O Brother Where Art Thou O Brother Where Art Thou? Cast

2000 film by Ethan and Joel Coen

O Brother, Where Art K?
O brother where art thou ver1.jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Joel Coen
Written by
  • Joel Coen
  • Ethan Coen
Based on The Odyssey
by Homer
Produced by Ethan Coen
Starring
  • George Clooney
  • John Turturro
  • Tim Blake Nelson
  • Charles Durning
  • Michael Badalucco
  • John Goodman
  • Holly Hunter
Cinematography Roger Deakins
Edited by
  • Roderick Jaynes
  • Tricia Cooke
Music by T Bone Burnett

Production
companies

  • Touchstone Pictures[one]
  • Universal Pictures[1]
  • StudioCanal[1]
  • Working Title Films[2]
  • Blind Bard Pictures[3]
Distributed by
  • Buena Vista Pictures Distribution[2] (N America, Germany, Italian republic and Spain)[a]
  • Alliance Atlantis (United Kingdom; through Momentum Pictures[v])[6] [b]
  • BAC Films (France)[4] [c]
  • Universal Pictures (International)

Release dates

  • May 13, 2000 (2000-05-thirteen) (Cannes)[8]
  • October nineteen, 2000 (2000-x-19) (AFI Film Festival)
  • December 22, 2000 (2000-12-22) (United States)

Running time

107 minutes
Countries
  • United Kingdom[two]
  • United states[2]
  • France[2]
Linguistic communication English
Budget $26 meg[nine]
Box role $72 million[7]

O Blood brother, Where Fine art Thousand? is a 2000 crime comedy drama musical picture show written, produced, co-edited and directed by Joel and Ethan Coen and starring George Clooney, John Turturro, and Tim Blake Nelson, with Chris Thomas King, John Goodman, Holly Hunter, and Charles Durning in supporting roles.

The film is set in 1937 rural Mississippi during the Great Low. Its story is a modern satire loosely based on Homer's epic Greek poem The Odyssey that incorporates social features of the American South.[10] The title of the film is a reference to the Preston Sturges 1941 movie Sullivan's Travels, in which the protagonist is a director who wants to flick O Brother, Where Art Thou?, a fictitious book almost the Bang-up Depression.[11]

Much of the music used in the film is menstruation folk music.[12] The movie was one of the offset to extensively use digital colour correction to give the film an autumnal, sepia-tinted look.[thirteen] Released past Buena Vista Pictures (through Touchstone Pictures) in N America, France, Frg, Italy, and Kingdom of spain and by Universal Pictures in other countries, the flick was met with a positive disquisitional reception, and the soundtrack won a Grammy Award for Anthology of the Year in 2002, making it the only motion picture soundtrack to have ever received the laurels.[14] The country and folk musicians who were dubbed into the film include John Hartford, Alison Krauss, Dan Tyminski, Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch, Ralph Stanley, Chris Sharp, Patty Loveless, and others. They joined to perform the music from the picture show in the Downwardly from the Mountain concert tour, which was filmed for consumer consumption via Television and DVD.[12] [15]

Plot [edit]

Three convicts, Pete and Delmar led past Ulysses Everett McGill, escape from a chain gang and set out to retrieve a treasure Everett said was buried before the expanse is flooded to make a lake. The three get a lift from a blind man driving a handcar on a railway. He tells them they will notice a fortune, but not the one they seek. The trio make their way to the house of Launder, Pete's cousin. They sleep in the barn, only Wash reports them to Sheriff Cooley, who, along with his men, torches the barn. Wash's son helps them escape.

They pick upward Tommy Johnson, a young black man, who claims he sold his soul to the devil in exchange for the ability to play guitar. In need of money, the iv stop at a radio station where they record a song as the Soggy Bottom Boys. That nighttime, the trio part ways with Tommy after their car is discovered by the police force. Unbeknownst to them, their recording becomes a major hit. They briefly fall in with Babe Face Nelson and accompany him on a robbery.

Near a river, the group hears singing. They run into three women washing clothes and singing. The women drug them with corn whiskey and they lose consciousness. Upon waking, Delmar finds Pete'south wearing apparel lying next to him, empty except for a toad. Delmar is convinced the women were sirens and transformed Pete into the toad. Later, 1-eyed Bible salesman Large Dan invites them for a picnic lunch, so mugs them, takes all their coin, and kills the toad.

