police for directions there and even mentioning Fargo a couple of times.
    That led the media to link her death to the film Fargo. However its more likely that Takako traveled to the states after losing her job and going through some personal issues decided to come to the US in search of an American businessman she once dated. She wasn't able to find the man and her increasing depression caused her to binge drink and using heavy amounts of drugs, leading up to her death near Detroit Lakes, Minnesota. Her death was ruled as a suicide as her family received a letter from her while she was in the US stating she intended to end her life.

    • @adamp2029
      @adamp2029 Год назад +8

      Was searching for a comment like this before I said the same thing.

    • @FractalRaver
      @FractalRaver Год назад +3

      I mean, that’s just insane, even if it were true. Very much like a needle in 1000 haystacks. Japan has a real sui c1de problem. Like that forest where everyone goes to. You know. Do that. There was a Netflix episode about that forest. A show narrated by William Shatner. That first episode was creepy. As for that girl it’s a sad story. I bet she was just a Fargo fan. And it does seem sort of interesting how much international success they’ve had. Didn’t even know that.

    • @mikearchibald744
      @mikearchibald744 Год назад

      @@FractalRaver United States actually has a higher suicide rate than Japan.

    • @robertglass3944
      @robertglass3944 Год назад

      @@FractalRaver, well, when you come from a culture that, for hundreds of years, suicide was expected of you if you shamed your family, it can be hard to shake.

  • @legendarycheekymonkey
    @legendarycheekymonkey Год назад +48

    Amazing catalogue of movies, most of which I adore. No Country for Old Men always stands out to me as a movie that has so much but is made with so little. It's ruthless efficiency blows me away every time I watch it, which is regularly. And The Big Lebowski is usually the first thing that comes to mind when I'm asked what my favourite all time movie is, but that's just like my opinion man.

    • @jacksonbonds220
      @jacksonbonds220 Год назад

      I’m sorry your step-mother is a nympho

    • @Skabanis
      @Skabanis Год назад +2

      The books is amzing too

    • @magistrumartium
      @magistrumartium Год назад +2

      No Country and Fargo are two of my all-time favorite films, but The Big Lebowski didn't tickle me. It's so popular, I watched it a second time (many years later) because I thought maybe I missed something the first time around, but again it left me cold. Personal taste is a mysterious thing, isn't it?

  • @jaymeals8571
    @jaymeals8571 Год назад +16

    Two of the Greatest to ever put their touch on cinema!

  • @ParamotorSteve
    @ParamotorSteve Год назад +9

    What makes me sad sometimes is realizing that you only get to see a movie for the first time ONCE. The Coen Brothers' movies are especially spectacular upon first view. Repeated views are great, of course, but that first view of each of their movies is such a treat. Seeing Blood Simple for the first time for me was simply magical.

    • @EJD339
      @EJD339 4 месяца назад +1

      I’ve grown accustomed not liking their movies in the first watch funny enough but I love them after repeat viewings. I was working for a movie theater when country for old men came out and I got sucked in and watched the whole thing at work on a Tuesday and was blown away.

  • @stommx
    @stommx Год назад +72

    My favourite is the totally underrated Miller's crossing. I actually met Gabriel Byrne and we had a chat were he talked about the Coen brothers and the scene with Albert Finney with Danny Boy playing in the background. Was totally starstruck.

    • @laurarules3642
      @laurarules3642 Год назад

      If only that was real

    • @RoverIAC
      @RoverIAC Год назад +10

      Miller's Crossing is easily my favorite Coen Bros film and gangster film.

    • @stommx
      @stommx Год назад +11

      @@laurarules3642 Yes it's a real story. I worked in a restaurant in Dublin and he used to be a regular there. Nice fella.

    • @AdaptiveApeHybrid
      @AdaptiveApeHybrid Год назад +1

      One of my all time favorites.

    • @AdaptiveApeHybrid
      @AdaptiveApeHybrid Год назад

      @@laurarules3642 shut up Laura.

