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A Serious Man in Situ: “Fear and Loathing in St. Louis Park”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 December 2011

Riv-Ellen Prell*
Affiliation:
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota
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Extract

“Who ever heard of the Coen brothers anyway?” asked a Minneapolis woman with whom I was seated at a small party shortly after the opening of A Serious Man, in 2009. An accomplished and striking woman in her early seventies, Ms. S had lived in St. Louis Park, a first-ring suburb of Minneapolis, and the hometown of Joel and Ethan Coen. In fact, all of the women at the table where I was seated were likewise: affluent, politically and culturally active, philanthropic, and residents of St. Louis Park in the 1960s. On that December night, what they also shared was contempt for the film, and the filmmakers, whom they resented as inaccurate narrators of their shared place and time. Nothing could dissuade them from their conviction that the film was awful, not even the arguments of the Minneapolis Star Tribune film critic, Colin Colvert, who was also seated at our table.

Type
Symposium: A Serious Man
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Jewish Studies 2011

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References

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27. Ibid., 50; Mention of this club, though not of its restrictive policies, is made on the website devoted to the historical roots of the American Automobile Association, www.aaaminneapolis.com/about-aaa-history.asp. It is unclear if the club ceased to exist or if it changed the restrictive policy.

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