On their way to Everett'south home boondocks, Everett and Delmar see Pete working on a chain gang. Upon arriving Everett confronts his wife Penny, who changed her last name and told their daughters he was dead. He gets into a fight with Vernon, whom she is to marry the next solar day. Later that night, they sneak into Pete's belongings cell and free him. As information technology turns out, the women had dragged Pete away and turned him in to the authorities. Under torture, Pete gave away the treasure's location to the law. Everett so confesses that there is no treasure. He made information technology up to convince Pete and Delmar, who were chained to him, to escape with him in order to stop his married woman from getting married. He reveals that he got arrested for practicing law without a license. Pete is enraged at Everett, because he had two weeks left on his original sentence, and must serve l more than years for the escape.

The trio stumble upon a rally of the Ku Klux Klan, who are planning to hang Tommy. The trio disguise themselves as Klansmen and attempt to rescue Tommy. However, Big Dan, a Klan member, reveals their identities. Anarchy ensues, and the G Wizard reveals himself as Homer Stokes, a candidate in the upcoming gubernatorial election. The trio rush Tommy away and cut the supports of a large called-for cross, leaving it to fall on Big Dan.

Everett convinces Pete, Delmar and Tommy to help him win his wife dorsum. They sneak into a Stokes entrada gala dinner she is attending, disguised equally musicians. The group begins a operation of their radio hit. The crowd recognizes the song and goes wild. Homer recognizes them as the group who humiliated his mob. When he demands the group be arrested and reveals his white supremacist views, the crowd runs him out of town on a rails. Pappy O'Daniel, the incumbent candidate, seizes the opportunity, endorses the Soggy Bottom Boys and grants them full pardons. Penny agrees to ally Everett with the condition that he find her original ring.

The adjacent morning, the group sets out to recollect the ring, which is inside a cabin in the valley which Everett had earlier claimed was the location of his treasure. The constabulary, having learned of the place from Pete, arrest the group. Dismissing their claims of having received pardons, Sheriff Cooley orders them hanged. But as Everett prays to God, the valley is flooded and they are saved. Tommy finds the ring in a desk-bound that floats by, and they return to boondocks. However, when Everett presents the band to Penny, it turns out it was her aunt'due south ring. She declares that she will not marry him with that ring, simply just her wedding ring which she cannot think where she put.

Cast [edit]

  • George Clooney as Ulysses Everett McGill. He corresponds to Odysseus (Ulysses) in the Odyssey.[sixteen] His singing vocalism is dubbed past Dan Tyminski.
  • John Turturro as Pete. (His last proper name is never stated in the pic) Along with Delmar, Pete represents Odysseus' soldiers who wander with him from Troy to Ithaca, seeking to return home. His singing is dubbed by Harley Allen.
  • Tim Blake Nelson as Delmar O'Donnell. Nelson does his ain singing on "In the Jailhouse At present", but is otherwise dubbed past Pat Enright.
  • Chris Thomas King as Tommy Johnson, a skilled blues musician. He shares his proper noun and story with Tommy Johnson, a blues musician who is said to have sold his soul to the devil at the Crossroads (also attributed to Robert Johnson).[17] [18]
  • John Goodman as Daniel "Big Dan" Teague, a i-eyed mugger and Ku Klux Klan fellow member who masquerades equally a Bible salesman. He corresponds to the cyclops Polyphemus in the Odyssey.[16]
  • Holly Hunter equally Penny Wharvey-McGill, Everett's ex-wife. She corresponds to Penelope in the Odyssey.[16]
  • Charles Durning as Menelaus "Pappy" O'Daniel, the governor of Mississippi. The graphic symbol is based on Texas governor West. Lee "Pappy" O'Daniel.[19] He shares a name with Menelaus, an Odyssey grapheme, merely corresponds with Zeus from the narrative.[16]
  • Daniel von Bargen as Sheriff Cooley, a ruthless rural sheriff who pursues the trio for the duration of the film. He corresponds to Poseidon in the Odyssey.[16] He has been compared to Boss Godfrey in Cool Hand Luke.[20]
  • Wayne Duvall equally Homer Stokes, a candidate for governor and the leader of a Ku Klux Klan mob. His singing is dubbed by Ralph Stanley.
  • Ray McKinnon as Vernon T. Waldrip. He corresponds to the Suitors of Penelope in the Odyssey.[sixteen]
  • Frank Collison as Washington Bartholomew "Launder" Hogwallop, Pete's cousin.
  • Michael Badalucco as Baby Face Nelson.
  • Stephen Root every bit Mr. Lund, a blind radio station manager. He corresponds to Homer.[16]
  • Lee Weaver equally the Blind Seer, who accurately predicts the event of the trio's adventure. He corresponds to Tiresias in the Odyssey.[16]
  • Mia Tate, Musetta Vander, and Christy Taylor as the three "sirens". Their singing voices are dubbed by Emmylou Harris, Alison Krauss, and Gillian Welch.

