Top 64 Quotes & Sayings by Ethan Coen

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American director Ethan Coen.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
Ethan Coen

Joel Daniel Coen and Ethan Jesse Coen, collectively known as the Coen brothers are American filmmakers. Their films span many genres and styles, which they frequently subvert or parody. Their most acclaimed works include Raising Arizona (1987), Miller's Crossing (1990), Barton Fink (1991), Fargo (1996), The Big Lebowski (1998), O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000), No Country for Old Men (2007), True Grit (2010), Inside Llewyn Davis (2013), and The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (2018).

It's not that I don't like TV. It's alien to me. I haven't watched a television show in decades.
There's something strange - not in a bad way - about going back to where you grew up or recreating where you grew up. It's strange and stimulating.
A writer, by definition, is pathetic. — © Ethan Coen
A writer, by definition, is pathetic.
We haven't had to defend anything to anybody.
We don't outline, so we don't have prospective tasks to divide up. It's just, we start at the beginning and talk the first scene through, write it up, proceed to the next.
Oscars just ain't gonna do it for me anymore. I need the Nobel Peace Prize. The Oscars have worn off, man.
When the movie's done, you talk about either the score or source music over a particular scene, what might work. You just throw a piece of music over the scene, and we both listen to it.
We do worry that we might be making something we've made before. It's important that we make something we've never made before.
We're not big on taste. And actually, if you don't pander to undue sensitivities, then it ends up usually not being much of a problem.
Sometimes you can just hear the actor in the language.
It's tough being a Jew.
You don't go around thinking about how characters in a movie, in the stories you make up, relate to people in general.
Midwestern Jews is a different community, is a different thing than New York Jews, L.A. Jews. It's just different. It's the whole Midwestern thing. — © Ethan Coen
Midwestern Jews is a different community, is a different thing than New York Jews, L.A. Jews. It's just different. It's the whole Midwestern thing.
With 'The Big Lebowski,' we were really consciously thinking about doing a Raymond Chandler story, as much as it's about L.A.
'I Love You, Man' was kind of funny.
We wouldn't have done it if we didn't think we could have fun with it.
'The Big Lebowski' was something we wrote for Jeff Bridges, and we set it aside for a couple of years because he wasn't available.
We used to watch the muscle movies on Saturday matinees, such as 'Hercules Unchained.' Then we'd go outside and do a remake of it.
As kids, we did see the Disney movies and the kids' adventure stories of the day.
Whatever faith you have, you have that crisis: what am I doing?
There aren't reasons why you like this song or this piece of music, or don't like it. It's just, it's either right or wrong, you know?
I think some superstars feel they get trapped in their established screen persona over and over again. That's what they get hired to do.
Two heads are better than none.
The mountain music... is compelling music in its own right, harking back to a time when music was a part of everyday life and not something performed by celebrities.
All we think about is how to keep the audience engaged, and normally we're big on plot because that's the easy way to do it.
'Once Upon a Time in the West' is a great movie.
I have never had feeling in my toes. My uncle, Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, once told me in confidence he had the same syndrome, leading me to believe it is genetic.
Sergio Leone has this weird western opera thing.
We loved the language in Cormac McCarthy's 'No Country,' which is really about the region, while in 'True Grit' it's more about period: people did speak more formally and floridly.
We go to the office every day when we're writing - or supposed to be writing. It's not always productive, and there's a lot of procrastinating, just staring at the wall, like any other writing. But we just make ourselves go to the office every day for more or less the whole day.
It's more interesting for me as an audience member to see a movie about a loser.
Barton Fink is just too self-important as an artist to get much sympathy.
What is striking in Minnesota is the invisible horizon line. On a grey day, when there's snow on the ground, the sky and the ground are one tone. Everyone appears to be hanging in mid-air.
Dave Van Ronk, for those who don't know him - probably most don't know - was a folk singer. He's kind of the biggest person on the scene in 1961 in the folk revival in Greenwich Village, biggest person on the scene until Bob Dylan showed up.
It was never an ambition to grow up and win an Academy Award, so when it happens, you go, 'Weird!'
Is this business any worse than any other business? It's not especially bad.
Dave Van Ronk is not an obscure figure. He's the biggest figure on an obscure scene, playing a kind of niche music that we knew and liked.
Whenever you're specific with ethnicity or religion, people find reason to take offence. — © Ethan Coen
Whenever you're specific with ethnicity or religion, people find reason to take offence.
I don't know we have a method. We show up at the office. Is that a method? That's about the extent to which it's been formalized, asystematised. We show up at the office and talk, talk a scene through.
Of course, 'True Grit' is a Western, but we never considered our film a classical Western and honestly never thought about genre at all. We didn't talk about John Ford or Sergio Leone, even though we like their films. Really, we were driven only by our enthusiasm for Charles Portis's book.
It's important to tell the story you're telling in the right way, which might involve black people or people of whatever heritage or ethnicity - or it might not.
It's always tempting to cast someone you enjoy being with. You've got to hang out with these people for a number of months.
People are always curious about brothers working together.
You don't have to have a true story to make a true story movie.
We've always actually been remarkably commercially successful. Not in terms of making huge amounts of money, which we rarely do, but in terms of not losing money and making modest amounts of money. We're actually strangely consistent in that respect.
When you're younger, you kind of assume you'll be fine at whatever. Then you get older, and you're either unsuccessful and you wonder why, or you're successful and you wonder why.
I mean, Joel talks to the actors more than I do and I probably do production stuff a little more than he does.
There is some pleasure in doing a movie and problem solving on a specific movie and getting a movie made, but once they are done, we don't look at them again, much less relate one to another.
That's interesting: people deriving their identities from their music. — © Ethan Coen
That's interesting: people deriving their identities from their music.
Like any kind of writing, there are good days and frustrating days. But even frustrating days can be rewarding sometimes.
Mainstream movies used to be more adventurous because people went to them.
That cowboy look - the hat and the bandana - that's not a fashion statement. That clothing is purely practical.
We tend to do period stuff because it helps make it one step removed from boring everyday reality.
Being non-commercial is never an ambition. Movies come together at different points for fortuitous reasons. You do them as you get the opportunity, as opposed to doing them when you choose to or design to.
It's hard to get away from being old. I still talk about the TV set.
Don't bang your head against the wall about what you can't do.
'Barton Fink' owed something to Roman Polanski. As a director, he always goes beyond the obvious narrative drift.
It's very weird when people you know are in 'Star Wars.'
People respond to real problems from the heart.
In 'True Grit,' we had a vulture, a trained vulture... that was a pain and that was - even by vulture standards - probably a stupid vulture, and that was frustrating.
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