Ordinary People, Hard Times

The latest from the Brothers Coen, “A Serious Man,� is in fact a serious, albeit funny, film.

   Larry (Michael Stuhlbarg), a nebbishy physics professor at an unnamed Minnesota university around 1967, has a few problems:

   His wife wants a divorce.    His brother Arthur (Richard Kind), who is a bit eccentric, has moved in with him. His redneck neighbor mows part of Larry’s lawn and is threatening him with a tool shed built too close to the property line.

A Korean student is — maybe — trying to bribe him for a passing grade. He’s up for tenure, but the selection committee has received anonymous letters critical of his teaching and moral probity.

   His weird brother gets stranger. His wife’s lover dies suddenly. Mysterious messages are carved — in Hebrew — on gentile teeth. The sexy lady next door sunbathes in the nude and smokes pot. And none of the rabbis help.

   Larry’s modern-day Job  stumbles through the film, questioning God and trying to do the next right thing, even though there is no definite answer as to what that might be.

   And by the end of the film, the tide seems to have turned a little bit, even as storm clouds  gather (literally) for another round of trials.

   The Coen brothers, as usual, go for a kind of deadpan, unhurried, and twisted humor. The individual sequences stand alone, dramas in miniature.

   The dialogue is clever but the characters aren’t.

   And much of the film is set against the Levittown-like backdrop of a suburbia, all cookie-cutter houses, vinyl kitchen chairs and landscapes carefully denuded of distinguishing characteristics, like trees.

   Settings are either claustrophobic — the tract house, Larry’s office — or isolating — the housing development, or the immense chalkboard Larry fills up with incomprehensible mathematics in a dream sequence.

   The period details — fixing “the aerialâ€� on the roof so the kids can watch “F Troop,â€� Larry’s son’s transistor radio (with single earplug) on which he listens to the Jefferson Airplane during Hebrew class, and the narrow neckties — are all there.

And anybody who ever smoked a joint before some important event and then thought better of it will understand the bar mitzvah sequence.

   Ultimately, “A Serious Manâ€� is about ordinary people doing the best they can under the circumstances, and as such is more like “O Brother, Where Art Thou?â€� than “Blood Simpleâ€� in the Coens’ work.

   “A Serious Manâ€� is playing at The Moviehouse in Millerton, NY, and elsewhere.

  It is rated R for language, sexuality and brief violence.

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