Gillian Welch and Dan Tyminski also appear as a record store client and a mandolinist, respectively. Del Pentacost, JR Horne, and Brian Reddy appear every bit members of Pappy O'Daniel'south staff. Ed Gale appears as Homer Stokes' ceremonial "little man." Three members of the Fairfield Iv (Isaac Freeman, Wilson Waters Jr, and Robert Hamlett) cameo every bit gravediggers. The Cox Family and The Whites announced as fictionalized versions of themselves.

Product [edit]

The idea of O Brother, Where Art G? arose spontaneously. Work on the script began in December 1997, long before the beginning of production, and was at least half-written by May 1998. Despite the fact that Ethan Coen described the Odyssey every bit "1 of my favorite storyline schemes", neither of the brothers had read the epic, and they were only familiar with its content through adaptations and numerous references to the Odyssey in popular culture.[21] Co-ordinate to the brothers, Tim Blake Nelson (who has a degree in classics from Dark-brown Academy)[22] [23] was the only person on the set who had read the Odyssey.[24]

The title of the picture show is a reference to the 1941 Preston Sturges film Sullivan'due south Travels, in which the protagonist (a director) wants to direct a film about the Great Depression called O Brother, Where Art Chiliad? [11] that will exist a "commentary on modern atmospheric condition, stark realism, and the problems that face the average man". Lacking any experience in this surface area, the director sets out on a journey to experience the human suffering of the average human just is sabotaged by his anxious studio. The film has some similarity in tone to Sturges's film, including scenes with prison gangs and a black church building choir. The prisoners at the picture show testify scene is also a direct homage to a nearly identical scene in Sturges's motion-picture show.[25]

Joel Coen revealed in a 2000 interview that he traveled to Phoenix to offer the atomic number 82 role to Clooney. Clooney agreed to do the role immediately, without reading the script. He stated that he liked even the Coens' least successful films.[26] Clooney did not immediately understand his character and sent the script to his uncle Jack, who lived in Kentucky, request him to read the entire script into a tape recorder.[27] Unknown to Clooney, in his recording, Jack, a devout Baptist, omitted all instances of the words "damn" and "hell" from the Coens' script, which only became known to Clooney later the directors pointed this out to him during shooting.[27]

This was the fourth motion picture of the brothers in which John Turturro has starred. Other actors in O Brother, Where Fine art Thou? who had worked previously with the Coens include John Goodman (three films), Holly Hunter (ii), Charles Durning (2) and Michael Badalucco (one).

The Coens used digital color correction to give the motion-picture show a sepia-tinted await.[13] Joel stated this was because the actual set was "greener than Ireland".[27] Cinematographer Roger Deakins stated, "Ethan and Joel favored a dry, dusty Delta look with gilded sunsets. They wanted it to look similar an onetime hand-tinted moving picture, with the intensity of colors dictated by the scene and natural skin tones that were all shades of the rainbow."[28] Initially the crew tried to perform the colour correction using a physical procedure, nonetheless later several tries with diverse chemical processes proved unsatisfactory, it became necessary to perform the process digitally.[27]

This was the fifth film collaboration between the Coen Brothers and Deakins, and it was slated to exist shot in Mississippi at a time of yr when the leaf, grass, trees, and bushes would be a lush green.[28] Information technology was filmed virtually locations in County, Mississippi, and Florence, Southward Carolina, in the summer of 1999.[29] Subsequently shooting tests, including film bipack and bleach bypass techniques, Deakins suggested digital mastering be used.[28] Deakins spent 11 weeks fine-tuning the look, mainly targeting the greens, making them a burnt yellow and desaturating the overall image in the digital files.[13] This made it the first feature film to be entirely color corrected by digital means, narrowly chirapsia Nick Park's Chicken Run.[13]

O Brother, Where Art One thousand? was the first time a digital intermediate was used on the entirety of a start-run Hollywood picture show that otherwise had very few visual furnishings. The piece of work was done in Los Angeles past Cinesite using a Spirit DataCine for scanning at 2K resolution, a Pandora MegaDef to adjust the color, and a Kodak Lightning II recorder to put out to picture.[thirty]

A major theme of the motion picture is the connection between old-time music and political campaigning in the Southern U.Due south. It makes reference to the traditions, institutions, and entrada practices of bossism and political reform that divers Southern politics in the offset half of the 20th century.

