![]() ![]() In a Coen brother's film it's quite dangerous to make our usual identifications with key characters, you can't afford to relax. Gotcha! He dies.īy now the film has you firmly in its grip, anything can happen, and it does, we can't hide safely behind the settee of our expectations, as brave old prospectors, pathetically disabled actors, cheeky little dogs, occupants of a stage coach, all take their chances in life, and we find that we care! As the jolly bounty hunter in the stagecoach says, if you can get your quarry drawn into a story you can pounce on him before he knows it. A bank robber has a miraculous escape from hanging, as they always do in westerns? Nope ten minutes later he'll be at the end of a rope again but this time. Since they are all stunningly realistic with arbitrary insertion of death, disaster, and coincidence we cannot just sit back and work our way through the usual tropes. We are now a bit unsettled and confused about what might happen in the following segments. His clothes, even his guitar, are completely anachronistic in the rough tough greasy setting of his segment, his shooting skills are impossible, every element in his story is an outrageous overextension of a traditional western, so, the Coen brothers take the genre forward to a ludicrous conclusion and he abruptly dies and flies off to cheesy bluegrass heaven. Buster is a ludicrous mid 1950' s Gene Autrey like figure. So, one reviewer says that the first story is a good old fashioned western that they wish had been extended. Now if that sounds like it's somehow cheating or breaking a contract between the viewer and the film makers, ie the opening statement is a fact though the rest of the film is of course actors working through a script, it means you haven't realised there aren't really any rules, just umpteen conventions that have accumulated in popular films especially the Western genre, and blunted their capacity of to make fresh and new connections with us. When asked why they put the statement up, one brother said " because we always wanted to make film that started like that." One simple example: at the beginning of 'Fargo' a frame appears that says " This film is based on a true story". The Coen brothers are fascinated by the way that over thousands of repetitions, enormous numbers of rules have become hidden away among the narratives that are produced as films, and they love to subvert and play with those hidden rules. It's ludicrous to say things like story six should have been number five, or to allocate different ratings to the different stories, or even to complain that the red indians are not fairly represented! The Coen brothers don't try to make simple narrative films working within the conventions that so many of their viewers expect. I'm truly amazed at the naivety of so many of the reviews here. ![]()
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