No Country for Old Men (2007) - Trailer Included
December 17th 2007 00:01
Dusty Noir Enlightenment
Coming Soon: To be released on January 24th 2008
Special thanks to the wonderful people at Paramount Pictures for the invite to this advanced screening.
Written and Directed by: The Coen Brothers
Based on Novel by: Cormack McCarthy
Starring: Javier Bardem, Tommy Lee Jones, Josh Brolin, Kelly MacDonald, Garret Dillahunt, Woody Harrelson, Barry Corbin
The cinematically gifted storytellers known as the Coen Brothers return to their former glory with a lone-star meditation on declining cultural morality. Based on the original novel of the same name by Cormac McCarthy, No Country for Old Men is a deceptive and divinely engineered daylight Noir set against the backdrop of a modern day western.
It’s the story of 2 million dollars in a stolen briefcase from a drug deal gone bad. The welder on a hunting expedition (Josh Brolin) who finds it, the psychopathic hit-man (Javier Bardem) who ruthlessly tracks him and the seasoned Texas Sheriff Tommy Lee Jones who struggles to comprehend the maelstrom of violence and greed that represent contemporary times.
The film opens with the arrested maniac Anton Chigurh being put in the back of a police car on the barren country road under enigmatic but inferred gruesome circumstances. Cut to the station and in the foreground the arresting officer tells his tale on the phone. In the background the brutal killer frees his cuffed hands. In the blurring of a lens exploding with the chain linked strangulation of the deputy.
This begins a daisy chain of events that link 3 central characters. Llewelyn Moss flees with the cash. Anton is on a bloody rampage of violence. Sheriff Ed Tom Bell tries to make sense of it all.
John Doe Says:
Inventively scripted, beautifully shot with authentic characters, No Country for Old Men pulls you into its lariat spinning yarns with cunning wit. The action scenes are swift and gruesomely honest, calculatedly abrupt.
Writer/Directors Joel and Ethan Coen match the Miller’s Crossing, Man Who Wasn’t There and Blood Simple perfection here. Letting us soak in the daunting doom and tumbleweed dust bowl atmosphere emanating from each panel.
The disciplined pace allows the audience to contemplate the loaded dialogue that twangs with regional dialect. The modulated sound editing punctuates moments and manipulates the meaning of others.
Opulent in character, the script surprises and engages as it should. Carefully hiding the contemplative sub text within the husk of a slow burn thriller, it is the understanding of character and astonishing choices to omit key plot points that satisfies.
Every line and thespian gesture seems to carry metaphorical baggage to be chewed over like good tobbacy later. The performances are appropriately dense in silent strength and it’s refreshing that all three pivotal parts are penned with survivalist wisdom. These are no dummies, self aware and more importantly attuned to the repercussions of their actions. Be it murder, theft or investigation.
The malevolent Javier Bardem (Perdita Durango, Live Flesh, Sea Inside) doesn’t need words to frighten with this inherently violent being. Unstoppable, a whirl wind of carnage, the eyes so cold and calculating you can see his detached submission to barbaric tendencies. Graced with a spiritual body language the part of Anton is an instant nominee for any villainous hall of fame. The androgynous hair cut adding to the discomfort.
The ever reliable Tommy Lee Jones’ (Natural Born Killers, Heaven and Earth, Executioners Song, Three Burials) usual persona is given added dimension with the whimsical and prophetic lines of the role. Reminiscent of his own superb turn in Three Burials.
Ex Goonies member Josh Brolin (Flirting with Disaster, Dead Girl) breaths a sympathetic life into his man of few words and we understand his motives every step of the way. His audition tape for the part was shot by Robert Rodriguez and Directed by Quentin Tarantino.
Sexy Scottish imp Kelly MacDonald (Trainspotting) does a convincing Texan accent and as the wife of in over his head Llewelyn there is an innocent charm.
Totally worthy of being mentioned alongside the best of the Coen Brothers filmography, John Doe fell in love with this films look and tone almost instantly. The skilful storytelling and transcendental cinematography took JD to another geocentric universe and successfully dazzled and enriched.
Watch the trailer
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