The Ku Klux Klan, at the fourth dimension a political force of white populism, is depicted burning crosses and engaging in ceremonial trip the light fantastic toe. The character Menelaus "Pappy" O'Daniel, the governor of Mississippi and host of the radio bear witness The Flour Hour, is similar in proper name and demeanor to W. Lee "Pappy" O'Daniel,[31] one-time Governor of Texas and subsequently U.Due south. Senator from that state.[32] O'Daniel was in the flour business, and used a backing band chosen the Light Crust Doughboys on his radio show.[33] In i entrada, O'Daniel carried a broom, an oft-used campaign device in the reform era, promising to sweep away patronage and abuse.[34] His theme song had the hook, "Please pass the biscuits, Pappy", emphasizing his connection with flour.[33]

While the film borrows from historical politics, differences are obvious between the characters in the picture and historical political figures. The O'Daniel of the movie used "You Are My Sunshine" as his theme vocal (which was originally recorded past vocalizer and Governor of Louisiana James Houston "Jimmie" Davis[35]), and Homer Stokes, every bit the challenger to the incumbent O'Daniel, portrays himself every bit the "reform candidate", using a broom every bit a prop.

Music [edit]

Music was originally conceived as a major component of the motion-picture show, not merely as a background or a support. Producer and musician T Bone Burnett worked with the Coens while the script was still in its working phases and the soundtrack was recorded before filming commenced.[36]

Much of the music used in the pic is menses-specific folk music.[12] The musical option also includes religious music, including Primitive Baptist and traditional African American gospel, most notably the Fairfield Four, an a cappella quartet with a career extending back to 1921 who appear in the soundtrack and as gravediggers towards the movie's finish. Selected songs in the picture reflect the possible spectrum of musical styles typical of the quondam culture of the American Southward: gospel, delta blues, country, swing and bluegrass.[24] [37]

The utilise of dirges and other macabre songs is a theme that often recurs in Appalachian music[38] ("O Death", "Lonesome Valley", "Angel Ring", "I Am Weary") in contrast to bright, cheerful songs ("Continue On the Sunny Side", "In the Highways") in other parts of the motion picture.

The voices of the Soggy Lesser Boys were provided by Dan Tyminski (atomic number 82 vocal on "Man of Constant Sorrow"), Nashville songwriter Harley Allen, and the Nashville Bluegrass Band's Pat Enright.[39] The three won a CMA Award for Unmarried of the Year[39] and a Grammy Award for All-time Country Collaboration with Vocals, both for the song "Man of Constant Sorrow".[14] Tim Blake Nelson sang the lead song on "In the Jailhouse Now".[11]

"Homo of Constant Sorrow" has five variations: ii are used in the moving-picture show, one in the music video, and two in the soundtrack album. Two of the variations feature the verses being sung back-to-back, and the other three variations feature additional music betwixt each poesy.[40] Though the song received little pregnant radio airplay, it reached #35 on the U.S. Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in 2002.[36] [41] The version of "I'll Fly Abroad" heard in the pic is performed not by Krauss and Welch (as information technology is on the CD and concert tour), but by the Kossoy Sisters with Erik Darling accompanying on long-neck five-string banjo, recorded in 1956 for the anthology Bowling Green on Tradition Records.[42]

Release [edit]

The film premiered at the AFI Film Festival on Oct xix, 2000, and the United States on December 22, 2000.[2] It grossed $71,868,327 worldwide off its $26 million budget.[vii] [9]

Critical reception [edit]

Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives it a score of 78% based on 154 reviews and an average score of 7.12/10. The consensus reads: "Though not every bit good as Coen brothers' classics such equally Claret Simple, the delightfully loopy O Brother, Where Fine art Thou? is yet a lot of fun."[43] The film holds an average score of 69/100 on Metacritic based on xxx reviews.[44]