  • @retrodude5891
    @retrodude5891 Год назад +22

    No Country for Old Men has a place in my heart. I remember I had a classmate in my cinema class in college that told me watch this or Lawrence of Arabia, chose the first.
    And at the time I did think the ending sucked. Maybe growing up in where I did, violence was not new.
    But as a film buff I did get disappointed Bardem was able to walk away.
    It's not til I've grown that I now understand why it was a best picture. It really isn't about the story I saw, it's about the sheriff.
    Man crazy how you learn more about a movie over time. How you try to see from other people's perspective.

    • @wet-read
      @wet-read Год назад

      LoA is worth watching for the gorgeous cinematography alone!

    • @lilmoe4364
      @lilmoe4364 Год назад

      My friend shared the same disappointment, and my brother gave it to him lol - "Aw, it didn't wrap up nicely with the good winning and everyone riding happily into the sunset? Hello! Life isn't like that, you want happy endings, go see a Disney movie," etc lol

    • @chuckschillingvideos
      @chuckschillingvideos Год назад

      You do understand that Bardem may or may not have even existed, right?

    • @hjarten
      @hjarten Год назад

      Cormac McCarthy. Died Recently.

    • @JLeeeP
      @JLeeeP 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@chuckschillingvideosThe moment when you realize how shameful this comment is will also be the moment when you become a man.

  • @iguanacashmere
    @iguanacashmere Год назад +16

    In film school I learned they use a pseudonym for the editor because of union regulations around the guilds. It may not be this way now but it used to be you couldn't be a member of multiple guilds but needed to be union for certain projects. I did a paper on Barton Fink (my choice) and it came up at that point :)

  • @briandain8432
    @briandain8432 Год назад +16

    In the Fargo TV Series, Billy Bob was one of the best Hitmen ever!!

  • @AdaptiveApeHybrid
    @AdaptiveApeHybrid Год назад +3

    Words cannot begin to convey how much I love Fargo, Miller's Crossing and O' Bro

  • @rushmore309
    @rushmore309 Год назад +10

    Love just about every one of the Coen Brothers films, but Raising Arizona just may be my personal favorite.

  • @tonyisgolden5136
    @tonyisgolden5136 Год назад +6

    I like the coen brother's alot and I think there one of if not the best directing duo's. Fargo is one of my favorite movie's of all time. I also liked raising arizona, the big lebowski, o brother where art thou?, miller's crossing, burn after reading, a serious man, the man who wasn't there, blood simple, true grit, no country for old men and barton fink alot. I would say my top 5 coen movie's are probably fargo, no country for old men, barton fink, raising arizona and the big lebowski.

    • @MisterRlGHT
      @MisterRlGHT Год назад

      My favorite Coen Bros film is all of them except The Ladykillers & Intolerable Cruelty (both of which I choose to pretend never existed).

  • @MatthewSmith-fy5hk
    @MatthewSmith-fy5hk 10 месяцев назад +3

    The Coens don't care if they win awards or make billions of dollars, they care about making great movies. Its quite refreshing.

  • @solearesoul
    @solearesoul Год назад +5

    Two of my top five all time favorite movies are Coen Bros films… Raising Arizona and Big Lebowski. They’re two movies I can watch over and over and always find such joy in. Raising Arizona is one of the most intelligently comedic films I’ve ever seen.

    • @asmith8947
      @asmith8947 Год назад +2

      I think I've got Lebowski memorized in it's entirety. Great movie.

  • @SLAV326
    @SLAV326 Год назад +9

    I'm surprised they don't like the Fargo series. It practically pays homage to all of their films at one point or another.

  • @jonathanfeldheim6554
    @jonathanfeldheim6554 Год назад +10

    Brad Pitt as Chad Feldheimer in Burn After Reading still makes me laugh

  • @somebodynowhere
    @somebodynowhere Год назад +9

    I feel like Steve Buscemi would be a great subject for a WTF episode

  • @rylymbona
    @rylymbona Год назад +6

    Inside Lewin Davis was one of the most interesting scenes I've ever seen. I liked how it opens the way it ends, sort of. Also, it's one of the first films I've ever seen where I was just depressed by the end because of the lack of a happy ending and really how sad Lewis' life is.

