The Coen brothers’debut,Blood
Simple, is a blueprint for most of
their films. Here’s how they did it
WORDS IAN NATHAN
IN THE BLOOD
“HOW MANY YEARS is it now?” asks
M. Emmet Walsh, who memorably portrayed
Blood Simple’s private eye Loren Visser, fi rst of
many villainous windbags to crop up in the fi lms
of Joel and Ethan Coen. Thirty-three years have
passed since this keenly plotted tale of vengeful
husbands, cheating partners and corpse disposal
proclaimed a singular cinematic voice with two
brains. Indeed, the three-minute tighter
Directors’ Cut could easily be their latest release.
Not only does it contains most of their
hallmarks, it also defi ned the attitude that has
served the Coen brothers well since...
PREPARATION WAS EVERYTHING...
The Coens took a leaf out of the book of their
friend and sometime colleague Sam Raimi, who
had raised money for The Evil Dead, by going
door-to-door among the dentists and wealthy
middle-class of suburban Minneapolis. The Coens
did so lugging a projector and ersatz trailer they
had made over a weekend with cinematographer
Barry Sonnenfeld and his cousin Kenny. It took
a dispiriting year to land the money, their parents’
wealthy circle not easily swayed by talk of James
M. Cain, whose dark American crime thrillers
like The Postman Always Rings Twice and Double