Roger Ebert gave 2 and a half out of 4 stars to the picture, saying all the scenes in the picture show were "wonderful in their different ways, and yet I left the motion picture uncertain and unsatisfied".[45]

Accolades [edit]

The film was selected into the main contest of the 2000 Cannes Film Festival.[eight]

Award Appointment of ceremony Category Recipient(due south) Result Ref
Academy Awards March 25, 2001 Best Adapted Screenplay Ethan Coen
Joel Coen
Nominated [46]
Best Cinematography Roger Deakins Nominated
BAFTA Awards Feb 25, 2001 Best Screenplay – Original Ethan Coen
Joel Coen
Nominated
Best Cinematography Roger Deakins Nominated
All-time Product Design Dennis Gassner Nominated
American Movie theatre Editors 2001 Best Edited Characteristic Moving-picture show – Comedy or Musical Ethan Coen
Tricia Cooke
Nominated
American Comedy Awards 2001 Funniest Actor in a Moving-picture show (Leading Role) George Clooney Nominated
American Society of Cinematographers 2001 Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography in Theatrical Releases Roger Deakins Nominated
Awards Circuit Community Awards 2000 Best Adapted Screenplay Ethan Coen
Joel Coen
Nominated
Best Cast Ensemble George Clooney
John Turturro
Tim Blake Nelson
Charles Durning
Michael Badalucco
John Goodman
Holly Hunter
Nominated
All-time Fine art Direction Dennis Gassner Nominated
All-time Cinematography Roger Deakins Nominated
All-time Costume Pattern Mary Zophres Nominated
BMI Film & Tv set Awards 2002 Special Citation T Bone Burnett Won
British Gild of Cinematographers 2001 Best Cinematography Roger Deakins Won
Cannes Pic Festival 2000 Palme d'Or Joel Coen Nominated
Chicago Moving picture Critics Association Awards 2001 All-time Cinematography Roger Deakins Nominated
Best Original Score Carter Burwell
T Bone Burnett
Nominated
Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards 2001 All-time Picture O Blood brother Where Fine art K? Nominated
Best Director Joel Coen Nominated
Empire Awards 2001 Best Histrion George Clooney Nominated
European Film Awards 2000 Screen International Award (USA) Joel Coen Nominated
Faro Island Film Festival 2000 Best Film Ethan Coen
Joel Coen
Nominated
Florida Pic Critics Circumvolve Awards 2001 All-time Soundtrack and Score Carter Burwell
T Os Burnett
Won
Golden Globes January 21, 2001 Best Motion Motion-picture show – One-act or Musical O Brother Where Fine art Thou? Nominated [47]
Best Performance by an Thespian in a Motility Picture – One-act or Musical George Clooney Won
Grammy Awards February 27, 2002 Album of the Yr Alison Krauss
Union Station
Tim Blake Nelson
Chris Thomas King
Emmylou Harris
Gillian Welch
Harley Allen
John Hartford
Norman Blake
Pat Enright
Hannah Peasall
Leah Peasall
Sarah Peasall
Ralph Stanley
Sam Bush-league
Stuart Duncan
The Cox Family
The Fairfield Iv
The Whites
T Bone Burnett
Peter Grand. Kurland
Mike Piersante
Gavin Lurssen
Jerry Douglas
Barry Bales
Ron Cake
Dan Tyminski
Cheryl White
Sharon White
Won [48]
All-time Compilation Soundtrack Album for a Motion Movie, Television or Other Visual Media T Os Burnett
Mike Piersante
Peter F. Kurland
Won
Las Vegas Moving-picture show Critics Society Awards 2000 Best Cinematography Roger Deakins Won
Best Screenplay, Original Ethan Coen
Joel Coen
Nominated
Best Costume Blueprint Mary Zophres Nominated
London Critics Circle Motion-picture show Awards 2001 Moving-picture show of the Year O Blood brother Where Art Thou? Nominated
Screenwriter of the Year Ethan Coen
Joel Coen
Nominated
MTV Movie + TV Awards June 2, 2001 Best On-Screen Team (The Soggy Bottom Boys) George Clooney
Tim Blake Nelson
John Turturro
Nominated
All-time Music Moment "Man Of Constant Sorrow" Nominated
Online Film Critics Club Awards January 2, 2001 All-time Original Score T Os Burnett
Carter Burwell
Nominated
Best Cinematography Roger Deakins Nominated
Phoenix Film Critics Guild Awards 2001 Best Original Score T Bone Burnett
Carter Burwell
Nominated
Satellite Awards January 14, 2001 Best Picture show, Comedy or Musical O Brother Where Fine art Chiliad? Nominated
Best Screenplay, Adapted Ethan Coen
Joel Coen
Nominated
All-time Actor in a Motion Picture, Comedy or Musical George Clooney Nominated
Best Thespian in a Supporting Role, Comedy or Musical Tim Blake Nelson Nominated
Best Actress in a Supporting Function, One-act or Musical Holly Hunter Nominated
Scientific discipline Fiction Fantasy Writers of America 2002 Best Script Ethan Coen
Joel Coen
Nominated
Turkish Picture Critics Association Awards 2001 Best Foreign Motion picture O Brother Where Fine art Thousand? Nominated

