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Un hombre serio

Título original: A Serious Man
  • 2009
  • B15
  • 1h 46min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.0/10
155 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
2,604
257
Michael Stuhlbarg in Un hombre serio (2009)
A black comedy set in 1967 and centered on on Larry Gopnik (Stuhlbarg), a Midwestern professor who watches his life unravel when his wife prepares to leave him because his inept brother (Kind) won't move out of the house.
Reproducir trailer1:41
8 videos
99+ fotos
Comedia oscuraComedia peculiarDrama de ÉpocaDrama psicológicoTragediaComediaDrama

Larry Gopnik, un profesor de física del Medio Oeste, observa cómo su vida se desmorona ante múltiples incidentes repentinos. Aunque busca sentido y respuestas en medio de su confusión, parec... Leer todoLarry Gopnik, un profesor de física del Medio Oeste, observa cómo su vida se desmorona ante múltiples incidentes repentinos. Aunque busca sentido y respuestas en medio de su confusión, parece que sigue hundiéndose.Larry Gopnik, un profesor de física del Medio Oeste, observa cómo su vida se desmorona ante múltiples incidentes repentinos. Aunque busca sentido y respuestas en medio de su confusión, parece que sigue hundiéndose.

  • Dirección
    • Ethan Coen
    • Joel Coen
  • Guionistas
    • Joel Coen
    • Ethan Coen
  • Elenco
    • Michael Stuhlbarg
    • Richard Kind
    • Sari Lennick
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.0/10
    155 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    2,604
    257
    • Dirección
      • Ethan Coen
      • Joel Coen
    • Guionistas
      • Joel Coen
      • Ethan Coen
    • Elenco
      • Michael Stuhlbarg
      • Richard Kind
      • Sari Lennick
    • 441Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 325Opiniones de los críticos
    • 88Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Nominado a 2 premios Óscar
      • 17 premios ganados y 80 nominaciones en total

    Videos8

    A Serious Man -- Trailer #1
    Trailer 1:41
    A Serious Man -- Trailer #1
    A Guide to the Films of the Coen Brothers
    Clip 1:56
    A Guide to the Films of the Coen Brothers
    A Guide to the Films of the Coen Brothers
    Clip 1:56
    A Guide to the Films of the Coen Brothers
    "Living Arrangements" from A Serious Man
    Clip 0:44
    "Living Arrangements" from A Serious Man
    "I Tried to Be a Serious Man" from A Serious Man
    Clip 0:58
    "I Tried to Be a Serious Man" from A Serious Man
    A Serious Man
    Interview 0:46
    A Serious Man
    A Serious Man
    Interview 0:27
    A Serious Man

    Fotos120

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    + 114
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    Elenco principal76

    Editar
    Michael Stuhlbarg
    Michael Stuhlbarg
    • Larry Gopnik
    Richard Kind
    Richard Kind
    • Uncle Arthur
    Sari Lennick
    Sari Lennick
    • Judith Gopnik
    Fred Melamed
    Fred Melamed
    • Sy Ableman
    Aaron Wolff
    Aaron Wolff
    • Danny Gopnik
    Jessica McManus
    • Sarah Gopnik
    Peter Breitmayer
    Peter Breitmayer
    • Mr. Brandt
    Brent Braunschweig
    • Mitch Brandt
    David Kang
    • Clive Park
    Benjamin Portnoe
    • Danny's Reefer Buddy
    Jack Swiler
    • Boy on Bus
    Andrew S. Lentz
    • Cursing Boy on Bus
    Jon Kaminski Jr.
    • Mike Fagle
    Ari Hoptman
    • Arlen Finkle
    Alan Mandell
    • Rabbi Marshak
    Amy Landecker
    Amy Landecker
    • Mrs. Samsky
    George Wyner
    George Wyner
    • Rabbi Nachtner
    Michael Tezla
    • Dr. Sussman
    • Dirección
      • Ethan Coen
      • Joel Coen
    • Guionistas
      • Joel Coen
      • Ethan Coen
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios441

    7.0155.2K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    guypotok

    One of their best

    My wife and I saw the film last Friday. We talked about it for an hour over dinner and again in the evening. The more we discussed it the better we liked it.