  • @jimarri
    @jimarri 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for your reverence and respect for "A Serious Man." I think it's their best.

  • @justinmanser7525
    @justinmanser7525 Год назад +11

    Seeing David Ransche (☆Sledge Hammer ☆) in Burn After Reading was the highest quality casting ever.
    Raising Arizona was brilliant....

  • @brandynjohnson2248
    @brandynjohnson2248 Год назад +5

    I can't think of anyone else with a longer list of good movies.

  • @mzcytin
    @mzcytin Год назад +5

    Intolerable Cruelty was hilarious.

    • @sclogse1
      @sclogse1 Год назад +1

      I love it too. Puts a smile on my face, along with Hail Caesar.

  • @bulletmccarthur
    @bulletmccarthur 4 месяца назад +3

    Joel died of an explosive diarrhea attack. Ethan went to check on him, slipped on the diarrhea and cracked his skull on the bathroom tile. It was a horribly tragic way to lose such talented filmmakers.

  • @MichalGorkaTruskaw
    @MichalGorkaTruskaw Год назад +4

    Intorelable Cruelty is perfect! 10/10

    • @sclogse1
      @sclogse1 Год назад

      It sure puts me in a great mood. A desert island comedy.

  • @Omar-wq9dz
    @Omar-wq9dz Год назад +8

    A little late to the party, but I never watched any Coen Brothers movies until I was in my twenties. The first of theirs I ever saw was Big Lebowski when I was 20 and took a film class in college, and then later saw their other movies like Raising Arizona, Hudsucker Proxy, No Country For Old Men, and Fargo on my own time

  • @AmericanHero-c7j
    @AmericanHero-c7j 9 месяцев назад

    Miller's Crossing is brilliant and my favorite of their movies. I love all of their work and it is my number one.

  • @GlennDavey
    @GlennDavey Год назад +1

    They're... they're right there. Still making movies...

  • @michaelstrong5383
    @michaelstrong5383 Год назад +13

    Fargo, Big Lebowski, O Brother Where Art Thou?, and No Country for Old Men are classics.
    Though, I do find The Ladykillers to be their most underrated. It's not nuanced or complex as the films I mentioned, but I thought it was just funny.

    • @MisterRlGHT
      @MisterRlGHT Год назад

      A special circle of hell awaits all who employ Tom Hanks to attempt a Southern accent.

  • @ericpalmer1905
    @ericpalmer1905 Год назад +2

    The Ballad of Buster Scruggs is great too..

  • @democlips1
    @democlips1 Год назад +4

    No country for old man was amazing!

  • @Largentina.
    @Largentina. Год назад +1

    I love these boys so much. My favorite will always be Miller's Crossing

  • @octoman511
    @octoman511 Год назад +5

    WTF happened to the DCEU next please

  • @caldodge
    @caldodge Год назад +5

    "Her insides were a rocky place where my seed could find no purchase."

    • @enderjed
      @enderjed Год назад

      TURN TO THE RAUGHT!

  • @tyler_rake88
    @tyler_rake88 Год назад +10

    The Coen Brothers have directed some great films Over the years

  • @ottomattix86
    @ottomattix86 Год назад +2

    No country for old men hit me incredibly hard. Their tightest movie besides Fargo. Imo.

  • @robharper2078
    @robharper2078 7 месяцев назад

    "That's gold, Ethan and Joel, GOLD!"

  • @anotherpeasant
    @anotherpeasant Год назад +2

    I listen to the O Brother and Inside Llewen Davis soundtracks regularly

    • @007Julie
      @007Julie Год назад

      The O Brother soundtrack is pure perfection, I also listen to it quite often.

  • @JacobMcCaslin
    @JacobMcCaslin Год назад +1

    Burn After Reading has always been my favorite Coen brothers movie. 🎉

  • @anonymousowl72
    @anonymousowl72 Год назад +3

    Intolerable Cruelty is one of my favorites of theirs

    • @sclogse1
      @sclogse1 Год назад +1

      It puts me in great mood. Desert island movie..

