A
Serious Man is the story of an ordinary man’s
search for clarity in a universe where Jefferson Airplane
is on the radio and F-Troop is on TV. It is 1967,
and Larry Gopnik (Tony Award nominee Michael Stuhlbarg),
a physics professor at a quiet Midwestern university,
has just been informed by his wife Judith (Sari Lennick)
that she is leaving him. She has fallen in love with
one of his more pompous acquaintances, Sy Ableman
(Fred Melamed), who seems to her a more substantial
person than the feckless Larry. Larry’s unemployable
brother Arthur (Richard Kind) is sleeping on the couch,
his son Danny (Aaron Wolff) is a discipline problem
and a shirker at Hebrew school, and his daughter Sarah
(Jessica McManus) is filching money from his wallet
in order to save up for a nose job.
While
his wife and Sy Ableman blithely make new domestic
arrangements, and his brother becomes more and more
of a burden, an anonymous hostile letter-writer is
trying to sabotage Larry’s chances for tenure
at the university. Also, a graduate student seems
to be trying to bribe him for a passing grade while
at the same time threatening to sue him for defamation.
Plus, the beautiful woman next door torments him by
sunbathing nude. Struggling for equilibrium, Larry
seeks advice from three different rabbis. Can anyone
help him cope with his afflictions and become a righteous
person – a mensch – a serious man?