    It helps to be familiar with the paradox of Schrodinger's cat, a staple of quantum physics, which can be found on Wikipedia, before you go see this film. You might also want to understand the quantum concept of duality.

    The entire movie examines Gopnick and his world==and to a lesser extent that of his teenage son--in light of these aspects of quantum mechanics. I could not find a single scene that did not address uncertainty and/or duality. The attempt to discern traditional religious meaning in this world is humorous in itself. The opening presents the paradox and is crucial to the rest of the film.

    Unlike the local review for the film which described this as a "typical Coen Brothers film" and "weird" and "no closure at the end", I found this film to be quite literal and true to the principles of uncertainty and duality. The two major characters both find closure, and in retrospect, there is clearly a beginning, middle and end to the story the brothers wanted to tell.

    But the movie continues after the closure, just as life continues on a daily basis, setting up another expectation of continual uncertainty.

    Not being Jewish, I no doubt missed some of the double entendre and humor in the tradition. I would have liked to understand the Hebrew passage of the bar mitzvah ceremony, for example, and how it relates to the core theme of the film. But the movie is universal in its appeal, if you understand the basic concept of quantum mechanics upon which the film is based.

    I rate this as one of their best films due to its intellectual foundation. Much more important to me than No Country.
    ravitchn

    A movie both funny and for some offensively funny

    This movie is a wonderful assessment of the defunct quality of American Judaism in the current period, or the last half century. Larry Gopnik, for reasons I cannot see, seems inclined to want to understand his dilemmas and woes, as well as his successes, as the work of God, calling Him by the orthodox Jewish evasion Ha Shem (the Name). Trying to do this he encounters Jews, both rabbis and ordinary Jews, who give him Jewish answers to his questions, answers which have been unsatisfactory since the writing of the Book of Job many centuries ago. The rabbis are evasive, superficially knowledgeable, self-righteous, and in general ridiculous. The ending, which I will not reveal, is pure Coen Brothers: sardonic and outrageously true.

    The Jews portrayed could be considered anti-semitic caricature: all have big noses, loud voices, unpleasant expressions, etc. But the Coen Bros. are Jewish and know the tribe pretty well. The only Jew in the whole movie who comes out looking good is the old bearded rabbi Marshak. The start of the movie, in some Galician shtetl, is funny but misleading. The Yiddish spoken there is the Galizianer type which is very different from the Yiddish of the much more educated Litvaks in pre-Hitler Europe. I doubt many who even know Yiddish would understand it, but there are subtitles.

    In short not a happy movie but one which Jews need to take seriously lest they pretend their obsolete religion can have any relevance today. Christianity is just as irrelevant but in different ways.
    8rooprect

    Magnificent. The Coen Brothers take a detour.

    Let me say up front that most fans of the Coen brothers' early films might be disappointed if they're expecting "Fargo", "The Big Lebowski" or even "O Brother". Unlike those movies, here we don't have a lot of plot, comedy or action. The message of the film is very challenging, and it requires a lot of thought to figure out what they're saying.

    I'd say this movie is for fans of the recent American films "Synecdoche NY", "Doubt", and the recent Japanese films "Departures", "Yureru" and of course the classics by Kurosawa like "Rashomon". What I'm saying is that this is a film that tackles philosophical questions of perception, faith, and in particular, uncertainty.

    If you've had some physics, you're in for a real treat because much of the theme centers around Schrödinger's "Uncertainty Principle", briefly touched upon in the Coens' excellent 2001 film "The Man Who Wasn't There". Here they give us a more powerful dose. If you've never heard of this principle, don't worry, you can look it up on Wikipedia or you can accept my synopsis of it, which I'll warn you might be flawed because I ain't no physicist:

    The Uncertainty Principle (or "Schrödinger's Cat") proves mathematically that certain events are unknowable. It proposes the idea of a cat that might be alive or dead, but we cannot know without looking inside the cage. At the same time, the minute we look inside the cage, the cat will be killed by a toxic gas. The bottom line: we can't know the answer. Ever.

    From there, the movie explores how different people react when confronted with the unknown. Some form prejudices. Some fall back on faith. Some become faithLESS. And some just don't care.