  • @greatsilentwatcher
    @greatsilentwatcher 8 месяцев назад

    Enjoyed watching. I'm a Coen Brothers fan and this is a terrific review.

  • @simonetta-ta
    @simonetta-ta Год назад

    Hey thanx! I enjoyed this so müch!! Your passion & enthusiasm 4 the Coen bros. which I definitely share!! Esp. Barton Fink & ... Fargooo!!

  • @jamesstewart8377
    @jamesstewart8377 11 месяцев назад +1

    Man who wasn’t there is my favorite

  • @heatherhillman1
    @heatherhillman1 3 месяца назад

    No Country For Old Men is one of the absolute BEST movies I have ever seen.

  • @Locadel2003
    @Locadel2003 Год назад +5

    "No country for old men" has still some of the most intense and terrifying scenes ever made and isnt even an horror movie. They are known for dark comedies but that movie was really something of different and great

    • @idkwhodidthis2990
      @idkwhodidthis2990 Год назад +1

      I was a little let down that Llewelyn's body, let alone death wasn't shown. But I bought the DVD as soon as it hit the store

    • @ottomattix86
      @ottomattix86 Год назад

      @@idkwhodidthis2990 it's done this way to imply "it doesn't matter how we got there, only the end result. A theme throughout the movie.

    • @ottomattix86
      @ottomattix86 Год назад

      @@idkwhodidthis2990 you wwre suposed to. It's the point!
      There are no clean geteways

  • @movonup
    @movonup Год назад

    I'm at a loss for words, just, thank you, and thanks to the greatest film makers of my generation. Long live the Coen brothers.

  • @sanketfulmali9113
    @sanketfulmali9113 Год назад

    Coen brothers are masters of filmmaking, they gave us rich quality fun movies in this absurd strange world, lots of respect and blessings for them. 🙌🙏

  • @Locadel2003
    @Locadel2003 Год назад +3

    "Fargo" & "Burn after reading" has still some of the best most WTF moments in cinema history. Like Brad pitt death and Steve Buscemi death

  • @Edgeof666
    @Edgeof666 9 месяцев назад

    Raising Arizona will always be my favourite film from the Brothers.

  • @archer1949
    @archer1949 Год назад +7

    A Serious Man is very underrated.

  • @andrewwalledge6101
    @andrewwalledge6101 Год назад

    Great video, brilliant film makers. Only thing I don't understand is why hardly any of their films are on 4K - or even Blu-ray. Surely someone could put out a complete collection for their fans. They deserve it and we deserve it.

  • @mattmaloney2445
    @mattmaloney2445 Год назад

    Looking forward to "Drive Away Dolls" this coming autumn.

  • @rottensquid
    @rottensquid Год назад +2

    What a delightful trip down memory lane. I discovered the Coens when Raising Arizona came out on video. I'd seen the trailer in a theater, but dismissed it as looking about as dumb and shallow as any film I could imagine. But man, was I wrong. I fell in love immediately, and followed the Coens from then on. Miller's Crossing was the low-profile gangster film I thought far superior to Goodfellas, and eventually, lots of people came around to agreeing. But at the time, everyone was patting themselves on the back for having "discovered" Scorsese. I took my folks to Barton Fink, making them lifelong Coen fans too. The snooty French got it, but I clearly remember the New Yorker critic dismissing it, while heaping praise on Batman, which is such a surface-only film, it makes me laugh.
    Speaking of, I sometimes wonder what a Coen Batman film would have been like, but as much of a fan as I am, I can't picture how the Coens could have pulled it off. Tim Burton is a shallow filmmaker by any standard, but he had at least a notion of how to bring a cartoon into the real world. I've never particularly liked his rubber Batman, but I can only imagine the Coen Batman being even worse. The Coens, for all their genius, are filmmakers' filmmakers. It's clear that their entire body of inspiration comes from film alone. And whatever one might say about Burton, he has a wider body of inspiration. And you need that to even begin the arduous task of translating the deceptively stylized world of superheroes into live action. There was no model in film that parallels what comic books do. It was utterly uncharted territory. There's no way around the fact that the minute you put a real person in a superhero leotard on film, the fantasy created by comics bursts. So I don't see the Coens cracking that problem, not with the ludicrous audacity that Burton cracked it, by turning his Batman into a six foot action figure, molded plastic muscles and all. I imagine that was one of many reasons they turned down the gig.

