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A Serious Man (2009, US/UK/Fr.)
In this Best Picture-nominated dark comedy from the
Coen Brothers, perplexed, middle-class Jew
in suburban Minnesota in 1967 -- a beleaguered, mild-mannered, Job-like
university physics professor named Larry Gopnik (Michael Stuhlbarg),
experienced a series of unexpected batterings,
trials and tormenting tribulations:
- a letter containing money was given to Larry as
a bribe by disgruntled South Korean student Clive Park (David Kang)
to change his mid-term grade from an F to passing (and there were
additional threats of a lawsuit by the student's father (Steve
Park))
- imminent tenure consideration was threatened with
unofficial warnings from the chairman of the committee Arlen Finkle
(Ari Hoptman) that anonymous letters had been received referring
to his "moral
turpitude"
- Larry's matronly, discontented and adulterous wife
Judith (Sari Lennick) was seeking a divorce during an affair with
overbearing, erudite, and unctuous widower Sy Ableman (Fred
Melamed)
- Larry was engaged in high-priced consultation with
pessimistic, expensive divorce lawyer Don Milgram (Adam Arkin)
- an expensive bar-mitzvah was approaching for his
indebted marijuana-smoking son Danny (Aaron Wolff), who loved listening
to the Jefferson Airplane and complained repeatedly
about poor TV reception from the rooftop TV antenna, making it
impossible for him to watch F-Troop
- Larry's rebellious, self-centered eldest daughter
Sarah (Jessica McManus) was stealing money from Larry's wallet
for a desired nose-job
- Larry's wife emptied his bank account, and forced
him to move out of the house to a nearby Jolly Roger Motel,
taking along his own socially-inept, ailing, unemployed loser,
odd-ball brother Arthur (Richard Kind), who had a sebaceous draining
cyst on his neck and was suspected of both illegal gambling and
sodomy
- a property line dispute was occurring with Larry's
redneck, anti-semitic neighbor Mr. Brandt (Peter Breitmayer)
- Larry became disoriented after spying on his
nude-sunbathing, semi-abandoned, blase, promiscuous next-door neighbor
Mrs. Vivienne Samsky (Amy Landecker) from his rooftop while adjusting
the antenna - who later offered to smoke a joint with him in her
home (she asked provocatively: "Do you take advantage of the
new freedoms?")
- his uncertain, upturned life compelled Larry to
meet with rabbis to question his faith and his treatment by Hashem
(aka God), and to plead for them to help, without success; in
his last meeting, he pleaded: "I've tried to be a serious
man, you know? Tried to do right, be a member of the community,
raise Danny, Sarah, they both go to school, Hebrew school....Please,
I need help"
- Larry experienced a triple
fender-bender on the same day that Sy was killed in another automobile
accident; Larry was
forced to finance the funeral
- there were repeated annoying phone calls from Dick
Dutton at the Columbia Record Club for four-months non-payment
of fees for receipt of the selection of the month
- his life was succinctly illustrated by a blackboard
completely filled with physics formulas demonstrating "The
Uncertainty Principle" -- as he told the exiting class when
the bell rang: "It
proves we can't ever really know what's going on. But even though
you can't figure anything out, you will be responsible for it on
the mid-term"
- the clincher was a film-closing call from his doctor
to ominously discuss recent X-rays (taken at the start of the film)
amidst a threatening tornado
- at the end of the credits, it was noted: "No
Jews Were Harmed in the Making of This Motion Picture."
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Larry's Torment
"The Uncertainty Principle"
Provocative Neighbor Mrs. Vivienne Samsky
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