Soggy Bottom Boys [edit]

The Soggy Lesser Boys are the fictional musical group that the main characters form to serve every bit accompaniment for the motion picture. It has been suggested that the name is in homage to the Foggy Mountain Boys, a bluegrass band led by Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs.[49] In the pic, the songs credited to the ring are lip-synched past the actors, except that Tim Blake Nelson does sing his own vocals on "In the Jailhouse Now".

The band'due south hit single is Dick Burnett's "Man of Constant Sorrow", a vocal that had enjoyed much success prior to the movie's release.[50] After the film's release, the fictitious band became then pop that the state and folk musicians who were dubbed into the flick got together and performed the music from the film in a Down from the Mount concert tour, which was filmed for Telly and DVD.[12] This included Ralph Stanley, John Hartford, Alison Krauss, Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch, Chris Sharp, Stun Seymour, Dan Tyminski and others.

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ Co-distributed with Universal Pictures in Germany and Italy[4] and Warner Sogefilms in Spain.[four]
  2. ^ Co-distributed with Universal Pictures.[4]
  3. ^ Co-distributed with Buena Vista Pictures Distribution.[7]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c "O Brother, Where Art K? (2000)". www.the-numbers.com. The Numbers. Retrieved October nineteen, 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "O Brother, Where Fine art 1000?". American Film Institute. Archived from the original on December 20, 2014. Retrieved January 24, 2018.
  3. ^ "O Blood brother, Where Art Thou? (2000)". British Moving picture Plant. www.bfi.org. Retrieved Oct 17, 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d "Film #15267: O Brother, Where Art Thou?". Lumiere . Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  5. ^ Minns, Adam (May 10, 2000). "Momentum confirms Brother, Rocky acquisitions". Screen International . Retrieved October 8, 2021.
  6. ^ "O Brother, Where Art Thou?". BBFC . Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  7. ^ a b c "O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000)". Box Part Mojo . Retrieved January 8, 2008.
  8. ^ a b "O Brother, Where Art Grand?". Festival de Cannes . Retrieved Oct 10, 2009.
  9. ^ a b "Box Office Data:O Blood brother Where Art Thou". The Numbers.com.
  10. ^ Grey, Richard J.; Robinson, Owen (April xv, 2008). A companion to the literature and culture of the American southward . John Wiley & Sons. ISBN978-0470756690.
  11. ^ a b c Lafrance, J.D. (Apr 5, 2004). "The Coen Brothers FAQ" (PDF). pp. 33–35. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 26, 2007. Retrieved Nov viii, 2007.
  12. ^ a b c d Menaker, Daniel (November thirty, 2000). "A Pic Score Odyssey Down a Quirky Country Road". The New York Times . Retrieved Feb 4, 2010.
  13. ^ a b c d Robertson, Barbara (May ane, 2006). "CGSociety — The Colorists". The Colorists: 3. Archived from the original on January 22, 2012. Retrieved October 24, 2007. Filmed near locations in Canton, Mississippi; Vicksburg, Mississippi and Wardville, Louisiana.
  14. ^ a b "The 2002 Grammy Winners". San Francisco Chronicle. February 28, 2002. Retrieved September ix, 2018.
  15. ^ "Pioneering Bluegrass Musician Ralph Stanley". Fresh Air. December 27, 1992. NPR. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h Flensted-Jensen, Pernille (2002), "Something old, something new, something borrowed: the Odyssey and O Brother, Where Fine art Thou", Classica Et Mediaevalia: Revue Danoise De Philologie, 53: thirteen–thirty, ISBN978-8772898537
  17. ^ "The existent king of delta blues - Tommy Johnson". Erinharpe.com . Retrieved August 24, 2016.
  18. ^ "Dejection Singers". Academy of Virginia. Retrieved August 24, 2016.
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  21. ^ Ciment, Michel; Niogret, Hubert (1998). The Logic of Soft Drugs . Positif. Positive. ISBN9781578068890.
