No Country for Old Men - Don't Underestimate the Audience

2018 ж. 23 Там.
2 551 561 Рет қаралды

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No Country For Old Men is a film that challenges the audience in the best possible way. It never condescends and refuses to spell things out-instead compelling us to connect the dots and participate in the storytelling. This video examines some of the ways it achieves this.
Produced by: Michael Tucker ( / michaeltuckerla )
Written by: Brian Bitner ( / brianbitner )
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  • The lack of music score is also a very conscious and effective move in this film.

    @AslanW@AslanW5 жыл бұрын
    • Yes I always thought was interesting and unique that there's no music

      @trevorwinn5012@trevorwinn50124 жыл бұрын
    • I've seen this movie a hundred times and it never crossed my mind that it needs music, I didn't think about it until now it's almost like I didn't even notice the lack of music

      @donaldo141194@donaldo1411944 жыл бұрын
    • @@donaldo141194 It makes everything more intense, no suspense-music actually makes it more suspenseful. The Coen Brothers really know how to make it work to their advantage.

      @AslanW@AslanW4 жыл бұрын
    • I think it's effective because music tends to foreshadow too often. In real life there are rarely previews or foreshadowing. In my movies I don't want to know something is about to happen.

      @nreeldeep1@nreeldeep14 жыл бұрын
    • I never even noticed there was no OST... and I've seen this movie like 10 times.

      @aleckermit@aleckermit4 жыл бұрын
  • I've just noticed that all three men also sit in the same seat at one point, yet their paths all drastically diverge to various outcomes

    @radonstone@radonstone5 жыл бұрын
    • Mind telling me which seat

      @Deimos_the_Autist@Deimos_the_Autist4 жыл бұрын
    • @@Deimos_the_Autist he Sofa in the trailer home

      @radonstone@radonstone4 жыл бұрын
    • radonstone nice observation. Did all three drink milk?

      @allgrainbrewer10@allgrainbrewer104 жыл бұрын
    • nice catch. never thought of that

      @seen921@seen9214 жыл бұрын
    • Larry John - the milk is purely to affirm that Sugur was there, that he knew they were coming and that he would get him before they did. Because he sees it all coming, and he is amazed nobody else does. The predictability of humans is baffling to Sugur. He kind of wants them to smarten up *and catch him if at al possible... because he's not really sure he otherwise exists.* 2 cents.

      @j_freed@j_freed4 жыл бұрын
  • “No country for old men”and “there will be blood”..damn we were spoiled in 2007

    @justinhopper5941@justinhopper59414 жыл бұрын
    • Yep so true. I have seen both movies like 10 times each and i cannot decide which one of them is the best one. I think There Will Be Blood might be better by just a hair. Like 9.4 vs 9.3.

      @FabledGentleman@FabledGentleman4 жыл бұрын
    • I'd give almost anything to go back

      @jimmycakes7158@jimmycakes71584 жыл бұрын
    • @@ayushtripathi9463 well that makes sense cuz it's more fun than TWBB

      @clkgtr12@clkgtr124 жыл бұрын
    • Ayush Tripathi I have always thought that NCFOM was better written and directed but somehow There Will be Blood was the better movie

      @yandhi5016@yandhi50164 жыл бұрын
    • @@yandhi5016 well, it had DDL

      @casey7130@casey71304 жыл бұрын
  • The good guy asks for a jacket, and they sell it to him. The bad guy asks for a shirt, and the kid gives it up out of kindness.

    @richhenry7540@richhenry75404 жыл бұрын
    • The bad guy was wounded, the kids didn't know he was a bad guy, and the kids were offered money for the shirt, which they initially declined, but accepted only after the bad guy insisted. There is no ''the good guy gets screwed for being good'' in that particular case.

      @mbpm6135@mbpm61354 жыл бұрын
    • @@mbpm6135 Llewellyn: 500 bucks for that coat. Guy: Let me see the money. Chigurh: What do you take for the shirt? Teen: Well hell mister I'll give you my shirt. Its not a good guy gets screwed for being good statement. Sometimes people that get help dont deserve it. Cormac/Cohen brothers wrote it that way for a reason.

      @richhenry7540@richhenry75404 жыл бұрын
    • MB PM the good guy was even more wounded

      @itsd0nk@itsd0nk3 жыл бұрын
    • Adam Zahavi Exactly. They play with the narrative tropes of the protagonist and the audience’s expectation of what will happen to him. Moss could be seen ultimately as a reluctant “hero” but the fact is that he stumbled across money that didnt belong to him, he was smart enough to know where it came from and what would happen once “they” figured out what happened to it. He absolutely is a gray character but I never saw him as a hero in the classical sense. For some reason we root for him but only because we as the audience know what’s after him for taking the money. It’s always interesting and fresh to see characters that not only define the traditional “good” vs “bad”, but also to frame the morally ambiguous character as such. One of my favorite movies ever and to me the Cohen bros have never made a bad movie.

      @Pinko_Band@Pinko_Band3 жыл бұрын
    • That's why they don't use the words "good guy" and "bad guy" in movies. They use "protagonist" and "antagonist" instead

      @n.g.p1082@n.g.p10823 жыл бұрын
  • Tiny detail I just noticed: There's this recurring scene we see in action and suspense films nowadays where the protagonist is driving through an intersection and they get T-Boned, but you almost always see the car that hits them in the distance of the interior shot. The scene where Chigurgh gets T-Boned it comes from the opposite side, almost like the viewer is in his headspace, and we're just as oblivious to the other car as he is. Anyway, I just thought I'd point that out, even though it's a bit off topic.

    @Coleo20@Coleo205 жыл бұрын
    • Reminds me of the car crash in Adaptation.

      @MkeKen67@MkeKen675 жыл бұрын
    • Ken H Yes! Sudden, violent, and abrupt! And devastating

      @darling_danke_schoen@darling_danke_schoen5 жыл бұрын
    • Pretty much in any movie where someone is driving and it shows them at a certain angle, like a side shot, and I seen an intersection approaching, I always expect a car to hit them haha.

      @roundearthshill248@roundearthshill2485 жыл бұрын
    • Great observation.

      @crookedpaths6612@crookedpaths66125 жыл бұрын
    • Same, I just noticed that

      @tamaradimarco878@tamaradimarco8785 жыл бұрын
  • This movie was brilliant, it told you nothing, but gave you everything.

    @bricecate@bricecate4 жыл бұрын
    • Amen.

      @byrongammonbyrongammon9937@byrongammonbyrongammon99374 жыл бұрын
    • The movie is a load of crap. The Cohen brothers took an interesting story and made a slow moving thriller with a non climatic climax. All that build up of tension just to have the protagonist shown dead bleeding on the floor for 2 seconds. After that, the film just drags till the scene where sherriff Bell talks about some weird dream. Total waste of film and time...

      @rcrxjlb@rcrxjlb4 жыл бұрын
    • @@rcrxjlb Well, thats for taking the heat on that. I also found it dull as dishwater. It couldn't reallly decide whether to be a thriller, action movie, or 'neo' western. It was basically The Terminator plot with a more pessimistic ending. I LIKED that the protagonst got shot off screen, that was really the main inventive part, because thats what he 'deserved'. But in todays climate with what is going on at the border it reads pretty racist. Chigurgh before Trump could have passed symbolically as the drug trade, which just kills everybody, is beyond the law, and shows no mercy. Of course the idea of simply doing like alcohol and legalizing it never fits into the narrative. Woody Harrelson essentially only gets three scenes, for some reason he's a cocky killer despite going after a known psychopath and basically not looking behind him when he goes into a building. Lesson number one dude in contract kiler school, make goddam sure nobody came in the door behind you before going up stairs. And how many times does it need to be said, you can't make a fucking silencer that blocks the noise of a gun that much. But in todays world it almost reads as though he's the fear of mexican immigration-those mexicans, they just can't be reasoned with, can't be bargained with, etc.. Its pretty much racism for the elite hollywood crowd that doesn't want to be outright racist against mexicans. That was a different world even back then, even though things were pretty bad on the border, but that almost seems blatant today. But this was nowhere as good as Blood Simple and I really don't see what the fuss is about, unless people just like violence, which lots do in movies. Sometimes the Coens make great movies, sometimes good, and sometimes its "Hail Caesar", which was also a stinker-in my humble opinion of course, I'm well aware that thats a minority opinion, to each their own.

      @mikearchibald744@mikearchibald7444 жыл бұрын
    • @@rcrxjlb Amen brother, you nailed it.

      @michaelangelo8001@michaelangelo80014 жыл бұрын
    • @@rcrxjlb That's because 2+2 is too difficult for ya.

