Sep
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All of which brings us back to the boob played by Pitt, as well as to Frances McDormand, that marvel of fine acting chops and confounding taste in the roles she takes, both in and out of Coen productions (she hasn’t been married to Joel Coen all these years for nothing). Here, McDormand portrays fellow gym employee Linda Litzke, a sad, single lady who treats her femininity as something akin to an embarrassing, itchy rash. (She’s got some of the choppy, desexualized speech patterns of Fargo’s Marge Gunderson, and a whole lot more self-loathing.) Linda hates everything about her face and body — her goal is to
finance a head-to-toe surgical overhaul, possibly with extortion money wrung from Chad for his computer disc, if that’s what it takes. Still, she’s also brave enough to look for love online; she dares to have real feelings. And while she hurts, we’re invited to laugh. Linda is Burn After Reading’s most troublesome character — she’s a serious woman disguised as a joke, thrown into a story that has no use for seriousness (or, jeez, for women). Here’s something to consider after watching Pitt revel in the role of a dim bulb perfectly
contented with his life while McDormand
is stuck once again playing a bright-enough woman discontented with the universe:
Is this not very old country for Coen men?
Watch Burn After Reading Full Movie George Clooney Frances McDormand John Malkovich Tilda Swinton Richard Jenkins Coen
Duration : 0:0:24
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