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Barton Fink is a 1991 film by Joel and Ethan Coen. Arguably the brothers' most enigmatic film to date, it tells the story of Barton Fink (John Turturro), a young, intense and rather unlikeable writer of Social Realist plays in the early 1940s; his raison d'etre is to "create a theatre of the common man." Relocating from his native New York to Los Angeles to earn a quick buck as a contracted writer for a Hollywood studio, Fink is put to work scripting a B-picture about wrestling and, trapped twenty-four hours a day in his sweltering, claustrophobic hotel room, suffers a serious bout of writer's block.
The Coens claim the film was inspired by an attack of writer's block they suffered whilst working on the screenplay for Miller's Crossing. Barton Fink won the Palme D'Or at Cannes.
Barton Fink is an oddly-structured film with many sudden shifts in dramatic tone and nods to many genres, from film noir to pschycological drama to farce. The denouement, in which Charlie/Muntz sets fire to the hotel and guns down a pair of feds, is particularly (perhaps purposefully) jarring. However, the performances are universally excellent, it is beautifully staged and shot and one could never accuse the Coens of being boring or predictable. Critics have variously interperated the film as an examination of the creative act, a hollywood satire, a Joseph Campbell-like quest and even an allegory for the rise of Nazism. The Coen brothers themselves remain characteristically tight-lipped on the subject.

