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Categorized: Rank and File

In My Opinion: The Top Ten Coen Bros. Films

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From Blood Simple to Burn After Reading and The Dude to Anton Chigurh

Laremy Legel
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Published: Wednesday, September 30th 2009 at 1:49 AM
Raising Arizona (1987)
You're out there thinking "You've rated Arizona too high." You're wrong. First off, it was my initial introduction to the Coen brothers, so it has has huge sentimental value to me. Secondly, it's probably their funniest film, at least in terms of noticeable punchlines and easily accessible comedy. It's also my favorite Nic Cage performance, before everything broke bad, back when he wasn't running around in a bear costume. The film is absolutely scathing in its look at the "American dream" — having kids, getting a good job, staying out of prison. John Goodman, who is in all three of my top Coen films, is an absolute monster here. If you watch this film you will be entertained, and you'll know why I often say, with just a tinge of sadness, "So many social engagements… so little time."

The Big Lebowski (1998)
This is still my go to movie for quotes, and it's also the closest thing I have to a worldview. The Dude (Jeff Bridges) is confronted with aggression at every single turn. Does he let it throw him for a loop? No. To do so would be very un-dude-like. Watch this movie once and you'll be amused. Watch it five times and you'll be in hysterics. Watch it ten times and you'll be writing down the dialogue, wondering how you missed so many little gems the first nine times through. It's like a diamond, it catches different light depending on which way you tilt it. It has musical interludes, copious amounts of cursing, and a dozen bit characters who really should have had their own movie. It inhabits a world which is at once completely realistic and also absurdly unhinged. This movie also spawned a festival, in numerous cities, every single year. It made only $17m in 1998, but those two million evangelists have spread the word ever since, to the point where you could make a case that it's the best film of 1998, sorry Waterboy and Saving Private Ryan. I can't even believe I don't have this film ranked first.

O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000)
My heart will always belong to Lebowski but my intellect knows that O Brother, Where Art Thou? is a modern masterpiece. It shows off love of the language, a dynamite soundtrack, and a third act cleansing flood. The Coens based it on "The Odyssey" which they mentioned they'd never read, instead preferring to pull from their knowledge of how the work has been interpreted in the past two millenia. This makes sense… if you're starting with the world class mind of a Coen brother.

This film ties in a substantial narrative and a color palette that's like nothing we've seen since. It's a spiritual film that tackles race relations, con men, and political corruption, and it does it with a smirk and a wink. It's a film for the ages, an art film, an entertaining film, a film that you can consider on multiple levels. You can check your brain and whistle along to the music or really concentrate and ponder how the Coens were channeling Homer from scene to scene. O Brother, Where Art Thou? is a love letter to cinema, and it's one I can't help but appreciate, admire, and respect.


So there you have it. Agree or agree to disagree, my list is set in digital ink and it is now your turn. What's your #1, and why?

Do any of my third levels films belong higher? Are any of my "greater Coen Canon" movies given too much love? These guys just might be the best filmmakers out there, so pay a little homage yourself and bust out a Coen opinion or two.

Comment below and remember A Serious Man hits theaters this Friday, October 2. For more on that film click here.

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Showing 35 Comments

  1. Carson Dyle

    Haven't seen Raising Arizona, Barton Fink, Hudsucker Proxy, The Man Who Wasn't There, Intolerable Cruelty, or The Ladykillers. So I don't know how much my opinion on the overall Coen canon counts.

    I think my #1 would absolutely have to be No Country For Old Men. When I saw it first, I quite enjoyed it, but I didn't think it was as good as Fargo. When I watched it a second time (after having read the book)… wow. I was utterly rocked to the core, and I would have to say that it's my second-favourite film of 2007 (an extremely strong year for film, just quietly) after Atonement.

    #2 would probably actually be The Big Lebowski. For that chair-up-against-the-door gag alone. Well, the whole thing is kinda really great, but I don't think I've laughed harder at a sight gag in a film… ever.

    #3 – Fargo. Superb acting across the board, really original and fresh kind of film even today. Haven't seen it a second time though… maybe I need to.

    #4 – Miller's Crossing – Utterly superb stuff. Polito and Finney are magnificent.

    #5 – Burn After Reading – I really enjoyed this, for Malkovich and Pitt. And the CIA interludes with J.K. Simmons and David Rasche. It's not a great film, but it's pretty easy to watch.

    #6 – Blood Simple – Impressive debut, but if they hadn't gone on to greater things it would have been forgotten.

    #7 – O, Brother, Where Art Thou? – I actually didn't enjoy this one at all. I knew what they were doing, and that's cute and all, but it just got laborious after a while.

  2. Marcell

    Hey there!

    Don't agree with you!

    10. Burn After Reading
    9. Raising Arizona "Son, you gotta panty on ur head"
    8. Hudsucker Proxy
    7. Blood Simple
    6. Miller's Crossing
    5. O Brother Where Art Thou?
    4. The Big Lebowski
    3. No Country For Old Men
    2. Fargo
    1. Barton Fink

  3. I totally disagree.
    1. Fargo
    2. The Big Lebowski
    3. Raising Arizona
    4. Barton Fink
    5. No Country For Old Men
    - then some.
    The Hudsucker Proxy is the only one I come close to loathing, desperatly trying to be so funny with a deep message, but it´s just awful – despite the presence of Paul Newman.

