Description
About the Author
Allen H. Redmon coordinates and teaches classes in interdisciplinary film studies at Texas A&M University Central Texas. He has published articles in The Journal of Popular Film, Literature/Film Quarterly, Bright Lights Film Journal, The Journal of Religion and Film, Studies in French Cinema, and Journal of American Culture.
Reviews
Redmon has written the definitive critical study of the films of Ethan and Joel Coen, the writer-director team behind Fargo, Raising Arizona, and O Brother, Where Art Thou? Previous critics have portrayed the Coen Brothers as hipsters who make apocalyptic, misanthropic films about American culture made palatable by healthy doses of humor, a nostalgic period setting, and affectionate homages to genre films of the past-especially film noir, the western, and the musical. Redmon, however, demonstrates that, while the brothers may be snarky-and may employ postmodern storytelling techniques-their work is soulful and concerned with truth and ethics.... Redmon explains that the Coen Brothers' films demand that the audience participate actively in making meanings of the films. The films help viewers become better readers of cinema and of life, and offer us all clues as to how to find truth and emotional authenticity in the grotesque carnival of broken dreams and solipsistic concerns of an America fractured by the culture wars. As Redmon observes, while the Coens enjoy laughing at human folly, they have an ethical worldview, celebrating virtue, condemning evil, and asking us to accept the mystery of the human comedy. Say whatever you want about the Coen Brothers: these men are not nihilists and their films have an ethos. * Religious Studies Review *
Book Information
ISBN 9781442244849
Author Allen Redmon
Format Hardback
Page Count 192
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Weight(grams) 408g
Dimensions(mm) 237mm * 158mm * 19mm