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Burn After Reading

United States

2008

96 Min
Color
English
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
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DIR Ethan Coen, Joel Coen

EXEC Robert Graf

PROD Tim Bevan, Ethan Coen, Joel Coen, Eric Fellner

SCR Joel Coen, Ethan Coen

DP Emmanuel Lubezki

CAST George Clooney, Frances McDormand, Brad Pitt, John Malkovich, Tilda Swinton

ED Richard Jenkins

MUSIC Carter Burwell

Synopsis

Osbourne Cox, a Balkan expert, is fired at the CIA, so he begins a memoir. His wife wants a divorce and expects her lover, Harry, a philandering State Department marshal, to leave his wife. A diskette of Osbourne’s musings falls out of a gym bag at a Georgetown fitness center. Two employees there try to turn it into cash: Linda, who wants money for elective surgery, and Chad, an amiable goof. They try to sell the disc back to Osbourne, who has a short fuse, then they visit the Russian embassy. To sweeten the pot, they decide they need more of Osbourne’s secrets. Meanwhile, Linda’s boss likes her, and Harry’s wife leaves for a book tour. All roads lead to Osbourne’s house. — IMDb

Director

Ethan_coen

Ethan Coen

Born in St. Louis Park, MN, in 1957, Ethan Coen studied philosophy at Princeton University. Soon after he graduated, he and his brother began writing their first screenplays, and, in 1984, they made their debut with Blood Simple. Both of them wrote and edited the film, while Joel took the directing credit and Ethan billed himself as the producer. It earned considerable critical acclaim and established the brothers as fresh, original talent. Their next major effort (after Crimewave, a 1985 film they wrote that was directed by Sam Raimi), 1987’s Raising Arizona was a screwball comedy miles removed from the dark, violent content of their previous movie, and it won over critics and audiences alike. Their fan base growing, the Coens went on to make Miller’s Crossing (1990), a stark gangster epic with a strong performance from John Turturro, whom the brothers also used to great effect in their next film, Barton Fink (1991). Fink earned Joel a Best Director award and a Golden Palm at the 1991… read more

Joel_coen

Joel Coen

Combining thoughtful eccentricity, wry humor, arch irony, and often brutal violence, the films of the Coen brothers have become synonymous with a style of filmmaking that pays tribute to classic American movie genres, especially film noir, while sustaining a firmly postmodern feel. Born in St. Louis Park, MN, in 1954, Joel Coen studied at New York University before moving into filmmaking in the early ‘80s. He and his younger brother began writing screenplays while Joel worked as an assistant editor on good friend Sam Raimi’s 1983 film The Evil Dead. In 1984, they made their debut with Blood Simple. Both of them wrote and edited the film (using the name Roderick Jaynes for the latter duty), while Joel took the directing credit and Ethan billed himself as the producer. It earned considerable critical acclaim and established the brothers as fresh, original talent. Their next major effort (after Crimewave, a 1985 film they wrote that was directed by Raimi), 1987’s Raising Arizona was a… read more

Wall

Displaying 4 of 21 wall posts.
Picture of Epochal

Epochal

2Feb10

Can't remember a thing. Well, the chair is memorable.   
Picture of Tyler W

Tyler W

30Jan10

Definitely underrated. It has all the components of a great Coen comedy: an ensemble of eccentric characters, a blackmail scheme, and a dark twist. One of my favorites.   
Picture of Sergio Fernandez

Sergio Fernandez

29Jan10

UNDERRATED! fucking A  
Picture of beneezy

beneezy

7Jan10

Underrated Coen masterpiece.  

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Reviews

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The Bourne Stupidity?

By Daniel McCarth​y on December 2, 2009

To be honest this is sub par Coens but even then there still hitting above what most other filmmakers do at their worst. It’s much better than either Intolerable Cruelty or the pointless Ladykillers…  read review

Untitled

By Jack Falvey IV on November 6, 2009

Burn After Reading is a Coen movie for Coen fans, and that’s that. If you relish the Coen’s trademark larger than life approach to the mundane and namely darker side of human nature, then there’s…  read review

Untitled

By Phillip​EJohnst​on on November 3, 2009

A film of many brilliant comedic setups, but some dark revelations in the second half could cause viewers to think back on what has gone before and a few things that were previously hilarious suddenly…  read review

Untitled

By Learn2S​wim on October 7, 2009

The real questions is “Is making a movie about pointless movies pointless?” I think that what they have achieved with this picture is unprecedented and groundbreaking. It does feel like a pointless…  read review

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