  4. polishprince

    I'm not gonna get into arguing rankings because I love the bros. and don't really feel it necessary. However, I will say I would take out The Man Who Wasn't There and switch in Intolerable Cruelty. I HATED T.M.W.W.T. and I know I.C. was fluff but I just thought it was a great funny movie. I thought Clooney and Richard Jenkins were great in it and Heinz, The Baron Krauss Von Espy was one of the great Coen bit parts.

  5. Haven't seen 5 of 'em and it would be pretty hard to rank those I've seen, but number one is clearly a tie between The Big Lebowski and No Country for Old Men. Two different filmmaking styles, can't really compare them, both are masterpieces in their own way and I love them immensely.

    Didn't like Ladykillers and Intolerable Cruelty was, uh, intolerable, but Burn After Reading is absolutely excellent. Fargo, Miller's Crossing and Barton Fink are pretty much on the same level to me – three great films, which I don't think I can properly rank.

  6. Adriano

    Congratulations on giving The Man Who Wasn't There the praising it deserves. It's an amazing movie that only gets better on repeated viewings.

    To me, Fargo and No Country For Old Men would be fighting for the #1 slot. I look at these movies as two sides of a coin. They both deal with greed, with what men will do because of money. But while Fargo believes that a (wo)man can be incorruptible, No Country… is 100% pessimistic on this.

    Being a perennial optimistic person, I think Fargo wins by a very small margin. That last scene with Marge and her husband laying in bed, just saying "Two more months"… There was NEVER a more emotional moment in the entire Coens filmography. My eyes get wet just remembering it.

  7. Dan Tralder

    It hurts my heart so much to see O Brother (a movie I love very much) and Arizona ahead of No Country for Old Men.

  8. I strongly recommend giving Burn After Reading another chance.

  9. laremy

    @Dan Tralder: @Helgi: @Marcell: @Carson Dyle: I think for me it came down to sentiment. Some people like the darker Coen work. I personally like the lighter stuff, though their lighter stuff is still not exactly light. On the right day No Country is my favorite film. But if six TVs were on, playing my top six, that's the exact order I'd become transfixed with each one.

  10. Fascinating list, if one I'd rearrange, and sounds like you would to given the day or time. Nice to see The Man Who Wasn't There get some love, Tony Shaloub's run in that movie cracks me up every single time.

  11. Paddytom

    Raising Arizona for sure. The first 10 Mins before the title card flashes is some of the best cinema ever created.

  12. Top 5 Coen Films:

    1. No Country for Old Men
    2. Fargo
    3. The Big Lebowski
    4. Bartin Fink
    5. O Brother, Where Art Thou?

    I actually love every single one of the Coens' films, but for me, there is No Country and Fargo, and then everything else.

  13. steelydwill

    Great article. Reminds me of an interesting question…where does The Big Lebowski rank amongst the biggest marketing failures of all time? Has to be close to the top, right?

  14. BR

    No Country For Old Men is #1 on every list. Not just the best Coen Brothers film…every list! Javier Bardem has forever solidified himself in the shrine of cinema greatness with his performance in the film. and yes Josh Brolin, Javier is the "Ultimate Bad A**"

  15. Dan Tralder

    @BR: Amen, BR, Amen

  16. loxmang

    I love how u put O brother at the number 1 spot. I feel like whenever people mention the recent coen films they leave that one out, but its definitely one of their best. I would personally put my top 3 at…
    1. No Country for Old Men.. only because it made me look up different interpretations online for about 2 weeks.
    2. Big Lebowski
    3. O brother

    I havent seen too many other ones but quite honestly i wasnt too into Fargo… i think its overrated and i think Burn after reading is a little underrated.

  17. Brian Fallows

    I'd say

    1. No Country For Old Men
    2. Fargo
    3. Miller's Crossing
    4. The Big Lebowski
    5. Blood Simple
    6. O Brother, Where Art Thou?
    7. Barton Fink
    8. The Ladykillers
    9. The Hudsucker Proxy
    10. The Man Who Wasn't There

    I really hated Raising Arizona.

  18. david l

    no country
    fargo
    blood simple

    their top three without a doubt. lists like these truly show the development in one's taste in film.

    you've shown us that you think raising arizona and o, brother are better than any of their other films. enough said.

  19. Dude

    I say that no matter in what order they come in. Love all of them:).

  20. justin

    lebowski was my first coen movie and is still by far my favorite

  21. austin

    I can't agree with this list. I like the high ratings of the Big Lebowski and Raising Arizona, I also liked calling the Ladykillers, Intolerable Cruelty, and Burn After Reading their, for lack of a better word, weakest films. However, I have to say that No Country For Old Men is their best movie yet. I'm not just saying this b/c of the oscar hype, it was a great all around film, one of my favorites. Also, I'd rank Barton Fink higher. It was good b/c of Turturro's timid nature. The symbolism was great and so were John Goodman and Michael Lerner.

