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Movie Title: O Brother, Where Art Thou?
Rating: 10
Reviewed By: Michael Stevens
Review:
Who would of thunk it? George Clooney as a
Southern boy in a comedy based on the works of the ancient Greek
poet Homer. I certainly didn't, nor did I know quite what to
expect when I went to the theater to see Clooney (minus Mark
Wahlberg) in the Coen brother's, O Brother, Where Art Thou?
Clooney plays Ulysses Everett McGill, who along with Pete (John
Turturro) and Delmar (Tim Blake Nelson) break out of jail while
working on the chain gang in Depression Era Mississippi. The
three of them plan on recovering the loot that Ulysses hid from a
bank job he said he did, but they have to get to the money before
the Tennessee Valley Authority floods the place as part of
Roosevelt's Works Progress Administration to alleviate the
economic hardships of the Depression. This motley crew of
escapees contains one smooth talker in Ulysses who pretends he is
well educated and sophisticated, one nitwit who doesn't have a
clue (Delmar), and a poor fella that trouble just seems to follow
(Pete). During these three's misadventures across the state, they
are being hunted down by Sheriff Cooley (Daniel von Bargen) who
has just as many problems as the three boys. The three boys'
adventure mimics that of the original Ulysses, but with a few
modern adaptations. And along the way they run into a few famous
people. First they run into Governor Pappy O'Daniel at the radio
station where Ulysses, Pete, and Delmar transform themselves (along
with Tommy Johnson the guitar player) into the Soggy Bottom Boys
and record what will turn out to be a hit song. Tommy (Chris
Thomas King) is a colored boy who sold his soul to the Devil so
that he could learn to play the guitar. Soon after their radio
days the group runs into famed bank robber George "Babyface"
Nelson (Michael Badalucco). Through out all of this the three
guys do make it to their destination, but the loot changes as
Ulysses meets up with his wife Penny (Holly Hunter) and daughters.
Also in this picture are John Goodman, Brian Reddy, J.R. Horne,
Del Pentecost, Wayne Duvall, Ray McKinnon, and Ed Gale as the
Little Man. Clooney, Tim Blake Nelson, and John Turturro put in
great performances as the outlaws. Clooney especially does a
great job with his role all the way down to the neurotic
obsession with the Dapper Dan hair crap. The whole governor
episodes are hilarious (as is most of the film) as Ethan and Joel
Coen take a shot at politics. Ethan wrote O Brother, Where Art
Thou? and Joel directed it. Though I'm not one to listen to Old
Tyme music, even the soundtrack was enjoyable for this film. So
in the end, I give O Brother, Where Art Thou? a perfect ten
couches, despite the lack of nudity in this film (nor was there
much in the way of the immature humor that has made the Coen
brothers famous). Adios.
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