      @StefanVeenstra@StefanVeenstra4 жыл бұрын
  • I think there's another subtle aspect to the moral that most people missed in this film. Up until Moss' showdown with Chigurh, the villain is seen as almost immortal and essentially unstoppable. Moss is able to wound him and offer him his first true challenge, which feels emotionally appropriate because Moss is the protagonist. Then, when Moss is killed, Chigurh goes back to being unstoppable and terrifying again. Chigurh is a personification of evil itself, which none of us can survive without the aid of heroes or at least heroism; in Moss' absence, evil is free to move about and operate unimpeded and unchallenged. At the end of the film, when Chigurh is severely injured in a startling car accident and limps away with his bones sticking out, his future is now uncertain, and he is shown in a shocking turn to be much more vulnerable than we had thought. We are left to realize that the image of unconfrontable evil in our minds was always an illusion and an exaggeration; that even the most terrifying villain is ultimately powerless against the forces of entropy which rule the universe. He may be stronger or more fearsome than we are, but to a careless moment at a stop sign, he's just another accident victim. At the very moment of the film when the sheriff is explaining his choice to resign, certain that he cannot contend with the changing times, the thing he feared the most is shown broken and defeated. So to me, the real moral of the film is that nothing - not even the devil himself - is immune to the winds of change. There was never a "good old days"; only ever a relentless march of time, which consumes everything in its path. The sheriff, at this point, ceases to become a character, and joins the viewer in offering interpretations of the film we have just seen. And in failing to understand the fragility of all things - even evil - the sheriff's interpretation of the film, and indeed his whole assessment of his world, is shown to be tragically incorrect.

    @iamtheiconoclast3@iamtheiconoclast34 жыл бұрын
    • Ugh. Reading that was painful. Brought me back to mountains of bullshit from high school and college. There is no "real moral of the film."

      @nunliski@nunliski4 жыл бұрын
    • @@nunliski He specifically said "to me". And maybe there is a real moral. The one that autor had in mind while writing the story, but it doesn't mean that your interpretation is wrong, or another person's interpretation is wrong. There can be as many interpretations as many there are members of the audience, my teacher used to say. If you were forced to interpret things in a certain, "true" way in your school, then you had shitty teachers. If you can back up your understanding of the movie by some facts from it and it makes logical sense, then your interpretation is by all means true.

      @Gargulec184@Gargulec1844 жыл бұрын
    • Chigurh has become an old man, cause he was confronted and worn down by Moss, his wife, who refused to play his game, and the kids who distracted him.

      @ferise1@ferise14 жыл бұрын
    • In the "good old days" the sheriff's didn't wear a gun. But they were also shot in the gut at sunrise by a band of Indians and took all day to die while the wife watched over him. In the book, teachers said gum chewing was their major discipline problem back in 1960, but now it's rape, drugs, violence. He says it's because parents don't raise children, grandparents do, and politeness is the first bulwark of civilization. But Bonnie and Clyde in the 30's, Al Capone, hell, the Civil War before that; "this country is hard on people," as the old man says. I think Chigurrh getting hit by the car is that there HAS to be some sort of a universal balance. He got away with it, he killed Carla Jean because of a promise, and he had to balance the scales. Did you like "The Counselor," the movie? Cormac McCarthy wrote the script when he was in his 80's, and critics panned it saying it was too focused on death and morbidity. I think that was unfair. A deep man at the end of his life, with an archive of dark themed stories, we should listen to what he has to say, maybe he has a perspective we don't. At least it was original.

      @drmayne@drmayne4 жыл бұрын
    • Dennis Mayne no, Chigurh is becoming an old man. It’s time for him to go. He met Moss, who managed to shoot him, Carla, who’s even younger, and refused to play his game, saying « it’s just you », and then the kids on bikes distracted him and he had the accident. Clock’s ticking, wheel is turning, he’s becoming old and it’s time for him to go.

      @ferise1@ferise14 жыл бұрын
  • While it's a great movie I feel like Cormac Mcarthy deserves a lot of credit. Not only for the story he created, but his writing style translates into film extremely well.

    @Hatecrewdethrol@Hatecrewdethrol4 жыл бұрын
    • McCarthy should be credited for his story , not the film. He wrote an awesome novel of words on paper. He deserves no credit for bringing that story to audio and visual excellence.

      @brianfabre8413@brianfabre84134 жыл бұрын
    • Brian Fabre but McCarthy originally wrote NCFOM as a screenplay, then as a novel. The Coen brothers are brilliant, but many of the film’s notes this video praises are just as much to Cormac McCarthy’s novel as they are to the Coens. Especially the little instances that show the audience who Moss, Chigurh, and Bell are. Those aren’t invented moments by the Coens, they are in the novel as well. It might be the most faithful adaptation ever. The Coen brothers, the best filmmakers in the business, deserve a huge amount of credit for making an exceptional film. But a lot of what they did was not change what Cormac McCarthy wrote, and merely convert that brilliance from the pages to the screen.

      @ElCrab@ElCrab4 жыл бұрын
    • @@mikearchibald744 i agree ,read the book after seeing the movie and was amazed how it was exactly as written in the book

      @treborsirrah7916@treborsirrah79164 жыл бұрын
    • I haven't read any of his books, but I disagree with his writing style translating into film extremely well, purely from having watched The Counselor. (Cormac McCarthy actually wrote the screenplay, while Ridley Scott directed the film.)

      @CornyBum@CornyBum4 жыл бұрын
    • @@CornyBum I got my info from the writers directly, they said one brother read aloud, while the other brother wrote the screenplay from it. I haven't actually read the book, didn't like the movie that much, I enjoyed this TALKING about the movie MUCH more than the movie itself.

      @mikearchibald744@mikearchibald7444 жыл бұрын
  • One of the reasons I love shows like Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul is that quite often they just show a character doing something and force the audience to figure it out. It's a really engaging and I wish more shows and movies did similar instead of spoon-feeding exposition.

    @Fangtorn@Fangtorn5 жыл бұрын
    • Oh yes. The writers seem to have perfected this technique in Better Call Saul. Those scenes are some of the best I've ever seen.

      @VigneshKrishnamurthy2509@VigneshKrishnamurthy25095 жыл бұрын
    • You can even notice Walter adopting or learning some of the mannerisms of his enemies as well, like folding a towel on the floor before vomiting (Gus Fring does it).

      @MrSottho@MrSottho5 жыл бұрын
    • Another show that does this exceptionally well is The Americans.

      @stacetheface47@stacetheface475 жыл бұрын
    • I adore details like this. Like you said, it's more engaging, and I think we really need more of it.

      @elleruach2301@elleruach23015 жыл бұрын
    • Absolutely. I don't know why the directing doesn't get as much praise as the writing. Every time you hear someone talk about those shows it's always "Oh the writing's so good, it's masterful writing" blah, blah, blah. And the writing's good... Most of the time but it's the directing that always impressed me the most in the show. Ever since Walter pieced together the pieces of plate he dropped in episode 3 was when I knew the show was something special. There's no inner monologue saying "I'm missing a piece of plate oh nooooooooo!!!" Instead it lets you literally put the pieces together when you remember him dropping it right in front of Crazy 8 earlier and what it means to Walt's moral dilemma.

      @EldritchAugur@EldritchAugur5 жыл бұрын
  • I always thought this film was overrated. This makes me realize, I'm just an idiot....and not competent enough to be able to understand fantastic filmmaking. Well done.

    @markkeady1732@markkeady17325 жыл бұрын
    • Lol

      @arza0932@arza09324 жыл бұрын
    • I still don’t enjoy this film at all. Its ok to think it’s overrated.

      @decimalexercise7154@decimalexercise71544 жыл бұрын
    • The first time I watched No Country, I didn't get it but something about it held on to me. After additional viewings, I began the understand it more: at it's core, it is a classic film noir from the 1940s. This film made me go back and rewatch many Coen brothers films, and it became clear that noir is a thing with them (especially Big Lebowski of all films). I guess the best a movie can do for you is grab hold of you, even if you can't quantify it. I rarely believe people when they say they completely get a story right away, that likely means they're watching Paul Blartt: Mall Cop.

      @TJ_Mc@TJ_Mc4 жыл бұрын
    • A lot of the time lessons found in movies are unintended. It doesn't mean they aren't there. I know that there is quite a lot of metaphors seen in fiction, and really other forms of art too, that are the creation of the audience.

      @mikewalters3048@mikewalters30484 жыл бұрын
    • @@decimalexercise7154 Yes it was such a huge deal in the late 2000s and it was good but I have pretty much totally forgotten it.

      @newdamage5945@newdamage59454 жыл бұрын
  • _"It's your lucky quarter. Don't put it in your pocket sir. Or it'll get mixed in with all the others, and become just a coin..... Which it is."_ There's some very calming substance in the strangely illogical mind of Anton Chigurh. The best screen villain since The Terminator.

    @lonestar6709@lonestar67094 жыл бұрын
    • It`s not illogical, its the True meaning. We don't know how lucky we are until that luck is mixed with the mundane history of our lifes. That's why so many times "the true love" only reveal himself after we can no longer have it, like a lucky coin mixed it's just a past experience now, of great importance in our minds but meaningless at the same time. It's the abyss of time and loss, it's deep and disturbing.

