Or the constant concern of the Coen brothers

Carrie 2022-03-24 09:01:42

The Taiwanese translation is obviously better, and at the moment I find that the Coen Brothers films get a good response from me as long as they're not too outrageous. The male protagonist tries to be just a simple good person in all aspects, but the god of fate makes him bear the burden of life by making fun of him several times, and he is about to collapse. , the previous persistence and conduct seem to be useless. If you indulge the gods, you won't care. In fact, you can't even say whether the gods exist. In the end, when he revised the grades of the Bangzi because the parents of the Bangzi helped him pay for the album At the time, the moral line that had always existed was at stake like the American flag before the tornado, and it was at this time that fate notified him of his cancer, and everything was so ironic.
In my opinion, the people who make American films are Jews and Italians. Without these two foundations, the output of American blockbusters with beautiful and handsome men would not have long-term vitality. One of the Jews, whether it is Woody Allen, the Coen brothers, or Polanski, etc., have inherited the blood of the disaster that the Jews must endure, and their views on fate are always better than others. Fan. Chinese people say that people are doing things and watching. In fact, the collapse of beliefs does not require a big blow. Goodness and evil are only a thin line. It only takes an accident from a good person to a bad person. Yao Jiaxin may be an example. Maybe there is a god watching us all the time, maybe it's just luck that doesn't follow the laws of mathematics, who knows.
Fortunately, we know how to reflect, reflect on ourselves in movies, and reflect on ourselves in books. The future is always unknown, and the only constant is that everything should change. I would like to warn again with this film: good people do not necessarily have good rewards, bad people Not necessarily bad news, but if we choose to be the bad guy, we must be uneasy in knowing this, and this will not bring any good results.

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Extended Reading

A Serious Man quotes

  • Rabbi Scott: No, of course not. I am the junior rabbi. And it's true, the point-of-view of somebody who's older and perhaps had similar problems might be more valid. And you should see the senior rabbi as well, by all means. Or even Minda if you can get in, he's quite busy. But maybe - can I share something with you? Because I too have had the feeling of losing track of Hashem, which is the problem here. I too have forgotten how to see Him in the world. And when that happens you think, well, if I can't see Him, He isn't there any more, He's gone. But that's not the case. You just need to remember how to see Him. Am I right?

    [He rises and goes to the window]

    Rabbi Scott: I mean, the parking lot here. Not much to see. It is a different angle on the same parking lot we saw from the Hebrew school window. But if you imagine yourself a visitor, somebody who isn't familiar with these... autos and such... somebody still with a capacity for wonder... Someone with a fresh... perspective. That's what it is, Larry.

    Larry Gopnik: Um...

    Rabbi Scott: Because with the right perspective you can see Hashem, you know, reaching into the world. He is in the world, not just in shul. It sounds to me like you're looking at the world, looking at your wife, through tired eyes. It sounds like she's become a sort of... thing... a problem... a thing...

    Larry Gopnik: Well, she's, she's seeing Sy Ableman.

    Rabbi Scott: Oh.

    Larry Gopnik: She's, they're planning, that's why they want the Gett.

    Rabbi Scott: Oh. I'm sorry.

    Larry Gopnik: It was his idea.

    Rabbi Scott: Well, they do need a Gett to remarry in the faith. But this is life. For you too. You can't cut yourself off from the mystical or you'll be-you'll remain-completely lost. You have to see these things as expressions of God's will. You don't have to like it, of course.

    Larry Gopnik: The boss isn't always right, but he's always the boss.

    Rabbi Scott: Ha-ha-ha! That's right, things aren't so bad. Look at the parking lot, Larry.

    [Rabbi Scott gazes out, marveling]

    Rabbi Scott: Just look at that parking lot.

  • Larry Gopnik: She seems to be asking an awful lot. But then, I don't know. Somebody has to pay for Sy's funeral.

    Rabbi Nachtner: Uh-huh.

    Larry Gopnik: His own estate is in probate, but why does it have to be me? Or is it wrong to complain? Judy says it is. But I'm so strapped for cash right now, carrying the mortgage, and paying for the Jolly Roger, and I wrecked the car, and Danny's Bar Mitzvah coming up, I...

    Rabbi Nachtner: Something like this... there's never a good time.

    Larry Gopnik: I don't know where it all leaves me, Sy's death. Obviously it's not gonna go back like it was.

    Rabbi Nachtner: Mm. Would you even want that, Larry?

    Larry Gopnik: No, I- well, yeah... sometimes... or... I don't know; I guess the honest answer is "I don't know". What was my life before? Not what I thought it was. What does it all mean? What is Hashem trying to tell me, making me pay for Sy Ableman's funeral?

    Rabbi Nachtner: Mm.

    Larry Gopnik: And did I tell you I had a car accident the same time Sy had his? The same instant, for all I know. I mean, is Hashem telling me that Sy Ableman is me? Or that we are all one, or something?

    Rabbi Nachtner: How does God speak to us? A good question.