  • @erniehudson1
    @erniehudson1 Год назад +1

    Big Lebowski & True Grit are their best.

  • @jordanneal576
    @jordanneal576 Год назад +3

    I've over analyzed A Serious Man, and this is the conclusion that I came to. Throughout the film Larry keeps saying "I didn't do anything!" As if doing nothing means nothing should happen to him. The whole film is things happening to him, and him doing nothing. Then at the end, he finally makes a choice and does something bad, and God's judgement quickly follows. It's kind of like the story of Job if Job gave in at the end.
    Also Miller's Crossing is my favorite film of all time. I'll be surprised if I ever see one I enjoy more.

    • @diogenesagogo
      @diogenesagogo Год назад +1

      A Serious Man my favourite. Maybe because I'm seriously convinced quantum mechanics is essentially bullpoo. And who'd have thought a song written by some acid headed hippie freaks would contain the most profound lyrics ever written??

    • @robkeaton6143
      @robkeaton6143 Год назад

      Ya think?

  • @RileyRampant
    @RileyRampant Год назад +1

    How great was this sum-up of the CoenBros phenomenon ? Totally great. The Coens are, in film, what Dylan is to me, in Music. On a whole nother level.

  • @KenAdams426
    @KenAdams426 Год назад +1

    my money was part of the 60 million when i saw Fargo in the theaters. But i walked out of that movie thinking it was so stupid. But then saw it again on VHS when it came out and loved it!!!

  • @WhatAboutZoidberg
    @WhatAboutZoidberg Год назад +3

    We get it you dont like Intolerable Cruelty, just let people like it, its ok. It's a blast and I've watched it more times than most Coen Bros movies. Some people still hate Hudsucker Proxy and that movie just slays me, that little bit of Raimi edge. Blood Simple is still just such a solis flick & the soundtrack doesnt get enough love.

    • @sclogse1
      @sclogse1 Год назад

      Intolerable is wonderful film. It always puts me in a grear mood.

  • @thatbeme
    @thatbeme Год назад

    I love, ❤️ love, love ❤️ their works....

  • @francessimmonds5784
    @francessimmonds5784 Год назад +5

    What happened to the Cohen bros? They're continuing to make good films. Loved Buster Scruggs

    • @thenetworkingstudy2208
      @thenetworkingstudy2208 Год назад +1

      I couldn't believe how good "The Ballad of Buster Scruggs" was. I was glued to the scene the whole time and was thinking about it a lot for days after watching. Their movies always feel so original and different.

  • @ABoyandHisDog-pd3lb
    @ABoyandHisDog-pd3lb 7 месяцев назад

    I'd love to watch a streaming series based on the further stories of Buster Scruggs

  • @hermantaffy4580
    @hermantaffy4580 Год назад +2

    Love Coen Bros so much! Had no idea they weren’t fans of the Fargo series..so many other Coen movies eastereggs throughout. Is Hawley trolling them? You covered a lot, but admittedly disappointed you left out Ethan’s goofy movie he wrote The Naked Man and his book of short stories and scripts Gates of Eden, which is fantastic!
    🤘🏴‍☠️

  • @balaw1980
    @balaw1980 Год назад

    Wow, great analysis of all their films. I've gotta say I am in almost 100% agreement with all your comments and ratings. Thanks.