    This is a beautifully crafted film that shows us the nature of human beings in that respect. No, there's not really a story. But it does even better than that: it challenges our minds to see elements of our own lives within the life of this ordinary schmuck. I am truly amazed at the Coens' accomplishment, and I hope they continue in this direction in the future, though I'm sure it may hurt their mainstream appeal.

    If you see this film & like it, I think you'll really enjoy the other films I've listed as well as the Hungarian masterpiece "Werckmeister Harmonies", anything by Wim Wenders ("The End of Violence" touches on the same Uncertainty Principle) and Orson Welles' "The Trial".
    9aciessi

    Seriously Good.

    Only the Coen bros. could think of something as marvelous as taking the opening lyrics of "Somebody to Love" by Jefferson Airplane and turning them into a Jewish proverb. Somehow, after an hour and a half of pure mishegas from the perspective of a real schlemiel, those lyrics sounded just right coming from Rabbi Marshak. A Serious Man was most notably a surprise dark horse nomination for Best Picture in 2009. In most award-seasons, A Serious Man is the kind of film that you'd wish was nominated in every category.

    It's a humble project for the Coens, but don't ever underestimate what they can do. A Serious Man is a serious picture that makes you laugh and squirm at the misfortune of Larry Gopnik. An average mid-western Jewish man searching for reason in a time where there is none. Tested is he to make peace with HaShem when all around him is moral decay and temptation. The Coens strength is in their characters, which in this film are as rich as they've ever been. I was fascinated by Arthur Gopnik, a borderline autistic man who discovers a map of the universe while tending to his sebaceous cyst. Perhaps my favorite character was Sy Ableman, a self proclaimed "serious man" from the community who Larry's wife is cheating on him with. His purposely affected anglo-saxon accent nearly killed me. It's the littlest eccentricities of people that the Coens always explore and exploit and it's eternally delightful.
    7SweetWilliam63

    Quantum Physics Aside

    There are two ways to watch this movie: One, taken at face value as a slice of life movie presented in the typically painful dark comic stylings of the Cohen Brothers. In which case, the writing, acting, story line (and lack of deus ex machina there in) about a put upon drudge in 1960's suburban Minnesota will not disappoint. Trust me. Go on. Enjoy. Or, 'B', informed by the many breakdowns and analysis provided by the internets in which case you may find yourself going "Oy Vey!". The first way, at face value, is how I like to watch movies. It is, in my humble opinion, art in it's purest form. I like a good denouement phase as will as the next guy but when you have to have someone else explain it in order to appreciate it, it morphs into something else. Having said that, I was intrigued enough by what I watched the first time to watch it again informed by the cheat sheets on quantum physics, the uncertainty principle, Werber Hiesenberg, and the super-posiition. This latter perspective did provide some resolution and undoubtedly enough impressive fodder for my next cocktail party but it also left me in the "super-position" of unfixed propability and unable therefore to identify the movie as being 'good' or 'bad'. Ha! See what I did there?

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

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    • Trivia
      The names of the characters who ride the school bus with Danny Gopnik are the names of children that the Coen brothers grew up with.
    • Errores
      In the final scenes where Larry changes Clive's failing grade, you can clearly see the erasure marks of the new grade before he erases the old one. This could denote the film makers needing several takes to get the right shot. Yet, it could also have been chosen to be included on purpose to show that Larry struggled many times with the morality of passing Clive, going so far as to update his grade, but had changed his mind.
    • Citas

      Rabbi Nachtner: You know Lee Sussman.

      Larry Gopnik: Doctor Sussman? I think I - yeah.

      Rabbi Nachtner: Did he ever tell you about the goy's teeth?

      Larry Gopnik: No... I- What goy?

