Coen’s ‘No Country’ could make Oscar history
Joel and Ethan Coen could become the first to win four Oscars for one film
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LOS ANGELES - You know it’s a weird year at the Academy Awards when the Coen brothers are not only front-runners, but potential history-makers.
After 23 years as oddballs whose films occasionally click with broader audiences, on Sunday night Joel and Ethan Coen could become the first filmmakers to win four Oscars for one movie, with their crime thriller “No Country for Old Men.”
They would be the first siblings to win the directing honor and only the second duo to share Hollywood’s top filmmaking honor, following Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins for 1961’s “West Side Story.”
And they would tie the record of four Oscars won in a single year held by one of Hollywood’s most mainstream figures, Walt Disney, a quadruple winner for 1953 as producer of three short-subject winners and the documentary recipient.
The Coens share a best-picture nomination as producers of “No Country for Old Men,” a zigzagging tale that captures the bleak beauty of the west Texas landscape and seamlessly blends vicious violence with absurd humor. They also have nominations for directing, adapted screenplay and editing under the pseudonym Roderick Jaynes.
Since their 1984 debut “Blood Simple,” another crime story set in Texas, the Coens have established themselves as curious cousins to big Hollywood, delivering some films with solid yet modest box-office returns and others, such as “The Hudsucker Proxy,” that are mainly for the Coen faithful.
“What they manifest is a full-blown roller coaster instead of some linear idea of escapism,” said “No Country” co-star Josh Brolin. “When you go see a Coens movie, it’s not that at all. You’re totally involved and yet you’re doing things and reacting to things that are constantly surprising you.”
Story veers in specific directions
Adapted from Cormac McCarthy’s novel, “No Country” centers on three men: A resourceful Texan (Brolin) who makes off with a satchel of cash from a drug deal gone bad; his pursuer, a relentless killer (Javier Bardem) with an inhuman detachment and a bizarre hairdo vaguely reminiscent of Moe Howard’s from the Three Stooges; and the sheriff (Tommy Lee Jones) tracking both men, who finds himself on a case so inexplicable in its savagery that it shatters his flintlike mettle.
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The Coens, who often finish each other’s sentences, describe the story’s appeal this way:
Ethan Coen: “Not that in and of itself it kind of goes off the track you think it’s on, but the way it goes off the track is not...”
Joel Coen: “... arbitrary...”
Ethan Coen: “...arbitrary. It’s pointed. There is a point to it, so it’s satisfying in a way that it wouldn’t be if it were arbitrary.”
With eight nominations, “No Country for Old Men” tied for the Oscar lead with fellow best-picture nominee “There Will Be Blood,” an oil-boom saga that rivals the Coens’ flick for weirdness, barbarity and black humor.
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Past Oscar winners Daniel Day-Lewis of “There Will Be Blood” and Julie Christie of the Alzheimer’s drama “Away From Her” are solid bets to win again in the lead-acting categories, though Christie faces strong competition from Marion Cotillard, who stars as singer Edith Piaf in the film biography “La Vie En Rose.”
It’s a strong and varied Oscar lineup, but expectations are that the Coens will rule the show. Along with the Coens’ four personal nominations, Bardem is favored to win the supporting-actor honor for “No Country.”
Following their own muse works
The Coens have been embraced by Hollywood’s most-exclusive club before, winning the Oscar for original screenplay with 1996’s “Fargo.” Yet coming into the biggest night in show business as favored sons is a strange position for two filmmakers who always have followed their own eerie muse.
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At $60 million and counting, “No Country” is the Coens’ biggest box-office draw, topping the $45.5 million gross of “O Brother Where Art Thou.” Their films have another life, though, striking cultural chords beyond the theater.
With its earthy soundtrack, “O Brother” won the Grammy for best album of the year and helped usher in a rediscovery of American roots music.
Their 1998 comedy “The Big Lebowski,” about an overgrown slacker named the Dude who lives for bowling and gets more than he bargained for when seeking compensation for his urine-damaged rug, has spawned its own counterculture that includes fan festivals and T-shirts proclaiming the lead character’s laid-back approach to life: “The Dude abides.”
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