      @hernanuliana9111@hernanuliana91114 жыл бұрын
    • Deep, the meaning of the coin is assigned by the current owner..... as Sheriff Bell is assigning meaning to his life ( quit and live, fight and die)….. as Llewelyn is assigning meaning to his life ( low enough to risk it for money) ….. as Chigurh is assigning meaning to his life (only worth living if he achieves his goals)

      @whatsup3270@whatsup32703 жыл бұрын
    • Oddly I recently found an old 1967 quarter in my change, a few months after watching this film. and because of this film, I put it on my desk where its been for years.I was only 8 years old in 67' but I did not want to mix it with my other change where it would have just been another coin....which it is.

      @johnkonstantine9115@johnkonstantine91152 жыл бұрын
  • One of my top 5 movies. I watch it every few months. One of my favorite parts, which I haven't seen other people mention in the comments is when Anton is talking to the lady filing her nails at the trailer court. She literally stands up to, and stares down one of most evil, pathological movie killers of all time. He's thinking of killing her for standing up to him and not yielding to his will, then he hears a toilet flush in another room and knows she's not alone. He decides she isn't worth the bother. Little did she know who she was playing mind games with, and what could have happened except for a toilet flush. Love it!

    @4stringmanagmaildcom@4stringmanagmaildcom3 жыл бұрын
    • whats the other top 5 may i ask?

      @tomte6846@tomte68463 жыл бұрын
    • "@@tomte6846 3 weeks ago whats the other top 5 may i ask?" If No Country... is one of the Captn`s top five as he states, then they`d be four left, not five. Let me guess, Apocalypse Now; One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest; The Good, The Bad And The Ugly; Reservoir Of Dogs?

      @rattusnorvegicus4380@rattusnorvegicus43803 жыл бұрын
    • @@rattusnorvegicus4380 nah it's more like Shrek, Shrek 2, Shrek 3 and Shrek 4

      @kokomelon6375@kokomelon63753 жыл бұрын
    • @@kokomelon6375 Objective fact.

      @Wired4Life2@Wired4Life23 жыл бұрын
    • @@tomte6846 memento, the dark knight, blood diamond, oldboy

      @RaviGupta-pm4wb@RaviGupta-pm4wb2 жыл бұрын
  • *3:27**-**3:41* The way that entire scene played out was the most disturbing scene in a movie that I've ever seen. The way the victim stays so calm and trustworthy because he assumes it's a police officer. So much so that he even lets him put that "kill piece" right up to his forehead. Which I assume is exactly how it would play out in real life because people are programmed to think "He's a cop, he won't hurt me." A really genius scene all around.

    @Brandon-rq3ys@Brandon-rq3ys5 жыл бұрын
    • The driver was an unassuming, passive cow, killed by a weapon designed for him.

      @sequoyahcisneros8719@sequoyahcisneros87195 жыл бұрын
    • sorry, but if that's the most disturbing scene you've ever seen, than you haven't seen anything yet.

      @fozza1051@fozza10514 жыл бұрын
    • Fozza doesn’t need to be gory to be disturbing! Big difference.

      @jacksonmuralt5604@jacksonmuralt56044 жыл бұрын
    • ha! no. not everybody will act that way. some of us don't trust cops

      @moustik31@moustik314 жыл бұрын
    • AlphaDeltaXray Hahaha... watch the movie “Bone Tomahawk” if you want to see a disturbing scene.....

      @odin6667@odin66674 жыл бұрын
  • I remember when my girl friend told me this movie is boring. I pulled a coin outta my pocket and told her to call it. What happened next was up to chance...

    @Thehintercast@Thehintercast5 жыл бұрын
    • Or maybe you made your own luck like Harvey Dent

      @joshuahayles3219@joshuahayles32195 жыл бұрын
    • you got there the same way the coin did...

      @JamesBachmannFilms@JamesBachmannFilms5 жыл бұрын
    • James Bachmann Yer damn right I did

      @Thehintercast@Thehintercast5 жыл бұрын
    • I hope your shoes are clean.

      @xtushar100x@xtushar100x5 жыл бұрын
    • The movie isn't boring....girls are boring.

      @steveshap6219@steveshap62195 жыл бұрын
  • I found this film an edge-of-your-seat experience. One of the best, scariest villains ever.

    @ellenspear50@ellenspear504 жыл бұрын
    • i think its because he doesnt act like your conventional villain. The movie doesnt rant and rave about how badass he is or show him pull off unbelievable tricks like shooting the wings off a fly at 50 paces while blindfolded or bench pressing a humvee. Instead he is what's sometimes referred to as "dangerously intelligent" and "brutally effective", he uses pretty understandable tactics like shooting people through doors and using the pnumetic tool to silently kill. Having a credible, dangerous man with understandable goals is much scarier than having Jason Vorhees/Michael Meyers style unstoppable, unbeatable psychopath who kills for no other reason than he's really into stabbing people.

      @arthas640@arthas6404 жыл бұрын
    • What's incredible is that Javier Bardem was later cast as a Bond villain was wasn't scary at all. Creepy, yes. Scary, no. They should have just made Anton Chigurh the villain of Skyfall.

      @---cr8nw@---cr8nw4 жыл бұрын
    • @@---cr8nw Well, different character and different scripts, also very different Directors.

      @giodc8599@giodc85994 жыл бұрын
  • I remember reading the novel and getting to the part that said the protagonist's body was found, and he wasn't even killed by the main antagonist. I re-read that part at least 5 times thinking there was some kind of misprint.

    @stevendog40@stevendog402 жыл бұрын
  • The book explains why he was arrested to begin with. He snapped a guys kneck or choked him to death (doesnt specify) in an altercation outside of a diner of bar. They arrested him hours later. He said he allowed himself to get arrested to see if he could escape from the situation.

    @richhenry7540@richhenry75405 жыл бұрын
    • Yes, Anton tells, I think Wells about it. There was some guys at a diner and one of them told shit to Anton. The last insult was the draw for Anton. He waited for the guy outside the diner and killed him. And that is how Anton got arrested.

      @princessofnada87j25@princessofnada87j255 жыл бұрын
  • Best 2+2 moment: Accountant: "You going to shoot me?" Chigurh: "Do you see me?"

    @B1G_Dave@B1G_Dave5 жыл бұрын
    • I don't get it, don't have enough IQ to put 2 and 2 this time :(

      @StRanGerManY@StRanGerManY4 жыл бұрын
    • @@StRanGerManY his response is obvious to us he said no otherwise if he "sees him" he would be dead

      @marcossoni8198@marcossoni81984 жыл бұрын
    • @@marcossoni8198 well, when people got a vitness to their crime, they say "you didn't see me", in the past tense. So its a bit confusing that he formulated it a bit differently, in the present tense. So, you think he spared him? I just find it highly unlikely that a professional killed would leave a witness like that

      @StRanGerManY@StRanGerManY4 жыл бұрын
    • @@StRanGerManY I think he killed him. It was like an understated question. eg: "Are you going to kill me?" "Does a Bear shit in the woods?" That sort of thing. You've seen me, therefore you are a dead man.

      @TheDulcifer@TheDulcifer4 жыл бұрын
    • @@TheDulcifer ohhh, this makes a lot sense! Thanks, now I can sleep in peace.

      @StRanGerManY@StRanGerManY4 жыл бұрын
  • Teens were innocent at first...they acted according to their gut feelings and offered help without expecting anything in return, but when they were offered money and they took it the two of them became separated and began to argue about the way it should be divided. This holds a significant meaning in the movie. The ways in which humanity can be shattered with the arrival of greediness and complete silence of the universe to our ideals of right and wrong.

    @giniwelle@giniwelle3 жыл бұрын
    • That's probably the main reason for the entire scene!! It seems just a moment of normality but it's deep. . Why do they even have this crash scene, which is unlikely at best? A small town, a green light... come on that's just not believable. Why bother. . I didn't know why until reading your comment. Surely it is to remind us that we're not so different from Llewelyn or the kids (or Chigurh even), we'd take the gold -- or at least we would argue about it with our brother. We are happy to imagine ourselves as these two kids, but then we subconsciously admit we're liable. . Cain and Abel, dinner's ready! Stop fighting you two!

      @nmarbletoe8210@nmarbletoe82103 жыл бұрын
    • @@nmarbletoe8210 sorry it took long time to reply. Yes. This is such a unique movie which reminds us the state of humanity is not a thing that can be explored through heros and villains. Innocence and guilt stand face to face in a dry barren land to identify one another. Everything is so random and vague. Guilty man loses his excuse of insanity to justify his crimes and innocent man loses his excuse of innocence to justify his existence. In the end only things that remain in that deserted place are death, pain and incompetence. This and American beauty hold a special place in my heart.