  22. I sense a distinct case of diharditis. The list is big on what you might call "signature" works: the ones so covered with cute Coen Brothers features you don't notice there's nothing at their centre: Brother, Lebowski, Fink. Please. The Coens can run a plot as tight as a snare drum — their woozier jam sessions need no encouraging. The Who Wasn't There should even be on the list let alone at number 4. Here's how it should run.

    1. Fargo
    2. Miller's Crossing
    3. Raising Arizona
    4. Blood Simple
    5. No Country for Old Men
    6. Barton Fink
    7. O Brother Where Art Thou?
    8. The Big Lebowksi
    9. The Hudsucker Proxy
    10. There is no number 10.

  23. Kyle

    I've only ever seen No Country, Raising Arizona, Intolerable Cruelty, Burn After, Lebowski, O Brother and Fargo. And as it's been years since I've seen Fargo and Raising Arizona I don't feel as though I could do a proper ranking. What I will say is that I completely agree with you that O Brother Where Art Thou is the Coen's top work to date.

  24. Tyler C.

    I completely 100% agree with O Brother being number 1 and the majority of the rest of the list but now way Burn After Reading would be an honorable mention. That movie was fantastic! I love the two feds in the very last scene. That is a movie to be watch multiple times!!!

  25. Chris

    I know I'm probably in the minority here, but I actually like The Ladykillers more than most of the other movies the Coens have done.

  26. John Woodburn

    I have seen and like all of the Coen Brother's movies and I don't need to rate them, they're all good.

  27. Tim P.

    Can't believe I have never seen Lebowski. Probably because I am not much of a Jeff Bridges fan.

    Right there with you on Raising Arizona – it was the first movie I showed my wife when we were first dating (20 years ago) – I knew it would last if she liked the movie – she did.

  28. Tim P.

    By the way, that has got to be douchiest picture of the Coen Brothers.

  29. Ed

    Just watched Miller's Crossing a couple of weeks ago for the first time. It was the first Coen Bros movie that I really didn't care much for at all. My wife felt the same way. I would definitely have Burn After Reading ranked much higher, you should definitely give it at least one more watch. My number one would probably be Fargo, with Lebowski and Arizona 2nd and 3rd. Number 4, No Country was absolutely a great movie, but not one I can watch over and over, more because of the pacing I suppose rather than the quality of the film. O Brother rounds out my top 5. I'll definitely be putting The Man Who Wasn't There on my Netflix Q, as I haven't yet seen that one. Didn't even know it existed to be honest. Thanks for the knowledge. Great list.

  30. Central Ohio

    1. Miller's Crossing
    2. No Country For Old Men
    3. The Big Lebowski
    4. Fargo
    5. Raising Arizonia
    6. Burn After Reading
    7. Barton Fink
    8. O' Brother
    9. Blood Simple
    10. The Man who wasn't there

  31. Derek Hamel

    1) Fargo
    2) No Country for Old Men
    3) Miller's Crossing
    4) Blood Simple
    5) Barton Fink
    6) The Big Lebowski
    7) Burn after Reading
    8) The man who wasn't there
    9) Raising Arizona
    10) The Hudsucker Proxy

  32. Derek Hamel

    As far as No Country and Fargo are concerned, there is no arguing their status as the top 2 films in the Coens' library. Numbers 3-5 are also for-sures, any combination of Miller's, Blood Simple, and Barton. After that, opinions and personal tastes become the way of things. I had Lebowski, Burn, The man who, Raising, and Hudsucker rounding out my top 10. I'll debate and certainly listen to arguments considering nos. 6-10 and the films I omitted. I'll also banter about the order of the first five. I'm in the minority having Hudsucker on my list, but it really wasn't a close call for me. My no. 11, O Brother, is one of the few Coens' films that I felt was a strain. They were straining to live up to their own aura, their own unique comedic innovations. I was happy for its' success, of course-and now that they're finally recognized by ALL of their peers, instead of just the artists.

  33. peter

    My favorite film by the Coens is The Hudsucker Proxy.

  34. Michael

    I still havent seen blood simple so its hard to make a fair list when there is a gap. Realised that my top 5 keep swapping. This is like trying to pick my favourite beatle album. Credit to those who can actually make a top 5 for cohen brothers.

  35. Steve

    One thing I have noticed with Coen movies, and I've seen them all, is that they might be the only guys that make movies that you have to see multiple times. Since no two films are alike, you never really know what you're in for, so on your first time through, you're chewing more than digesting this movie that you have sky high expectations. I admit that the first time I saw "Lebowski", I didn't think that I really liked it that much. Now I can easily say it's one of my all time favorites. This happened again more recently with "Burn After Reading". You've got this movie packed with Hollywood hotshots like Pitt and Clooney, guys like Malkovich and Richard Jenkins that you'd watch make soup, Frances, and it didn't seem to go down right the first time. Actually felt massively wrong at first. But I've seen it a few more times since it's been on cable, and I love it now. I can't think of any other directors/producers that continuously make flicks that have that effect on me.

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