  • @robkeaton6143
    @robkeaton6143 Год назад

    I'm as big a Coen Bros fan as you'll find, which is why it's so ironic that whenever I try to pick a favorite film I always end up at True Grit. It's one of only a couple films that isn't an original idea of theirs, and it's just perfect. A close second is pretty much everything else, but in particular I love Inside Llewyn Davis, The Hudsucker Proxy, O' Brother, Fargo, No Country...well like I said, pretty much everything they've done is exceptionally good. Only Paul Thomas Anderson holds a candle to the brothers in my opinion, especially among American filmmakers.

  • @TheMako215
    @TheMako215 Год назад

    Well done . Nailed it!! JoBlow

  • @bekindrewindgeorgeprice8593
    @bekindrewindgeorgeprice8593 Год назад +1

    O Brother, Where Art Thou? Is my favourite film out of all them they did.

    • @jasoncanby2525
      @jasoncanby2525 Год назад +1

      Mine as well. The performances from the 3 leads are damn good

    • @bekindrewindgeorgeprice8593
      @bekindrewindgeorgeprice8593 Год назад

      @@jasoncanby2525 I know. It’s my favourite Coen Brothers film out of all of them.

  • @Blackdiamondprod.
    @Blackdiamondprod. Год назад

    I didn’t know that the Coens had anything to do with Evil Dead. That’s one of my favorite movies!

  • @mikehaliday8302
    @mikehaliday8302 Год назад +2

    Just one? Miller's Crossing
    Number two? (Frick you!): Intolerable Cruelty (seriously, love the intense script and Catherine Zeta Jones. And Billy Bob Thornton)
    Number three? A tie between Raising Arizona and O Brother Where Art Thou (although I'll concede at this point that I could easily trail off into a list of all their movies).
    The Coens are the nearest thing we have today to what Shakespeare was doing in his time. Miller's Crossing is their Hamlet, Intolerable Cruelty is their Taming of the Shrew, etc.
    What happened to the Coens? They need to get back to writing dense Shakespeare-esque scripts and then filming the everloving shit out of it.
    (Oh, yeah...and I agree with you on The Ladykillers...poorly acknowledged but absolutely delicious)

    • @sclogse1
      @sclogse1 Год назад

      I.C. is great fun.

  • @uselessagent7342
    @uselessagent7342 Год назад +1

    who would dare say that about the ending to No Country For Old Men that was a gotdam masterpiece

  • @junglemoose2164
    @junglemoose2164 Год назад +1

    I like the Coen brothers. I have seen most of their films. Raising Arizona and No Country For Old Men are two of my favorite films. I didn't like Fargo and found The Big Lebowski to be unwatchable so much so I didn't even finish viewing it.

  • @ThatBoyRashaad
    @ThatBoyRashaad Год назад

    I thank The Coen Brothers for making The Big Lebowski, thanks to them I have a cussing addiction and I am proud of it.

  • @domwalker6526
    @domwalker6526 Год назад +2

    Honestly all their movies are really good. None of em suck

  • @Strimbles
    @Strimbles Год назад +1

    5:43 combinding is not a word!

  • @briandain8432
    @briandain8432 Год назад +1

    DO NOT SEEK THE TREASURE always brings a grin among all classes of Guys.

  • @f.kieranfinney457
    @f.kieranfinney457 Год назад

    Miller’s Crossing is a personal favorite. Not their best work but so satisfying. Either you ‘get’ their work or not. A simple way to find like-minded friends is to ask someone about Barton Fink.

  • @PumpernickelBread25
    @PumpernickelBread25 Год назад +1

    They have so many good movies. I am a big fan of True Grit

  • @ErmineskinCreelov
    @ErmineskinCreelov Год назад +2

    The Tom Waits scene from BusterScrugs is their quintesential moment imo. please do dAviD LYnch

  • @andrewblack7852
    @andrewblack7852 Год назад

    Big lebo is all time classic as is Fargo , but no country is a gem of such a rare quality , it’s crazy. I’d say it’s one of the best movies of all time

  • @mattstivers342
    @mattstivers342 Год назад +2

    Intolerable cruelty is my favorite movie by the Cohen brothers.

