The Parable of the Goy's Teeth
Posted: Wed Apr 04, 2018 7:49 pm
So I finally watched the Coen Brothers' movie A Serious Man last weekend, which aside from being a darkly hilarious re-working of the Book of Job, includes this parable that seems to perfectly encapsulate the school of Jewish theology to which I adhere.
To set the scene, Larry Gopnik is a physics professor leading an apparently innocuous and blameless life, when out of the blue his world begins falling apart: his problematic brother has moved in, his wife wants a divorce, he has been apparently set up to be blackmailed by a student, the tenure committee has been receiving libelous letters about him, and he's somehow in hock to the Columbia Record Club, among other tsuris visited upon him. He seeks pastoral guidance from his clergy in an effort to understand what God may be telling him, consulting here with Rabbi Nachtman:
A Serious Man is the most seriously funny movie I have seen in a very long time, and contains more than a little insight into the human condition.
To set the scene, Larry Gopnik is a physics professor leading an apparently innocuous and blameless life, when out of the blue his world begins falling apart: his problematic brother has moved in, his wife wants a divorce, he has been apparently set up to be blackmailed by a student, the tenure committee has been receiving libelous letters about him, and he's somehow in hock to the Columbia Record Club, among other tsuris visited upon him. He seeks pastoral guidance from his clergy in an effort to understand what God may be telling him, consulting here with Rabbi Nachtman:
A Serious Man is the most seriously funny movie I have seen in a very long time, and contains more than a little insight into the human condition.