masters of mayhem and death
by Douglas Messerli
Joel Coen and Ethan Coen (screenwriters and
directors) The Ballad of Buster Scruggs
/ 2018
Those bad-boy brothers of American cinema are
at it again in their new anthology of 6 short films, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, serving up along with Thanksgiving
dinner, mayhem and death. I used to describe Joel and Ethan Coen as being
cynical, but over the years I guess I become inured to their so very well-made
films, now preferring to perceive most of their works as American versions of
the Grand Guignol theater, a popular French-born format mostly featuring rape
and death, with larceny, robbery, and other dark-doings dropped in for free.
Throughout their work the brothers have treated the most serious topics not simply the way the Grand Guignol masters did, as subjects of absolute fascination and utter significance, but as only Americans might, with a sense of innocence and good humor. If you’re going to kidnap a baby, you might as well leave him on the roof you your car (Raising Arizona, the very first Coen brother’s movie I saw with Dennis Phillips in Sacramento), if you intend to create a Frankenstein, you can’t do better than Anton Chigurh (No Country for Old Men). And it is no accident that these always winking kids choose Western shoot-‘em-up myths as the background for some of their films, in particular True Grit and now the 6 films that make up The Ballad.
It doesn’t hurt that the Coens’ work with some of the very best
cinematographers (in this case Bruno Delbonnel), composers (central to the film
replete with singing cowboys are the compositions in this work by Carter
Burwell). And it doesn’t hurt that over the years they have employed some of
the best of Hollywood (and non-Hollywood) actors as their performers. In this
instance, the Coen’s have gathered young and older actors such as Tim Blake
Nelson, James Franco, Liam Neeson, Harry Melling, Tom Waits, Zoe Kazan,
Jefferson Mays, Tyne Daly, and numerous others—all quite excellent.
Such a large concept, its numerous actors, and various locations—the
most difficult of which was “The Gal Who Got Rattled” which required 14 wagons,
shipped to Nebraska where they filmed, and many sets of suborn oxen and other
desert locations for the first, title film and the second, “Near Algodones,”
wherein the brothers satirically recreate a “literal” pan-shot when the
There are lots of such witty cinematic allusions, including the
hilarious rise of the singing cowboy as an angel, lyre in hands, after his
death or the wonderful theatrical mish-mash of Shelley, Shakespeare, the Bible,
and Lincoln in one of the very best of these films, “Meal Ticket,” in which the
lovely armless and legless actor is replaced with a chicken who seems, like the
horse Clever Hans, to know how to add and subtract.
Although I am well known as the spoiler of all times for those who love
to not know ahead of time what the story is—I have myself never cared about
knowing the “plot” ahead of time, focusing instead of how that story is told—I
will spoil no further plots this time ‘round. I think I’ve already suggested
that all of them ends in single or multiple deaths. The stories are all
fascinating in the manner of Bret Harte and O. Henry, with multiple ironic
twists and turns. And the Coens’ use of the Western American landscape is
stunning and complex.
Los Angeles, December 20, 2018
Reprinted from World Cinema Review (December 2018).
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