    • @sclogse1
      @sclogse1 Год назад

      It sure puts me in a great mood. You probably like Hail Caesar too..

  • @MisterRlGHT
    @MisterRlGHT Год назад

    I give them props for the directors' cut of Blood Simple, only director cut I know of that was indeed cut shorter than the original release.

  • @natet5959
    @natet5959 Год назад +1

    Raising Arizona is absolute fire! A top 5 movie for sure! I thought Cage's performance was solid and Holly Hunter was spot on.

  • @aWomanFreed
    @aWomanFreed Год назад

    Fargo, The Big Lebowski, O Brother Where Art Thou and True Grit are all in my top ten favorite films of all time

    • @asmith8947
      @asmith8947 Год назад

      You have good taste in movies.

  • @jasonkeenan4154
    @jasonkeenan4154 Год назад

    I believe the Coen Brothers to be the finest American filmmakers of all time. Their catalog speaks for itself.

  • @RaspberryMeatsicle
    @RaspberryMeatsicle Год назад +6

    Intolerable Cruelty is highly underrated. If you want to see a truly bad Coens' film The Ladykillers is just awful

    • @sclogse1
      @sclogse1 Год назад

      We are in agreement. I.C. Puts me in a great mood. I recommend Hail Caesar.

  • @perrymalcolm3802
    @perrymalcolm3802 Год назад

    I hope your conclusion is spot on! I feared they had some kind of falling out.
    Hope that’s not the case.
    They deserve any happy path they choose
    They’ve brought so much to us!

  • @aakankshaaditi9821
    @aakankshaaditi9821 9 месяцев назад

    amazing video essay

  • @SirSmoldham
    @SirSmoldham Год назад +2

    I used to live a few blocks away from the gang in Silverlake back in the day (I also knew Jeff Dowd who got me into a "Lebowski Fest" in LA but I digress) and could make a book-length comment about the genius of these men so I'll just say that I include "Crimewave" and "The Hudsucker Proxy" as two of my top 200 films of all time, which gives you an idea where I place the rest of their filmography. As a horror fan, "Suburbicon" and "No Country for Old Men" chilled me to the bone.

    • @enderjed
      @enderjed Год назад +1

      I had never heard of Crimewave and just happened to stumble upon it earlier this very week streaming for free on tubi (as a GenX, I find tons of great stuff on tubi). The fact that it opens at Hudsucker State Penitentiary knocks me out, and that climactic chase scene is a riot. And Bruce McCullough just owns, as usual

  • @robertglass3944
    @robertglass3944 Год назад +1

    I enjoyed "The Hudsucker Proxy" more than "The Big Lebowski".
    And,, "O Brother Where Art Thou?" Is my number one favorite Coen Bros film, by a pretty good lead. It's actually one of my all time favorite films, period.

  • @deejayiwan7
    @deejayiwan7 Год назад

    Excellent video

  • @jameslacey5474
    @jameslacey5474 Год назад +1

    'Blood Simple', 'Miller's Crossing' and 'No Country for Old Men' are my favorites. I worked on the Coen Bros. film 'The Hudsucker Proxy' as a make-up artist and there was a scene where Paul Newman was talking with his yes men that was hilarious (I was holding myself back from laughing) and it got cut from the film unfortunately. The film could have used it, in my opinion.

  • @Jinxyjones
    @Jinxyjones Год назад

    Love these. Thank you.

  • @1rwjwith
    @1rwjwith Год назад

    Here is my at least 3: THE BIG LEBOWSKI, INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS and BARTON FINK…Love their films.

  • @charlesrense5199
    @charlesrense5199 Год назад +1

    For me, the coens are all about America. Each of their movies represents a different regional facet of American culture, often one that doesn't get much attention from Hollywood. And then they elevate its flavors and nuances it to an almost mythical status.

  • @markmiremont749
    @markmiremont749 Год назад

    WELL DONE!!!!! 👍👍

  • @jorge6207
    @jorge6207 Год назад

    That rug really tied up the room together