  22. ^ Tim Blake Nelson Biography Yahoo! MoviesArchived June 28, 2011, at the Wayback Motorcar
  23. ^ Molvar, Kari (March–April 2001). "Q&A: Tim Blake Nelson". Brown Alumni Magazine. Archived from the original on December 26, 2001. Retrieved December 26, 2001.
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  25. ^ Dirks, Tim. "Sullivan's Travels (1941)". AMC Filmsite . Retrieved Nov eight, 2007.
  26. ^ Hochman, Steve (December 22, 2000). "George Clooney: O Brother, Where Art Thou?". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved October viii, 2013.
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  28. ^ a b c Allen, Robert. "Digital Domain". The Digital Domain: A brief history of digital movie mastering — a glance at the future. Archived from the original on February four, 2012. Retrieved May fourteen, 2007.
  29. ^ "O Brother, Where Art Thou: Box office / business". IMDb. Archived from the original on October 7, 2010. Retrieved February 13, 2012.
  30. ^ Fisher, Bob (October 2000). "Escaping from bondage". American Cinematographer.
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  33. ^ a b Walker, Jesse (August xix, 2003). "Pass the Biscuits – Nosotros're living in Pappy O'Daniel's world". Reason . Retrieved November 2, 2007.
  34. ^ Boulard, Garry (Feb 4, 2002). "Following the Leaders". Gambit. p. i. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
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  36. ^ a b "O Brother, why art thou so popular?". BBC News. Feb 28, 2002. Retrieved Feb fourteen, 2012.
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  38. ^ McClatchy, Debbie (June 27, 2000). "A Curt History of Appalachian Traditional Music". Appalachian Traditional Music — A Brusk History . Retrieved November 8, 2007.
  39. ^ a b "Soggy Bottom Boys Hitting the Meridian at 35th CMA Awards". Nov 7, 2001. Retrieved November eight, 2007.
  40. ^ Long, Roger J. (April ix, 2006). ""O Blood brother, Where Art Thou?" Home Page". Archived from the original on November 3, 2007. Retrieved November ix, 2007.
  41. ^ "Hot Country Songs: I Am A Man Of- Constant Sorrow". Billboard. Archived from the original on Dec 23, 2007. Retrieved Nov 2, 2007.
  42. ^ "O Kossoy Sisters, Where Art Grand Been?". Country Standard Time. January 2003. Retrieved Jan 8, 2009.
  43. ^ "O Brother, Where Art Grand? (2000)". Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved July 16, 2021.
  44. ^ "Reviews for O Blood brother, Where Fine art Thou? (2000)". Metacritic . Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  45. ^ Ebert, Roger (Dec 29, 2000). ""O Brother, Where Art Thou?" Review". The Chicago Dominicus Times . Retrieved Feb 14, 2012 – via Rogerebert.com.
  46. ^ "Browser Unsupported - University Awards Search | University of Movie Arts & Sciences". awardsdatabase.oscars.org . Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  47. ^ "O Blood brother, Where Art Chiliad?". www.goldenglobes.com . Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  48. ^ "T Bone Burnett". GRAMMY.com. November 19, 2019. Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  49. ^ Temple Kirby, Jack (November v, 2009). Mockingbird Song: Ecological Landscapes of the South. UNC Press. p. 314. ISBN978-0807876602.
  50. ^ "Human being of Constant Sorrow (trad./The Stanley Brothers/Bob Dylan)". Homo of Constant Sorrow . Retrieved November 2, 2007.

External links [edit]

  • O Brother, Where Fine art Thou? at IMDb
  • O Brother, Where Art Thousand? at AllMovie
  • O Brother, Where Art Thou? at Box Part Mojo
  • O Brother, Where Art Thou? at Rotten Tomatoes
  • "Coenesque: The Films of the Coen Brothers". Archived from the original on November 19, 2003.
  • "American Myth Today: O Blood brother, Where Art M?". Archived from the original on June 5, 2011. Retrieved Oct xx, 2009. American Studies at the University of Virginia

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O_Brother,_Where_Art_Thou%3F

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