      Rabbi Nachtner: So... Lee is at work one day; you know he has the orthodontic practice there at Great Bear. He's making a plaster mold - it's for corrective bridge work - in the mouth of one of his patients, Russell Kraus. The mold dries and Lee is examining it one day before fabricating an appliance. He notices something unusual. There appears to be something engraved on the inside of the patient's lower incisors. He vav shin yud ayin nun yud. "Hwshy 'ny". "Help me, save me". This in a goy's mouth, Larry. He calls the goy back on the pretense of needing additional measurements for the appliance. "How are you? Noticed any other problems with your teeth?" No. There it is. "Hwshy 'ny". "Help me". Son of a gun. Sussman goes home. Can Sussman eat? Sussman can't eat. Can Sussman sleep? Sussman can't sleep. Sussman looks at the molds of his other patients, goy and Jew alike, seeking other messages. He finds none. He looks in his own mouth. Nothing. He looks in his wife's mouth. Nothing. But Sussman is an educated man. Not the world's greatest sage, maybe, no Rabbi Marshak, but he knows a thing or two from the Zohar and the Caballah. He knows that every Hebrew letter has its numeric equivalent. 8-4-5-4-4-7-3. Seven digits... a phone number, maybe? "Hello? Do you know a goy named Kraus, Russell Kraus?" Who? "Where have I called? The Red Owl in Bloomington. Thanks so much." He goes. It's a Red Owl. Groceries; what have you. Sussman goes home. What does it mean? He has to find out if he is ever to sleep again. He goes to see... the Rabbi Nachtner. He comes in, he sits right where you're sitting right now. "What does it mean, Rabbi? Is it a sign from Hashem, 'Help me'? I, Sussman, should be doing something to help this goy? Doing what? The teeth don't say. Or maybe I'm supposed to help people generally, lead a more righteous life? Is the answer in Caballah? In Torah? Or is there even a question? Tell me, Rabbi, what can such a sign mean?"

      [pause as the Rabbi drinks his tea]

      Larry Gopnik: So what did you tell him?

      Rabbi Nachtner: Sussman?

      Larry Gopnik: Yes!

      Rabbi Nachtner: Is it... relevant?

      Larry Gopnik: Well, isn't that why you're telling me?

      Rabbi Nachtner: Okay. Nachtner says, look. The teeth, we don't know. A sign from Hashem? Don't know. Helping others... couldn't hurt.

      Larry Gopnik: No! No, but... who put it there? Was it for him, Sussman, or for whoever found it, or for just, for, for...

      Rabbi Nachtner: We can't know everything.

      Larry Gopnik: It sounds like you don't know anything! Why even tell me the story?

      Rabbi Nachtner: [chuckling] First I should tell you, then I shouldn't.

      Larry Gopnik: What happened to Sussman?

      Rabbi Nachtner: What would happen? Not much. He went back to work. For a while he checked every patient's teeth for new messages. He didn't find any. In time, he found he'd stopped checking. He returned to life. These questions that are bothering you, Larry - maybe they're like a toothache. We feel them for a while, then they go away.

      Larry Gopnik: I don't want it to just go away! I want an answer!

      Rabbi Nachtner: Sure! We all want the answer! But Hashem doesn't owe us the answer, Larry. Hashem doesn't owe us anything. The obligation runs the other way.

      Larry Gopnik: Why does he make us feel the questions if he's not gonna give us any answers?

      Rabbi Nachtner: He hasn't told me.

      [Larry puts his face in his hands in despair]

      Larry Gopnik: And... what happened to the goy?

      Rabbi Nachtner: The goy? Who cares?

    • Créditos curiosos
      At the end of the credits is a line advising that "No Jews were harmed in the making of this motion picture."
    • Conexiones
      Featured in The Rotten Tomatoes Show: Surrogates/Pandorum/Fame (2009)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Somebody to Love
      Written by Darby Slick

      Performed by Jefferson Airplane

      Courtesy of The RCA Records Label

      By arrangement with Sony BMG Music Entertainment

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    Preguntas Frecuentes25

    • How long is A Serious Man?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Is "A Serious Man" based on a book?
    • When is the film set?
    • Was Sy writing the derogative letters to the tenure board?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 29 de enero de 2010 (México)
    • Países de origen
      • Reino Unido
      • Francia
      • Estados Unidos
    • Sitio oficial
      • Official Facebook
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Yidis
      • Hebreo
    • También se conoce como
      • A Serious Man
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • República Checa(scenes before opening credits)
    • Productoras
      • Focus Features
      • StudioCanal
      • Relativity Media
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 7,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 9,228,768
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 251,337
      • 4 oct 2009
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 31,431,652
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 46min(106 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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