      @giniwelle@giniwelle3 жыл бұрын
    • man, so many like u in the comment section have these beautiful interpretations to tell. i am just amazed. wish i had that level of understanding.

      @bhagyashrigaikwad4679@bhagyashrigaikwad46793 жыл бұрын
    • @@bhagyashrigaikwad4679 🙂

      @giniwelle@giniwelle3 жыл бұрын
    • So it struck me: Chigurh absorbed a little of their innocence and generosity, and left them with a tiny seed of his evil. I note that with that compound fracture, which Chigurh could in no way have set unaided, his end was near. Death, crippling, or capture were his alternatives.

      @reymohammed7040@reymohammed70402 жыл бұрын
  • The off screen death is to make the viewer FEEL how sheriff bell feels when he finds Luwellyn dead. Absolutely brilliant story telling.

    @Avucs@Avucs2 жыл бұрын
    • I love this movie but I don't know if it worked. Everyone I talked to after seeing this movie was mostly just confused about how Luwellyn died and thought they missed something

      @mooseclamps@mooseclamps Жыл бұрын
    • The book does the same thing. Never had a single page play out Moss’s death.

      @kevinc8955@kevinc8955 Жыл бұрын
    • Who killed him then? I am more confused than ever now

      @swansong007@swansong0078 ай бұрын
    • @@swansong007cartel members

      @3n3j0t4@3n3j0t47 ай бұрын
    • It is spelled Llewelyn. It is Welsh. I cant even begin to explain how you really pronounce this in Welsh. In the movie Carla Jean says it like lou ellen. Llewellyn was the last king of Wales effectively.

      @nospoon4799@nospoon47997 ай бұрын
  • I was in denial regarding Carla Jean's death. Thank you for breaking my heart.

    @carlosyaya2890@carlosyaya28905 жыл бұрын
  • My favorite thing about No Country for Old Men is how it reinvents the Indestructible Evil trope. Anton Chigur is an antagonist in the same vein as the Predator, Jason Vorhees, or the T-1000. Seemingly motivated only by the tracking, hunting, and killing of their quarry. However Anton posses no traits of the supernatural, he's a flesh and blood human being like every other character in the story, what's unsettling and alien about him is his warped morality. Betting a mans life on a coin toss, blowing up a car so he can steal from a pharmacy, insisting on paying a young man for his shirt so he can make a sling for his broken arm. Anton is far from invincible, he's injured and nearly killed multiple times throughout the movie, but his survival is what begs a deeper and more profound question. Anton believes himself to be an agent of fate, that he is simply an embodiment of chances unbiased effect on reality, a cold unfeeling universe that is mechanics driven not emotion driven. Thing is, he survives everything that the film throws at him, he walks away while the protagonist lies in a morgue. So is he right? Is he an Indestructible Evil not in the sense he cannot be harmed, but in the sense that what he does is sanctioned by fate itself, thus granting him impunity?

    @tychoazrephet3794@tychoazrephet37945 жыл бұрын
    • Scott Barnard stealing money from a cartel (id assume) is considered immoral? I wouldn’t think so

      @qperci80@qperci805 жыл бұрын
    • I think the car wreck was him being put back into his place by whatever force he followed. Giving llewelyns wife the chance for a coin toss remission was not his choice to make. Her fate had already been sealed by llewellyn when he refused to come to an arrangement over the phone.

      @viciousKev@viciousKev5 жыл бұрын
    • He's also very patient. That made it very intense in the scenes where he's conversing with another character because I keep expecting him to blow up and kill the guy out of rage or yell at the kid for not taking the money, but he doesn't. I don't think he ever got angry or at least he didn't express it. He's indestructible in that sense.

      @beavisraspeartain6042@beavisraspeartain60425 жыл бұрын
    • Why is everyone smarter than me

      @bb2fiddler@bb2fiddler5 жыл бұрын
    • That's a really good point. I always thought the leg self-surgery scene was supposed to recall the Terminator as well, and the shotgun showdown between Lewellyn and Chigurh is reminiscent of the shotgun introduction Kyle Reese and the Terminator had, at least the 12 gauge and 00-Buck part.

      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017@stopthephilosophicalzombie90175 жыл бұрын
  • “- Carla Jean Moss: I ain't got the money. What little I had is long gone, and there's bills aplenty to pay yet. I buried my mother today. Can't pay for that neither. - Anton Chigurh: I wouldn't worry about it. - Carla Jean Moss: I need to sit down.”

    @jnava121@jnava1214 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, that dialog is more terryfing than any horror movie, and the resolution is hearthbreaking and brilliant. This inocent woman caught in the middle of a relentless battle and no "hero movie" move to save her. We sincerely hope not, but inside we know his fate is sealed when Chigur appear in her house.

      @hernanuliana9111@hernanuliana91114 жыл бұрын
    • This dialogue also demonstrates Carla Jean as the moral center of the film. She was loyal, responsible and caring. In the end, she was courageous, and refused to escape her fate unlike her husband and the Sheriff.

      @shanonsnyder9450@shanonsnyder94503 жыл бұрын
    • @@hernanuliana9111 And upon re-watches, we know Carla Jean's fate is sealed once Llewellyn chooses the money over her via that phone call with Anton.

      @Wired4Life2@Wired4Life23 жыл бұрын
    • @@shanonsnyder9450 her husband really put her life on a time clock when he took that money...so another thing that’s obvious Is If we let our greed get ahold of us we are bound for trouble.

      @zamasu9396@zamasu93963 жыл бұрын
  • The sets, the cinematography, the story, the acting, the dialogue. "No Country For Old Men" is a masterpiece. My favorite movie of all time.

    @dangrimes9547@dangrimes95472 жыл бұрын
  • I never noticed that curtain that was parted before. Thanks for that. I saw this movie in an early screening before its theatrical release. The earlier cut never showed Moss gunned down. So the rest of the movie I was left thinking “what happened to Moss?” I think this was a callback to the book, as the sheriffs talk about Moss being killed, but there’s no payoff/showdown. I think that the Coen bros. had to give the audience the “equals 4” (Moss dead on screen) answer cause we were so invested with him. We needed a confirmation. One of my favorite movies. Great vid, Michael. :)

    @genericsavings@genericsavings5 жыл бұрын
    • I also never noticed the curtain, or the lack of soundtrack. And I watched this movie like 5 times! Good breakdown

      @adamchimowicz3603@adamchimowicz36034 жыл бұрын
  • One of my favorite films of all time! Thanks for this

    @Paint@Paint5 жыл бұрын
    • Paint really love the film, never liked the ending. I thought it would have been cool if tommy lee jones killed or got killed by the nut

      @tommymc7535@tommymc75355 жыл бұрын
    • +Tommy Mc-- the movie didn't end like that for a reason. Same reason there was no time given to Llewellyn's death. You kind of missed the point of the entire film if you wanted more action and death. That said i'm not trying to attack or dismiss you. But this isn't a gun-toting action thriller. It's more of a pensive, existential drama about the age old battle with the perfect amount of thrilling action thrown in.

      @gabelogan56@gabelogan565 жыл бұрын
    • One of the goats in cinema for sure

      @seth131@seth1315 жыл бұрын
    • Bad editing

      @withrowcurtis@withrowcurtis5 жыл бұрын
    • Dead guy in motel opens his eyes and blinks like wtf

      @withrowcurtis@withrowcurtis5 жыл бұрын
  • What I like about these videos is that they explain explicitly what I think is going on in your subconscious mind when you realize you are watching a really well made film. Maybe you can't put it into words, but you just know it. It's like code running in the background, rules that are allowing the whole thing to work invisibly and work well.

    @InterstitialistRecords@InterstitialistRecords4 жыл бұрын
  • This film was flawlessly cast. Especially reading the book after the fact. I believe that the Coens captured McCarthy's vision better than any other film makers ever have.

    @jacknear2488@jacknear2488 Жыл бұрын
  • I honestly have no attention span anymore. I cannot sit through a movie at all without constantly wanting to mess with my phone. I pretty much only watch KZhead videos about movies instead of actual movies. But that No Country For Old Men, even with zero soundtrack, is one of the most engaging - real, gritty - films I have ever seen. Masterpiece.

    @realizedvisions@realizedvisions5 жыл бұрын
  • I wish we get more mysterious villains like Anton chigurh nowadays. We don't need backstories for villains to be great. The Joker and Hannibal lector are other examples

    @amanms1999@amanms19995 жыл бұрын
    • Lorne Malvo from the first season of the series Fargo is a very similar sort of villain, an agent of chaos

      @MasonMcLeodFilms@MasonMcLeodFilms5 жыл бұрын
    • What do you people think about Darth Vader ? Was he a better villain before his backstory ?

