Something’s Ranked in Here: Coen Brothers Films

The Coen Brothers are movies; few directors in the history of the medium can claim a body of work full of such iconic characters, spectacular images, and unforgettable soundtracks. With excitement building around their latest project, the Hollywood-based comedy Hail, Caesar! (Feb. 5th), now is a perfect time to reflect on the duo’s long career as virtuosos of the highest order.
And that’s what makes ranking their films so outrageously difficult. Even the ones that don’t work as well overall are still technically well-made, and contain any number of their own small pleasures. And as for their best work? Well, that can be downright arbitrary, critically speaking. Raising Arizona’s opening sequence—one of the greatest (and most hilarious) in cinematic history (and arguably the greatest example ever of time compression in film) is 11 minutes of perfection in motion. Anton Chigurh’s gambit with a hapless gas station attendant, resulting in the highest-stakes coin flip imaginable, is easily one of the most intense and unsettling scenes ever committed to film. So, do they do their best work in comedy, or drama? Really, the only fair answer to that question is, “Yes.”
Bearing that in mind, here is every movie from the Coen Brothers, ranked:
16. Intolerable Cruelty (2003)
The Coen Brothers first, and (to date) only, entry in the rom-com genre is an oddity in their oeuvre, for certain. Their involvement in the project began modestly; they were hired by the studio for a script rewrite. But after numerous delays, actors and directors backing out, they were tapped to just go ahead and helm the damn thing already. So what could have been a thoroughly generic, forgettable romantic comedy, instead benefitted from the Coens’ unique screwball and satirical stamps. George Clooney returns to collaborate with the brothers, post-O Brother—again seemingly having a fantastic time playing a know-it-all with a very specific requirement in vanity maintenance. —Scott Wold
15. The Ladykillers (2004)
The Ladykillersis considered one of the lesser movies from the Coens, but those who dismiss it fail to recognize the beauty and the eeriness amid the clutter. Yes, there are a few dumb jokes about IBS, and not all of the characters in the ensemble cast quite make sense, but the black comedy disguises something poetic in the manner of that most gothic of poets, Edgar Allen Poe. This is a story of a failed casino heist, but deep down it’s also a morality play (and an interesting prelude to A Serious Man). Tom Hanks is excellent as Goldthwaite Higginson Dorr—a flawed mastermind, and one who reforms too late. —Josh Jackson
14. Burn After Reading (2008)
This Coen Brothers favorite has an unsurprisingly incredible cast, but can we take a moment to give all of the awards and props to Frances McDormand? Her Linda Litzke is one of the strangest, most hilariously bizarre characters to ever appear in a film, and yet there’s something completely familiar about her. She’s pursuing her own version of the American Dream, and the mess she leaves in her wake makes up the crux of this very black, very funny comedy. That she does so while all the other members of this ensemble do the same, and manage to entangle their own personal dramas with hers, makes this movie an entertaining way to spend an evening. Along with McDormand, George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Tilda Swinton and Richard Jenkins (who plays the tragically adorable Ted) all give fantastic turns—unrecognizable, in many ways, from their typical fare which makes the story all the more enthralling. —Shannon Houston
13. The Hudsucker Proxy (1994)
The Hudsucker Proxy did, somewhat unfortunately, fall flat on its face right out the box office gate, despite being what’s probably their broadest comedy. Though uncharacteristically predictable at every beat for a Coen Brothers’ film, it also boasts some of their most sumptuous visuals and sequences. From the dramatic suicide of the non-proxy Hudsucker himself, to the Red Balloon-like escaped Hula Hoop, its dreamlike production design (which seems to exist outside of any real historical decade) elevates an otherwise highly cynical swipe at corporate culture in America—from rube-gotten-too-big-for-his-britches Tim Robbins to plucky, nonsense-intolerant reporter Jennifer Jason Leigh, to devious company board director Paul Newman. —S.W.
12. A Serious Man (2009)
Working with few recognizable stars, the Coens have made a funny but odd and inquisitive film about guilt. It’s also their most Jewish film to date, a film about physics professor Larry Gopnik and the Jewish subculture of a medium-sized late-’60s American town. Larry’s life begins to fall apart when his wife says she wants a divorce, and in the great unraveling that follows, the Coens have made Kafka’s implications explicit. The K word is often slapped onto any old symbolic nightmare, but Kafka’s own work was actually very funny, even though he could slip into gray areas without much warning. The Coens can, too. A Serious Man is one of the most fascinating, maybe even heartfelt, renderings of a Kafkaesque sensibility that I’ve seen. —Robert Davis
11. Barton Fink (1991)
While hung up with the intricate plotting of Miller’s Crossing, the Coen Brothers took a break to write a script about a blocked screenwriter (Jon Turturro). Reminiscent of Stanley Kubrick and David Lynch at their most darkly satiric, Barton Fink depicts a self-important New York playwright who struggles to write a Hollywood wrestling picture while residing in a rotting hotel. A jaundiced metaphor for the compromised creative process of show business, Barton Fink delivers the deadpan comedy and quirky performances of the Coen’s trademark, including Oscar nominee Michael Lerner as a bombastic studio chief, John Mahoney as a boozing, Faulkner-esque novelist, and John Goodman as a cheerful salesman with a dark secret. Audiences can obsess over the meaning of lines like Goodman’s “I’ll show you the life of the mind!” but any answers the film holds are unlikely to be reassuring. —Curt Holman