
With that out of the way, let's get to what I really want to talk about with this movie. It's a pet peeve that's bugged me for many years, one that pops up almost every time the Coen brothers make a movie. It's the critic who complains that the filmmakers didn't like the characters and was too mean to them. This line of thought makes my head hurt every time I hear it. First off, let's state the painfully obvious. These are fictional characters. We aren't talking about being mean to real people. We're talking about being cruel to figments of someone's imagination. It's akin to accusing someone of mental cruelty to an imaginary friend.
Yes, the Coen's have written a collection of particularly stupid characters. But don't they get credit for writing complex idiots? Every single character in this movie thinks they are the star. The story spins out of control the way it does for that very reason. Things get way too complicated for every character because they can't recognize their own limitations and/or lack of importance to a situation. The Coens aren't being cruel here. What they are doing is recognizing that is very funny to watch events go completely overboard simply because none of the participants understands when to reel themselves in.
The writing in this film, and in virtually all Coen brothers movies, is superb. They write really complex characters and then pen them all in together so that they can't escape their own or anyone else's limitations. The humor doesn't come from laughing at how stupid they are. The humor comes at how badly they can screw up situations. It is the weaknesses of these characters that sets up the laughs, not the weaknesses themselves. This is why the very best scene is the last one, when two side characters scratch their heads trying to figure out just what happened and why. I see people doing these sorts of things (to a lesser degree obviously) in real life all the time. And I laugh at the crazy situations they manage to get themselves into. It's not the people I find funny, it's the results.
Is this really so hard to understand? If you disagree, let me hear it. I'm genuinely curious how critics come to this idea. In the mean time, make sure to check out this movie.