      @jaherra2567@jaherra25675 жыл бұрын
    • Vader was great before but the prequels despite all their problems really added some more depth to his character. But most of it especially hayden's acting and the childhood (which was unnecessary) was executed Very poorly

      @amanms1999@amanms19995 жыл бұрын
    • @Rexvan Podung I like the full story of Vader but yeah the way it was made didn't impress me

      @jaherra2567@jaherra25675 жыл бұрын
    • @@amanms1999 Yes i agree the acting was bad and almost everything else in those 3 movies were bad except for the story. The 3rd one was the best.

      @jaherra2567@jaherra25675 жыл бұрын
  • I’ve read McCarthy’s works, and if there’s one thing that can be said about his books, it’s that they’re extremely light on dialogue. I would say the average book contains about 80% prose, characters silently interacting with the world around them, and the choices and consequences that befall them. The other 20% is dedicated to dialogue. McCarthy is deliberate in his writing. He never once holds your hand, or makes you feel like an idiot. There’s no spoon feeding in any of his books. He gives you just enough information, and expects you to piece the rest together from the clues provided.

    @VideoGameAutopsy@VideoGameAutopsy3 жыл бұрын
    • Yes. I remember that from Blood Meridian.

      @JackM12345100@JackM123451003 жыл бұрын
    • That doesn't sound right for "No Country for Old Men". I've just looked at the paperback . . . and randomly found multiple instances where 2 consecutive pages have 80% dialogue.

      @QED_@QED_3 жыл бұрын
    • It took some time for me to get use to his rejection of punctuation. No Country was the first McCarthy book I read; largely because I saw the film was to come out. So, thank you Coen Bros for introducing me to a great writer. Now I've read The Orchard Keeper, The Road, Blood Meridian, Suttree, and Child of God. All equally raw. Do not attempt if already depressed.

      @charlesadams4773@charlesadams47732 жыл бұрын
  • This 2+2 technique is heavily used in BrBa and Better call Saul

    @xkdjdnskdnscndjdj984@xkdjdnskdnscndjdj984 Жыл бұрын
    • And the very first episode of BCS is one of the best examples of this

      @devilbob@devilbob Жыл бұрын
  • I had to do a thesis on this film in a class. I watched it so much to complete the paper I got sick of it and haven't picked it up in over 5 years. This video might have brought it back for me. Thank you.

    @samwroblewski748@samwroblewski7485 жыл бұрын
    • Wary Trout you’re not funny

      @ejromm@ejromm5 жыл бұрын
  • The moral of the story is that there is no moral to the story. That is a hard reality to come to terms with. 'I feel over-matched. ' In the words of Cormac McCarthy, author of the book, "Your heart's desire is to be told some mystery. The mystery is that there is no mystery.”

    @JiveDadson@JiveDadson5 жыл бұрын
    • The reason there's "no moral" to the story is that the most powerful character in the movie is amoral. This gives us the actual moral of the movie - Don't let amoral monsters have power. Most of the characters in the movie are spiritually dead or defeated, masquerading as "humble folk". Humble folk are outmatched by monsters.

      @briankoontz1@briankoontz15 жыл бұрын
    • Blood Meridian. What a phenomenal piece of work.

      @INFEDnoX@INFEDnoX5 жыл бұрын
    • I dont think so. Actually what really strikes me on this movie how much are sheriff Bell and Anton Chigurh similar. They are both honorable people in the old fashioned way. For example Chigurh once he recovers money, doest even think about taking them and escaping. Or he kills Llewelyn´s girlfriend for one and simple reason only - because he promised that to Llewelyn. Both of them are men of their words and principles, but as a added feature Anton Chigurh kills people.

      @AB8511@AB85115 жыл бұрын
    • I disagree. The theme of the movie, to me, seems to be the unavoidable fate coming to you. Everyone in the movie/book seems to know exactly what's coming to them before it gets there and Chigur represents something inescapable. That's just my take on it anyways! Maybe not so much a moral but a theme

      @baphyyy7898@baphyyy78985 жыл бұрын
    • Meridian is a book that begs to be an epic film. Read it several times...@@INFEDnoX

      @zanichbug@zanichbug5 жыл бұрын
  • "Sheriff Bell, the only central character to actually change during the film." Which would make him the protagonist.

    @somethingnew3517@somethingnew35174 жыл бұрын
    • He actually is, indeed. He is US trying to make sense of all that has happened.

      @giodc8599@giodc85994 жыл бұрын
    • @@giodc8599 that makes 2000 pounds of sense

      @nmarbletoe8210@nmarbletoe82103 жыл бұрын
    • The plot was hidden before you, all along. The story is about Sheriff Bell accepting the reality of life and his insignificance.....

      @whatsup3270@whatsup32703 жыл бұрын
    • Whose OLD in three of them ? Sheriff. What's title of the film ?

      @Sirrajj@Sirrajj3 жыл бұрын
    • @@Sirrajj Sheriff Bell and the other sheriff he has coffee with after Llewelyn is killed. The country is too rough for all the old law man. Remember the opening where he speaks of sheriffs who didn't carry a gun, now it is machine guns and air actuated bullets. It has become "No Country for Old (law)Men"

      @whatsup3270@whatsup32703 жыл бұрын
  • This movie is like the Pink Floyd of movies. Nothing over-technical, but perfect in pace and execution...hidden meanings that still arise. The simplicity of the hidden complexity is why I still watch it.

    @BasilHayden@BasilHayden Жыл бұрын
  • It never hit me until just now that Breaking Bad does this too.

    @jesseorange412@jesseorange4125 жыл бұрын
    • I think Rachel means letting the audience add 2+2

      @TheAmericanpyro@TheAmericanpyro5 жыл бұрын
    • @@TheAmericanpyro Yes, that's what I meant 😅

      @jesseorange412@jesseorange4125 жыл бұрын
    • Yes! Better Call Saul has like 20 minute scenes with no dialogue that make the audience work very hard to put 2 + 2 together.

      @DalanaDailey@DalanaDailey5 жыл бұрын
    • I love the name Saul Goodman (S'all good, man.) Saul was St. Paul's name before he hallucinated Jesus. Maybe I'll change my name to Saul.

      @JiveDadson@JiveDadson5 жыл бұрын
    • @@JiveDadson fuck i didn't notice that about his name

      @jaherra2567@jaherra25675 жыл бұрын
  • The murder of Carla Jean makes me sad every time.

    @drunkenmasterii3250@drunkenmasterii32505 жыл бұрын
    • For what? Name one sin she committed. She just did as she was told to, blindly. She was just another in the long list of Chigurh's "code".

      @johnhall5129@johnhall51295 жыл бұрын
    • John Hall she didnt try stop his husband. But then again she always said it herself: his husband does it like he does. He wouldn’t listen to her. She really died for knowing nothing would work the way she wants and not fighting against the nature of things

      @kioskclerk@kioskclerk5 жыл бұрын
    • By that line of logic I suppose the two good Samaritans who stopped to help Chigurh were to blame for their own deaths because they didn't trust their instincts enough, huh?

      @johnhall5129@johnhall51295 жыл бұрын
    • @@johnhall5129 She let her mother come with her. Moss denied to that, which in turn ended up revealing his location which led to his death. Since Moss never willingly gave Anton his money he went there to kill her.

      @manavkumar9182@manavkumar91825 жыл бұрын
    • Prove that he killed her. We don't know from the film. Him checking his boots after walking through the entire house proves nothing. He methodically lifts his boots to avoid the blood from killing Carson Wells.

      @brianfabre8413@brianfabre84134 жыл бұрын
  • One of the greatest films ever made. And one of the few instances of a film adaptation surpassing the source material. And this is coming from a huge Cormac McCarthy fan. The Coens trimmed all of the fat, tightened the story and put laser focus on characters and motivations. A true modern masterpiece.

    @Lady_Vengeance@Lady_Vengeance4 жыл бұрын
    • @Lady Vengeance: Sorry, but you've gone too far. I agree that it's a great movie. And that it's a great novel. But there's no "fat" in the book. It's arguably one of the least fat major novels of all time. What the Coens actually "trimmed" was a significant characterization sub-plot: the hitchhiking girl. So the experience of the movie . . . and of the novel . . . turn out to be different. One is not better enough than the other . . . to be worth pointing out.

      @QED_@QED_3 жыл бұрын
    • QED The hitchhiking girl subplot was unnecessary and frankly I found it out of character for Llewelyn to behave the way he does in with her in the book. Not to mention the hotel sequence is much tighter in the film. And finally, most importantly, the Coens made a major change to the source material that I find more impactful than the source novel. When Anton confronts Carla Jean at the end of the film, she refuses to call the coin toss. She forces Anton to make the decision. In the book she initially resists but ultimately calls the toss and loses. The Coens’ interpretation is far more powerful. The book and the film are masterpieces of their respective media. But a case can at least be made that the Coens improved on the source material. And that is more than can be said for most adaptations.

      @Lady_Vengeance@Lady_Vengeance3 жыл бұрын
    • @@Lady_Vengeance My opinion: Llewelyn's behavior with the girl is a brilliantly scripted microcosm of his character. But I concede that this may be a "guy thing". So you might want to explore it further with male friends of yours. Regards . . .

