O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2001)
O Brother, Where Art Thou? Image Cover
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Director:Ethan Coen Joel Coen
Studio:Walt Disney Video
Rating:4.5
Rated:PG-13
Date Added:2006-01-01
Last Seen:2019-07-05
Purchased On:2006-01-01
ASIN:B00003CXRM
UPC:0786936144758
Price:19.99
Genre:Comedy
Release:2001-12-06
Location:0147
Duration:102
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:2.35:1
Features:DTS
Custom 1:Copied
Ethan Coen Joel Coen  ...  (Director)
  ...  (Writer)
 
George Clooney, John Turturro, Tim Blake Nelson, John Goodman, Holly Hu  ...  
Summary: Only Joel and Ethan Coen, the fraternal director and producer team behind art-house hits such as The Big Lebowski and Fargo and masters of quirky and ultra-stylish genre subversion, would dare nick the plot line of Homer's Odyssey for a comic picaresque saga about three cons on the run in 1930s Mississippi. Our wandering hero in this case is one Ulysses Everett McGill, a slick-tongued wise guy with a thing about hair pomade (George Clooney, blithely sending up his own dapper image) who talks his chain-gang buddies (Coen-movie regular John Turturro and newcomer Tim Blake Nelson) into lighting out after some buried loot he claims to know of. En route they come up against a prophetic blind man on a railroad truck, a burly, one-eyed baddie (the ever-magnificent John Goodman), a trio of sexy singing ladies, a blues guitarist who's sold his soul to the devil, a brace of crooked politicos on the stump, a manic-depressive bank robber, and--well, you get the idea. Into this, their most relaxed film yet, the Coens have tossed a beguiling ragbag of inconsequential situations, a wealth of looping, left-field dialogue, and a whole stash of gags both verbal and visual. O Brother (the title's lifted from Preston Sturges's classic 1941 comedy Sullivan's Travels) is furthermore graced with glowing, burnished photography from Roger Deakins and a masterly soundtrack from T-Bone Burnett that pays loving homage to American '30s folk styles--blues, gospel, bluegrass, jazz, and more. And just to prove that the brothers haven't lost their knack for bad-taste humor, we get a Ku Klux Klan rally choreographed like a cross between a Nuremberg rally and a Busby Berkeley musical. --Philip Kemp