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The Films That Shaped It

Burn After Reading

2008 · Joel Coen, Ethan Coen · United States

The Coen Brothers consciously designed Burn After Reading as a farcical, mean-spirited inversion of the taut, paranoid political thrillers that defined New Hollywood in the 1970s. The directors explicitly cited the self-serious espionage films of Alan J. Pakula, particularly The Parallax View and All the President's Men, as the architectural blueprint for their own narrative of monumental governmental ineptitude. They meticulously replicated the stark, institutional aesthetic and shadowy boardroom meetings of Three Days of the Condor, only to populate those spaces with gloriously idiotic, self-obsessed fitness instructors instead of sharp operatives. By hijacking the austere visual language of these conspiracy classics, the Coens transformed a genre of existential dread into a masterpiece of bleak American idiocy.

Films That Influenced Burn After Reading

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