      @QED_@QED_3 жыл бұрын
    • Well, they omitted the actual ending. You know, when Chigurgh meets with the money men and explains that he works for their "new supplier." This reveals what went down at the drug deal gone bad, and who did it, and why. Probably because the Coen brothers like their films to be just a string of seemingly random and bizarre events.

      @JadeDude1973@JadeDude19733 жыл бұрын
    • @@JadeDude1973 Right. I myself prefer that ending . . . but it's not enough for me to say that the movie is better. There's room here for each to work in its own way . . .

      @QED_@QED_3 жыл бұрын
  • I’ve adored this film since this first time I saw it over a decade ago when I was in high school, but I never consciously was aware there was really not much in the way of a soundtrack. What I did remember was how much simple foley sounds effects like the wrapper on the counter at the gas station had a huge impact on me. Now it makes so much sense as to why. Your ears aren’t bombarded with noise unlike virtually every other movie, so when there is sound, it’s both really intentional and makes an impact on the viewer. Expertly crafted masterpiece!

    @clintgolub1751@clintgolub17512 жыл бұрын
  • I love the scene in the gas station, especially, when Chigurh squeezes the snack pack after finishing it and puts it on the counter and says "What's the most you've ever lost..". Jeez that one of the most goosebumping scenes I've ever seen.

    @iranbek@iranbek5 жыл бұрын
    • That line, and "Raymond, why don't you pass the time by playing a little solitare?"

      @zanichbug@zanichbug5 жыл бұрын
  • I love this video, but I think you missed an important point of the moral of the movie, one that almost departs from the meaning in the book. Rather than realize that times have changed and violence is the new norm, Sheriff Bell realizes that the world has always been chaotic and violent, and it is he who has changed. I think the most critical part of this subtle adjustment made in the movie is the story told to Bell by Ellis about their famous predecessor. You can find the scene here: kzhead.info/sun/l5WOY7Gxj2KmoH0/bejne.html. The senseless violence of the past is reflected in Bell's current case, and I think that's the real purpose of the move. "What's coming" is Bell's own age, not the way of the world shifting.

    @Crumpeter1@Crumpeter15 жыл бұрын
    • This

      @hiramesensei3112@hiramesensei31125 жыл бұрын
    • 9:30 - I think this addresses your point. Sheriff Bell's experience is nothing new.

      @davidm1926@davidm19265 жыл бұрын
    • There's also a scene where Bell describes a scene where a man shoots a steer and the bullet ricochets off and hits him in the arm. I think this also adds to the "chaos" and inability to control situations. Even Chigurh can't escape from the chaos of the world when he's t-boned In the one of the final scenes coincidentally breaking his arm.

      @degausser5495@degausser54955 жыл бұрын
    • @@degausser5495 I agree, especially about that final scene in the movie: an anticlimatic ending on a completely random act of violence is exactly how a movie about the chaos of the world would end

      @Crumpeter1@Crumpeter15 жыл бұрын
    • Damn. Well-put.

      @jordankreisher8883@jordankreisher88835 жыл бұрын
  • This movie makes you THINK. That's what art is about. Giving you information , sharing ideas and concepts and letting you think about the events and situations.

    @zoisantonopoulos7999@zoisantonopoulos79995 жыл бұрын
  • No Country For Old Men is my favorite Coen brother's film and is in my top five favorite films of all time. It's a film with so much to take in, it throws all conventional storytelling tropes out the window and instead tells an enthralling psychological character study. Great Vid.

    @sebastianliebelt-boord3603@sebastianliebelt-boord36034 жыл бұрын
    • The other 4?

      @suryaprakash-mo6ui@suryaprakash-mo6ui2 жыл бұрын
    • I’m in the minority because my favorite is The Hudsucker Proxy. Most people don’t give it many props.😢

      @Mostopinionatedmanofalltime@Mostopinionatedmanofalltime8 ай бұрын
    • @@suryaprakash-mo6ui Shawshank, her, fantastic Mr Fox, return of the king

      @sebastianliebelt-boord3603@sebastianliebelt-boord36038 ай бұрын
    • @@sebastianliebelt-boord3603 great picks!

      @suryaprakash-mo6ui@suryaprakash-mo6ui8 ай бұрын
  • LFTS on 12 angry men would be interesting.

    @JungoFunko@JungoFunko5 жыл бұрын
    • Jungo - MY FAVORITE MOVIE!!!

      @BennyLindo@BennyLindo5 жыл бұрын
    • Yes, please.

      @ManjunathManja1227@ManjunathManja12275 жыл бұрын
    • THIS.

      @ManSeekingMeaning@ManSeekingMeaning5 жыл бұрын
    • Jungo I agree

      @thebreedinghousewife8818@thebreedinghousewife88185 жыл бұрын
    • holy moly yes

      @gabewrsewell@gabewrsewell5 жыл бұрын
  • I loved the soundtrack especially.

    @MikeHunt-wl4ye@MikeHunt-wl4ye5 жыл бұрын
    • Absolutely (especially since there isn't one, making the film more relatable.)

      @Just1American1966@Just1American19665 жыл бұрын
    • Jerk Mehoff I tried looking for it but I couldn’t find any of the songs :( Could you send me a link?

      @jaredjenkins99@jaredjenkins994 жыл бұрын
    • Jared Clark it has no soundtrack

      @Dan_28@Dan_284 жыл бұрын
    • I'm not sure who's being whooshed here.

      @naran_naran@naran_naran4 жыл бұрын
    • N. R. Neither am i, buddy! Neither am i!

      @Dan_28@Dan_284 жыл бұрын
  • One of my favorite lines of dialogue ever. The Sheriff and his deputy are surveying the shootout in the Dessert and the Deputy exclaims “Hell Sheriff isn’t this a mess?” To which the Sheriff blandly replies “Well if it’s not, it’ll do ‘till the mess gets here”.

    @mrpotter315@mrpotter315 Жыл бұрын
    • Some of Tommy Lee's lines in this movie are seriously iconic.

      @Ejexion@Ejexion11 ай бұрын
  • I truly appreciate the increasingly rare script that respects the audience, brought to life by a filmmaker (filmmakers) who has faith in people's ability to follow along. I think you could count the lines of purely expositional dialogue on one hand.

    @natecw4164@natecw416410 ай бұрын
  • Such a great film filled with well shot tension and build up. Javier has so much power behind his words and yet such calm body language.

    @horizon92lee@horizon92lee5 жыл бұрын
  • Moss is calm and methodical. Moss...His name is fitting.

    @SharpDesign@SharpDesign5 жыл бұрын
    • Do you think he ever gets a hot ear?

      @SilentSte@SilentSte5 жыл бұрын
    • Didn't save him tho'

      @Alan-io2ew@Alan-io2ew5 жыл бұрын
    • @@Alan-io2ew true

      @SharpDesign@SharpDesign5 жыл бұрын
    • Grows on the north side of a tree?

      @babypanthersjr@babypanthersjr5 жыл бұрын
    • @@Alan-io2ew that's one of the points in the movie, you can follow the rules but still end up dead, just like the villain gets hit by a car even though he was going through a green light.

      @abdulbrima5220@abdulbrima52205 жыл бұрын
  • "If the rules you follow brought you to this of what use were the rules?"

    @johnnyparker9928@johnnyparker99283 жыл бұрын
  • One thing that I appreciated is they showed that moss was calculated in his moves ( with the curtains you mentioned ) but he didn't consider that when Wells found him in the hospital that Anton could also both find him and when Wells threatened his Wife that Anton could also do the same thing. This inevitably led to his downfall trying to protect his wife which cannot be done perfectly and then him losing all the hands he gained when he tried to go there and the position was compromised. This happened after he lost a lot of blood and is really cool to see a protagonist make a mistake because the antagonist is truly ahead of him and showing him losing in that way was a nice change in scenery from movies. I wish new movies would have this same level of thoughtful writing because it's truly good cinema.

    @Narc0YT@Narc0YT Жыл бұрын
  • Fucking brilliant analysis. This was one of the hardest movies for me to watch when I was younger because I didn't really understand what was going on. Why did Josh Brolin's character have to die off-screen? What were Chigurh's motives? What the heck were those dreams at the end? I never really appreciated it until recently when I watched A Serious Man, and realised that the seemingly ambiguous story of NCFOM actually had a purpose of its own. Goes without saying that it's now one of my all time favourite movies.

    @isaacninan5053@isaacninan50535 жыл бұрын
    • Yes dude! It took me not having seen the film for more than 6 years to understand Lee Jones' perspective/dreams of his late father, and how it related to the world changing around him as he retired. So goddamn good.

