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Blood Simple (1984)
A gloriously repellent performance by M Emmet Walsh is one of many highlights of this thriller – a drum-tight gem that launched a film-making phenomenon
Apart from everything else, it has one of the most disturbing nightmare scenes I have ever sat through. Yet for all the mastery with which it is written and planned out, right down to the spectacular final line and the eerie brilliance of the dying man’s point of view, Blood Simple does not hint – or does so only indirectly – at the more prolix wit, the verbal, visual riffing and offbeat wackiness of the Coens’ later gems. Judging from this, I think I would have guessed at a career closer to that of John Dahl, director of Red Rock West and The Last Seduction. How wrong.
Frances McDormand’s Abby is no stereotypical shady lady, but an entirely plausible, flawed woman who is married to a brutal and emotionally inadequate bar owner, Julian, played with magnificent menace by Dan Hedaya. Abby has fallen in love with Ray (John Getz), who serves drinks at Julian’s place. Seething with jealous rage, Julian hires a private investigator of revolting sleaze: Visser, a show-stopping performance from M Emmet Walsh, with his stetson and perennial sheen of sweat. I had forgotten about the extraordinary closeups of flies settling on his glistening, jowly face, to which he is indifferent, like a lizard. He is given a captivatingly strange speech to start the film, concluding bleakly: “What I know about is Texas, and down here you’re on your own…” Julian gets this unspeakable man to take more direct action against his wife and her lover. But with diabolic inspiration, Julian has his own kind of extra revenge, taunting Ray with the allegation that Abby is cheating on him too.
- Release date: January 18, 1985 (USA)Director: Ethan CoenScreenplay: Ethan Coen, Joel CoenCinematography: Barry SonnenfeldRunning time: 1h 36m
- Release date: January 18, 1985 (USA)Director: Ethan CoenScreenplay: Ethan Coen, Joel CoenCinematography: Barry SonnenfeldRunning time: 1h 36m
Blood Simple is the 1984 directorial debut of Joel and Ethan Coen. A landmark of independent cinema and the neo-noir genre, the film established many of the stylistic and thematic hallmarks that would define the brothers' legendary careers: dark humor, sudden violence, meticulous plotting, and characters trapped by their own misunderstandings.
Directorial Debut: It introduced the world to the Coen Brothers. Despite its modest $1.5 million budget, it won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival.
Creative Partnerships: The film marked the first collaboration between the Coens and three key figures: cinematographer Barry Sonnenfeld (who later directed Men in Black), composer Carter Burwell, and actress Frances McDormand (who eventually married Joel Coen).
Neo-Noir Revival: Along with films like Body Heat, it helped revitalize the noir genre for the 1980s, trading the urban shadows of the 1940s for the neon-soaked grime of rural Texas.
The "Idiot Plot" Subversion: While many thrillers rely on characters being "stupid" to move the plot, Blood Simple is praised for how its characters make logical decisions based on the incomplete information they have, which leads to tragic irony.
At the time of its release, critics like Roger Ebert and Janet Maslin hailed it as an extraordinary accomplishment. It currently holds a very high rating on Rotten Tomatoes (around 94%) and is frequently cited as one of the best independent films ever made. While the Coens would go on to win Oscars for Fargo and No Country for Old Men, many fans consider Blood Simple to be the purest distillation of their "perfectly constructed trap" style of storytelling.
Loren Visser serves as the personification of pure greed. Unlike the noir "femme fatale" who might act out of passion, Visser is motivated solely by a small amount of cash and the amusement he derives from the chaos he creates.
Blood Simple is the 1984 directorial debut of Joel and Ethan Coen. A landmark of independent cinema and the neo-noir genre, the film established many of the stylistic and thematic hallmarks that would define the brothers' legendary careers: dark humor, sudden violence, meticulous plotting, and characters trapped by their own misunderstandings.
Directorial Debut: It introduced the world to the Coen Brothers. Despite its modest $1.5 million budget, it won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival.
Creative Partnerships: The film marked the first collaboration between the Coens and three key figures: cinematographer Barry Sonnenfeld (who later directed Men in Black), composer Carter Burwell, and actress Frances McDormand (who eventually married Joel Coen).
Neo-Noir Revival: Along with films like Body Heat, it helped revitalize the noir genre for the 1980s, trading the urban shadows of the 1940s for the neon-soaked grime of rural Texas.
The "Idiot Plot" Subversion: While many thrillers rely on characters being "stupid" to move the plot, Blood Simple is praised for how its characters make logical decisions based on the incomplete information they have, which leads to tragic irony.
At the time of its release, critics like Roger Ebert and Janet Maslin hailed it as an extraordinary accomplishment. It currently holds a very high rating on Rotten Tomatoes (around 94%) and is frequently cited as one of the best independent films ever made. While the Coens would go on to win Oscars for Fargo and No Country for Old Men, many fans consider Blood Simple to be the purest distillation of their "perfectly constructed trap" style of storytelling.
Loren Visser serves as the personification of pure greed. Unlike the noir "femme fatale" who might act out of passion, Visser is motivated solely by a small amount of cash and the amusement he derives from the chaos he creates.











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