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- <text id=91TT1905>
- <title>
- Aug. 26, 1991: A Three-Espresso Hallucination
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 26, 1991 Science Under Siege
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 58
- A Three-Espresso Hallucination
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Audacious, difficult--all right, weird--Barton Fink confirms
- the status of the Coen brothers, Joel and Ethan, as distinctive
- postmodern film artists
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Schickel--With reporting by Janice C. Simpson/
- New York
- </p>
- <p> You're going to be hearing a lot about Barton Fink in the
- next few weeks. Gnomic, claustrophobic, hallucinatory, just
- plain weird, it is the kind of movie critics can soak up
- thousands of words analyzing and cinephiles can soak up at least
- three espressos arguing their way through.
- </p>
- <p> It is, as well, the first film to accomplish the hat trick
- at the Cannes festival (best picture, best director and best
- actor), and we all understand, don't we, that when it comes to
- our own movies, the French always know what's best for--and
- by--us American primitives.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, it is the work of two brothers, Joel and Ethan
- Coen, who have, professionally speaking, rolled themselves into
- a single, significant auteur in the course of just seven years
- and four films, in the process developing cult and critical
- followings of large and vociferous proportions.
- </p>
- <p> In other words, intrinsically problematic as Barton Fink
- is, it is good copy, especially in August, when scarcely an
- interesting creature is stirring in the theaters. Whether or not
- it is likely to prove good box office is quite another, if
- equally problematic, matter. For this is Terminhood season, and
- one has to wonder: Do a profitably large number of American
- citizens, out for a good time, or at best a conventionally
- inspirational one, really want to see a movie that is
- essentially about a man sitting in a hotel room suffering a
- monumental writer's block in Hollywood a half-century ago?
- </p>
- <p> The answer is almost certainly no. This is not, putting it
- mildly, a subject of wide or particularly pressing current
- interest. Barton Fink's capacity for spiritual uplift is nil,
- and though the plight of the eponymous scrivener is often
- bleakly funny, we are not talking Hot Shots! here. In fact, with
- its long passages in which, literally, we are invited to watch
- nothing more stirring than paper peeling off the walls (or not
- moving through Barton's typewriter), the movie may challenge the
- faith of even the most loyal Coenheads.
- </p>
- <p> But it will never shatter that faith beyond repair. For
- even when its narrative stalls and its dialogue stammers
- incoherently, the picture seems at worst a necessary mistake for
- its creators. At its best, and especially considered in the
- light of the Coens' previous ventures, Barton Fink seems both
- marvelously audacious and quite inevitable.
- </p>
- <p> The Coens' earlier films, like those of many young
- filmmakers, worked out of, and off of, the American genre
- tradition. Blood Simple was a film noir, Raising Arizona a
- screwball comedy of sorts and Miller's Crossing, which was
- probably 1990's best movie, a reanimation of the classic
- gangster dramas of the 1930s. But these movies were not
- send-ups, rip-offs or slavish homages. Each was, instead, a
- dark, devious and witty reinvention of whatever inspired it.
- Barton Fink is, in this context, a logical next step. Evoking
- no particular genre, it is nothing less than a shrewdly perverse
- gloss on the darkly romantic (and wildly oversimplified)
- dialectic by which people have for ages tried--and failed--to understand how the whole movie enterprise works.
- </p>
- <p> As this story is traditionally told, Hollywood is the
- great corrupter of innocent talent, luring it away from
- righteousness with false promises of easy money for easy work,
- then blunting and eventually ruining it with vulgar values and
- stupefying assignments. In the Coens' revision of this legend,
- their title character (John Turturro, quite correctly a Coen
- favorite) is a proletarian playwright who calls to mind that
- real-life theatrical leftist Clifford Odets. Working on a
- wrestling picture at the behest of a studio boss (Michael
- Lerner) straight out of every literary intellectual's
- nightmares, and turning for advice to drunken, softly cynical
- W.P. Mayhew (John Mahoney), a figure unmistakably inspired by
- William Faulkner, Barton is neither a heroic symbol of
- resistance to materialism nor a sympathetic victim. He's just
- kind of a jerk.
- </p>
- <p> Historically Odets is usually seen as the great cautionary
- example of what Hollywood can do to a principled artist. But as
- the Coens reimagine the type, it is actually his unexamined
- political principles that undo him, not Hollywood crassness.
- Believing not wisely but entirely too well that all virtue
- resides in the common man, he befriends Charlie Meadows (John
- Goodman), his next-door neighbor in the hotel, who could not be
- more genially common--nor better played. Goodman's sunny
- menace sheds a glorious crosslight on Turturro's superb
- performance as an almost perfectly unattractive man, at once
- arrogant and self-effacing, politically articulate yet incapable
- of ordinary human connections.
- </p>
- <p> Anyone else but Barton might have read the danger signals
- Meadows sends forth, might have guessed at the murderous madness
- beneath his bonhomie. When, eventually, Meadows strikes
- perilously close to Barton, and the writer finally asks why, he
- gets a chilling answer that contains, perhaps, the entire moral
- of the movie. "Because you don't listen," Meadows says. This is,
- of course, precisely the problem with people who substitute
- grand ideological fantasies for clear and realistic observation
- of the world.
- </p>
- <p> The Coens, who themselves like to play boyish innocence,
- are in fact odd ducks, not least in their symbiotic closeness.
- In conversation they have a slightly spooky habit of finishing
- each other's sentences. "You're only working with one boss,"
- says Barry Sonnenfeld, the cinematographer of their first three
- films. "He just happens to be in two bodies." In their
- compulsively careful (and frugal) working methods, the Coens are
- as alienated from contemporary Hollywood as their protagonist
- is from the old-time movie colony. Growing up in a Minneapolis
- suburb, the sons of university teachers, they made little
- super-8 parodies of the movies they saw on TV before going their
- separate ways for a while--Joel, now 35, to study film at New
- York University and start a career as editor of low-budget
- features, Ethan, now 32, to major in philosophy at Princeton.
- It may be that the former's intelligence is the more cinematic,
- the latter's the more literary, but only they know for certain
- the details of their collaboration.
- </p>
- <p> And they're not telling. On all their films Joel is
- credited as the director, Ethan as the producer and both as
- screenwriters; but it is hard to tell where one leaves off and
- the other begins. Nor will they discuss the quite separate
- private lives they lead when they leave the Manhattan studio
- apartment where they meet every day to write and storyboard
- their films. They also refuse to lay out the meanings of their
- films or make any large moral claims for them. They say the
- Barton Fink script arose in part out of a writing block of their
- own, in part out of a desire to write a good role for their pal
- Turturro, in part because, in Ethan's words, "we started
- thinking about a big empty hotel." As he says of these various
- elements, "Who knows quite how they go together or what
- precipitates what?" To say more than that, adds Joel, "is just
- not appealing to us in any way."
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, their dreamlike realization of their script,
- though often imagistically striking, deliberately subverts their
- message and all too often alienates the viewer. You get the
- feeling that visually they are purposely, maybe even
- maliciously, messing with our heads instead of informing us. But
- whether they admit it or not--and it's not something anyone
- who needs mainstream financing is likely to own up to--the
- Coens are palpably, self-consciously postmodern artists, and
- that sets them apart from almost everybody else making
- theatrical films in America today. They are therefore entitled
- to patience, respect and, yes, perhaps a special gratitude for
- this movie, which never once compromises its fundamentally
- unpromising yet courageously aspiring nature.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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