      @clutchcobra2729@clutchcobra27295 жыл бұрын
    • I just remember being so pissed at Moss for returning to the scene of the massacre... He had that money free and clear! Transfer that money to a new bag... and ditch that homing beacon... then BOUNCE tf outta Dodge. The minute he had that little crisis of conscience, I knew he opened a big fat shit can full of problems. I thought for sure, a man who fought in Vietnam should be able to disconnect from his feelings of humanity and walk away without any moral crisis over what some shitbag drug dealers did to each other. War and repeated exposure to violence would jade such an individual and make them a creature of pure logic and have a keen sense of trusting their survival instincts. Talk to anyone who works in law enforcement or emergency medicine... there are limits to our compassion that make us seem like uncaring Assholes (look up Gallows Humor) to "normal" people, but we rarely have sympathy for those who bring their problems onto themselves via their own poor life choices, whereas the innocent victims (usually children) breaks our hearts to the point where people have to leave that line of work. Just my own take on that film from my perspective... 🤔

      @tracyranger8007@tracyranger80075 жыл бұрын
    • The parallels between No Country For Old Men and Serious Man are numerous. In Serious, the brothers hilariously mock inane (and ancient) attempts to invent meaning and purpose for Life with a large L. In No Country, they come to grips with the futility and sadness of those attempts.

      @JiveDadson@JiveDadson5 жыл бұрын
    • Tracy Ranger. Nope. Had nothing to do with his empathy and guilt ridden conscience. Moss' character was doomed from the moment he took possession of the satchel full of money because he didn't even check the money for a tracking device. The transponder was geo-navigating his whereabouts the entire time. Led death right to his front door. He was a wise military hunter, he should have known better frankly.

      @moviedude22@moviedude225 жыл бұрын
    • To elaborate, in No Country, fate is chaotic. In A Serious Man, God intervenes. Gopnik's great-great-great grandmother killed a man - or was it a golem? - or did he live? In any case, the family was cursed "even unto the fourth generation." But Gopnik did a Job with a long o. He kept the faith, or tried to. Things started looking up. The man who coveted Gopnik's wife died in a car wreck. Everything seemed to be getting all better until Gopnik took money for changing one of his students' grades. Oops. God wrath time again. An ominous call from Gopnik's doctor. Gopnik's son pursued by a bully and a tornado. There was even an omen that the USA was in peril. Now the irony is this: chaos or some capricious invisible hand - there is no way to tell the difference. Call it.

      @JiveDadson@JiveDadson5 жыл бұрын
  • There IS a country for old men. It's called Florida.

    @KajiCarson@KajiCarson5 жыл бұрын
    • Sheriff Bell should have just moved to Florida. Problem: solved.

      @LessonsfromtheScreenplay@LessonsfromtheScreenplay5 жыл бұрын
    • Or Nevada

      @Chris_Travis_Scott_Joplin@Chris_Travis_Scott_Joplin5 жыл бұрын
    • It's called Thailand.

      @andreasbergqvist6239@andreasbergqvist62395 жыл бұрын
    • Ironically, that's also where the craziest headlines come out of.

      @stealingfire5036@stealingfire50365 жыл бұрын
    • Strange that nobody has picked up on the fact that Florida isn't a country...

      @Interphased@Interphased5 жыл бұрын
  • One of my favourite movies ever. I remember discussing this movie with my students that I was guest teaching for a day. It was pretty cool to hear grade 8s discussing the more subtle hints/points in this movie. We had a brief bond over film and it was quite rewarding.

    @jackdaniels2905@jackdaniels29054 жыл бұрын
    • Yes, no, yes, partial, true, and muevate.

      @mikimiyazaki@mikimiyazaki4 жыл бұрын
  • Seen this movie over a dozen times and I never knew why he kept driving when he saw the part in the window curtain

    @Memnoch_the_Devil@Memnoch_the_Devil4 жыл бұрын
    • When went out from the room the curtain was fully closed and when he came back the curtain was little opened that means someone is in his room

      @RaviGupta-pm4wb@RaviGupta-pm4wb2 жыл бұрын
    • @@RaviGupta-pm4wb i dont wanna get into some kinda jackpot here, buddy You`re already in one

      @gaz4840@gaz48402 жыл бұрын
  • "If the rule you followed brought you to this, of what use was the rule?"

    @benedictsumberbatch458@benedictsumberbatch4585 жыл бұрын
    • Benedict Sumberbatch do you have any idea how crazy you are

      @metalfacemoviereviews8979@metalfacemoviereviews89794 жыл бұрын
    • @Benedict Sumberbatch: "The rule [logos] is both the end and the means . . . in and of itself."

      @QED_@QED_3 жыл бұрын
  • Man, Michael, you CRUSHED this! You explain things in a way that people like myself can understand and apply to their own videos. Keep it up, I loved this!!! 😁🤘

    @MetalForBreakfast@MetalForBreakfast5 жыл бұрын
    • ᅚᅚ ᅚᅚ fuck off

      @jqyhlmnp@jqyhlmnp5 жыл бұрын
    • He made a mistake with Carla Jean and the boots. It only implies something it is not an actual fact. To him it implies what happened to me it implies that the psychopath is obsessed with his boots.

      @bighands69@bighands695 жыл бұрын
    • @@bighands69 I understand that it does not mean for sure she was killed and that implication does not equal fact. But when you say that it only shows that he is obsessed with his boots, to take it a bit further, his obsession seems to do with the cleanliness of his boots. So since it has prior shown him remove his boots from becoming dirty it seems logical that something happened inside the house just prior to him leaving that warranted his fear of dirty boots. The most logical and reasonable answer is the implied killing of Carla Jean. To wrap up, you can stick with your idea of the boots obsession but it seems like to me you have been given an equation like 1+2×3 and you are knowingly choosing to only solve the first part of 1+2 and willingly ignoring ×3 for whatever reason that suites you. Anyway, good day!

      @joshforrest4020@joshforrest40205 жыл бұрын
  • I LOVE it when movies trust the audience to put 2 and 2 together Sometimes I'm way too stupid to get all of it, but whenever someone makes me notice details that suggest what happened off-screen that's one of the best feelings ever. Thank you for this video! your channel is so GOOD

    @PutridVodka@PutridVodka4 жыл бұрын
  • "...meaning is always more powerful when it can be synthesized in the mind of the viewer instead of spoon fed through on-the-nose dialogue" What a great quote. Definitely what I felt after finished watching Aftersun. Really minimalistic film that requires viewer to synthesize all of the meaning

    @SYAZWANisHERE@SYAZWANisHERE Жыл бұрын
  • Every now and then, I come to KZhead to watch the initial speech of Tommy Lee Jones. I believe is one of the best speeches ever given in a movie. It set up the scenario right away, it shows you the nature of what is the Heroe of the story and just leaves you with the feeling that "ok.. this movie is gonna be rough". Amazing analysis man!

    @gastonperazzo4836@gastonperazzo48365 жыл бұрын
    • If you like that speech you should really read the book. It’s fucking great. And the Sheriff is more fleshed out than he is in the movie, making that ending way way better.

      @amadousef846@amadousef8465 жыл бұрын
    • I know exactly what you mean. I read it just a couple a years ago and it renew my admiration for the movie and the Coen brothers.

      @gastonperazzo4836@gastonperazzo48365 жыл бұрын
    • Haha now I’m gonna have to look up that speech. And watch the movie again!😁👍

      @evanabbott2737@evanabbott27375 жыл бұрын
    • you should watch The Sunset Limited then. The movie is practically just one long speech between him and samual jackson. Nice fresh pace of a film clearly adapted from a play based on how it is filmed. If you are a fan of Tommy that is one portrayal you should definitely watch if you have not already.

      @guitarman0365@guitarman03655 жыл бұрын
    • @@amadousef846 I was given the book years before I saw the film and Cormac's style was too crazy

      @vb8428@vb84285 жыл бұрын
  • This is one of the great movies of this century. Thank you for taking the time to address it properly.

    @wakeruncollapse@wakeruncollapse5 жыл бұрын
    • WakeRunCollapse The book is better. Have you read it?

      @marymacdonald1651@marymacdonald16515 жыл бұрын
    • I haven't. Truth be told, I'm not much of a reader, and I fear I'd only compare the book to what I experienced from the movie after all this time.

      @wakeruncollapse@wakeruncollapse5 жыл бұрын
  • I've seen this film probably 20 times. Never once caught the hotel curtain thing...or the lack of music. Being a musician I'm surprised it never dawned on me that I was more tense because of the lack of sounds/music. What a goddamn film.

    @jingalls9142@jingalls9142 Жыл бұрын
  • I love the midpoint scene where Llewellyn leaves the hotel eluding Chigurh. The whole cat and mouse feel to it, with ZERO dialog is fantastic! My favorite movie, will watch again today. Great video, thank you.

    @Pboy7272@Pboy72724 жыл бұрын
  • As someone who grew up in rural hill country in Texas, the end of this film was simply sublime. "..and in the dream I knew, he was goin on ahead and he was fixin to make a fire, and he was somewhere out there in all that dark and all that cold. I knew that when I got here, he'd be there and then I woke up." Masterful.

