No Country for Old Men

Miramax - Miramax

Release date: 2008-03-11
DVD
Director:Joel Coen
Actors: Javier Bardem, Rodger Boyce, Josh Brolin, Barry Corbin, Beth Grant

Adult Situations, Color, Crime Thriller, Drama, English, Feature, Feature Film-drama, Forceful, Graphic Violence, Gritty, High Artistic Quality, Hired Killers, Movie, Mystery / Suspense / Thriller, Ominous, One Against the Mob, Period Film, Profanity, Tense, Thriller


No Country for Old Men
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average reviews

2 votes
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No Country for Old Men

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I totally agree with all the other 1 star reviewers. A total waste of time! Sitting thru 2 hours of violence and then "bingo" - NO ENDING!
I should have known it was trash - after all it received the Academy Awards....
Enough said - don't waste YOUR time!

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No Country for Old Men

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PLOT:
A major drug deal gone wrong in the Texas desert goes further awry when the money is recovered by a veteran-cum-local-trailer-inhabitant. The local sheriff tries to restore equilibrium to their picturesque homeland, yet ultimately realises he can no longer maintain a patriarchal influence over his people and their fates.

REVIEW:
There is much to be praised in the Coen Brothers' second masterpiece, which is different but equal to Fargo (1996). There's the menacing but somehow profoundly moral bounty hunter, played ghoulishly but with a touch of humour by Javier Bardem; the flawless, effortless performance of Tommy Lee Jones as the sheriff; the incredible cinematography; and the overall poetry of the picture.

Yet the greatest achievement of No Country for Old Men is a spine-tingling, soul-destroying sequence in the middle of the film chronicling the events before and after local veteran Josh Brolin realises that the two million dollar suitcase he has recovered contains a tracking device. You could even ignore all other highlights and this sequence would still ensure the film's triumph.

ELEPHANT STAMPS:
The Coen Brothers for Directing.
Roger Deakins for Cinematography.
Tommy Lee Jones for Acting.
Javier Bardem for Acting.
Josh Brolin for Acting.

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No Country for Old Men

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Skimming through all of the other reviews, it appears that whether this movie is rated highly or not everyone agrees that it begins really strong but loses steam about 2/3 of the way through.

I enjoyed the film...but you can put me in that category as well.

The first half is some of the Coen Brothers' best filmmaking. The actors are particularly strong in their roles and the storytelling is lean and driven. Javier Bardem makes the movie, portraying the unstoppable "ghost" (not a literal one but something an old law man likens him to) always one step behind everyone...or ahead of them. Everyone else you get a good sense of, but this guy you'd like to see more of, like to try to understand more.

But the last section of the film isn't as tight and seamless as the first half. To open a story so well with so little exposition and dialogue, the filmmakers leave us with a unsensational downer ending that looks (sorry) sloppy and undeveloped.

Still, a great movie, but--in a weird way--like THE BIG LEBOWSKI: fascinating characters, excellent scenes, compellingly watchable...but uneven.

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20 comments

No Country for Old Men

2008-03-11 11:29

Really Nice Movie. Coen Brothers rocks.

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