    @ricci777@ricci7775 жыл бұрын
  • When I watched this I didn't recognize Moss, I thought that was just a random guy. I didn't realize he had died until near the end. Had to rewind to see if it was really him.

    @NessieAndrew@NessieAndrew5 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, this was really odd. After it is established that he died, the camera always shows him from an angle, almost as if he was a completely random character that just got killed but who isn't really all that important for the plot.

      @CanIHasThisName@CanIHasThisName4 жыл бұрын
    • @@CanIHasThisName a daunting truth that the main character is nothing but a disposable extra.

      @joshdunham7167@joshdunham71674 жыл бұрын
    • @@CanIHasThisName Kooky username bud.

      @mark-ish@mark-ish4 жыл бұрын
    • @@CanIHasThisName You're the real psychopath here with that username buddy lol. c:

      @joshualeahy2162@joshualeahy21624 жыл бұрын
    • @@joshualeahy2162 Could say the same about you.

      @CanIHasThisName@CanIHasThisName4 жыл бұрын
  • I love the horn with fire dream at the end - the culmination of the theme. A light of hope "in all that dark and all that cold."

    @matthewsawczyn6592@matthewsawczyn65923 жыл бұрын
  • The greatest breakdown of this movie/book I've ever seen. Thank you for such a great display of it.

    @Jeff-qq1tz@Jeff-qq1tz4 жыл бұрын
  • Just came across the channel a week ago, and I also watched this movie like two weeks ago. Very pleasant surprise for my first notification.

    @JoelMoriasi@JoelMoriasi5 жыл бұрын
    • Awesome! That works out well.

      @LessonsfromtheScreenplay@LessonsfromtheScreenplay5 жыл бұрын
  • I don't know many theory things in movie making, but if I may make an observation, No Country for old Men is one of the only movies that does not have a soundtrack at all. I feel this alleviates the fact that this isn't your typical Hero movie. This is just a random guy with a certain background that happens to find money and ends up being killed for it. Nothing ehroic there. I feel this further underlines how powerless we can be in the face of evil.

    @WulfLOL1@WulfLOL15 жыл бұрын
    • Sound design is a brilliant in this film. Especially, use of absolute silence at the key moments in the film.

      @hermezkonrad@hermezkonrad5 жыл бұрын
    • What do you mean by "in the face of evil" ? Do you mean evil like the main guy getting killed or how he was powerless in the face of taking the money in the first place or how even the powerful cop who should keep bad things away from people felt powerless when facing the evil world ?

      @jaherra2567@jaherra25675 жыл бұрын
    • Main guy was up against both Cartels and Chigur. He was of no match. I mean Evil like in the prisoner's dilemma.

      @WulfLOL1@WulfLOL15 жыл бұрын
    • @@WulfLOL1 I don't see how the prisoner's dilemma has anything to do with this could you explain how you see it ?

      @jaherra2567@jaherra25675 жыл бұрын
    • In a society where good could prevail and everyone could benefit, people will always opt to only benefit themselves because they do not trust others. It's what I feel this movie highlights. Everyone is in it for themselves and everyone dies as a result.

      @WulfLOL1@WulfLOL15 жыл бұрын
  • its crazy how when i watched this film years ago i couldnt rlly understand the emotions i was feeling but knew i was made to be uncomfortable yet captivated by the way it turned out. this video excellently explains why i was feeling what i did and makes me appreciate the movie that much more

    @traiwitz2736@traiwitz2736 Жыл бұрын
  • I remember my parents told me they watched this movie a few years back and hated it, "it's just about some lunatic going around killing people" and advised me not to waste my time watching it. I gave it a go sometime later and I have since disowned my parents.

    @jbarnes4521@jbarnes45213 жыл бұрын
    • Josh, learn how to love your parents. They surely tried their best for you.

      @odissey2@odissey23 жыл бұрын
  • So hard to definitively settle which Coen brothers film is the best, but I’m confident in saying I think this is it.

    @joshweber2337@joshweber23375 жыл бұрын
    • I think this is my favorite too.

      @LessonsfromtheScreenplay@LessonsfromtheScreenplay5 жыл бұрын
  • No Country For Old Men is another example of the Coen brothers' mastering of film making. I own the BluRay of this film so I can watch it anytime.

    @AllThingsFilm1@AllThingsFilm15 жыл бұрын
  • The fact that so much was implied was my favourite part of this movie. I'm so glad I found this essay video!

    @Braham_the_Terror@Braham_the_Terror3 жыл бұрын
  • Very eloquent and efficient way to describe the storytelling elements of this movie. What a refreshing video; great job!

    @ernestof6697@ernestof66975 жыл бұрын
  • Love this movie! Tremendously good villain. Saw it when I was younger and didn't get it until I reached my twenties. Well explained video once again!

    @Screened@Screened5 жыл бұрын
    • Doneandgone It sometimes takes ideas to simmer and the more you understand things in life or in general movies can become better or worse, nothing wrong with not getting something at one time.

      @alexblock8607@alexblock86075 жыл бұрын
  • I had no idea about his "care for boots cleanliness" thing! I always assumed he killed Carla Jean, but this just confirms it. Thanks for pointing this out!

    @NateGH36O@NateGH36O5 жыл бұрын
  • Absolutely priceless synopsis. Much to think about. Brilliantly edited. Well done.

    @hilslamer@hilslamer Жыл бұрын
  • i keep going back and learning more things in this movie ,i love how there is no background music letting me really get into the movie without distraction.

    @michaelphillips7596@michaelphillips75962 жыл бұрын
  • After I watched this film I sat my Dad down too watch it although he said it didn't really interest him he was willing to try it. Halfway through the film he pauses it and says, "I'm shocked, this movie is actually really good"

    @BuzzRatchetGaming@BuzzRatchetGaming5 жыл бұрын
  • Get the name right. It’s “No country for old- holy shit this movie is good”

    @spakes6561@spakes65615 жыл бұрын
  • Man let me tell you, your channel is teaching me so much about film that I had previously been lacking and if I ever become an actor it’s because I meticulously studied your videos

    @katelynnhouseholder5450@katelynnhouseholder54505 жыл бұрын
  • Excellent. I was pleased with the way you added the the support announcement at the end, too.

    @rondevous5685@rondevous56853 жыл бұрын
  • Anton Chigurh is my favorite villain of all time. I have never been that terrified by a fictional character in my entire life 😖

    @TheRockerX@TheRockerX5 жыл бұрын
    • If you haven't already, read Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy. Judge Holden gives Chigurh a run for his money

      @two_dads@two_dads5 жыл бұрын
    • Fun fact, Bardem hated the haircut because he had to wear it for weeks and in public it made him incredibly self conscious.

      @peterking8085@peterking80854 жыл бұрын
  • Watched this film for the first time about a week ago, because I am studying it in my film class in September, and one thing I that stood out to me was the extreme tension in this film, I could name 3 or 4 scenes but the one which stood out to me, was when he returns to the murder scene (at the start) with water, at night. When the cars roll up from afar and the headlights go down and then that burst his tires. I guess what I mean is how well they take their time in creating tension, they have long build ups which just make everything so nailbiting. This film was incredible, on of those films where after watching it you're just sat there for a moment speechless; then for the next few hours you're just thinking about it and it only. Also I think a great screenplay to make a video on would be The Good, The Bad and The Ugly or The Grand Budapest Hotel.

    @williambrown1448@williambrown14485 жыл бұрын
    • William Brown its amazing how so much tension was created without one bit of music or score.

      @Prabzs123@Prabzs1235 жыл бұрын
    • Interesting you say that since direction and acting thoroughly elevates an otherwise ok screenplay with the good the bad and the ugly

      @IAteFire@IAteFire5 жыл бұрын
    • @Prabs s , i know right it's pure visual storytelling and again in the case of him revisiting the murder site with the water at night, I think that perhaps the coen brothers manage such tension is by shooting an establishing shot where in which it is a wide shot of the crime scene and he enters the frame from the right, this shot, for me at least added so much suspense because there was so much space in the frame for other characters or any suspicious tiny bit of movement that might suggest the presence of another person. Further more once the car full of the cartel arrives, I think as well as tension, the coen's add dredd into the scene because not only have they set up what these people are willing to do (slaughter a gang of 6 or so men and a dog), also by showing them puncture his tires it acts as almost a seal of his fate, as they're not going to let him escape. One more thing to mention is that the camera sticks, for the most part with the character (I have forgotten his name) and so it positions us with him, as we too try to figure out how to to escape or what to do; like you said there's no score and so, not to say that a score takes you out of the film, in fact I think the complete opposite, it makes it feel so real as if you are there, just with the sound of his breathing and gravel being kicked. Just one last thing to add about the silence is that we hear the cartels voice from afar as it slowly Louden's as they near us, only adding to the threat of an impending doom.

      @williambrown1448@williambrown14485 жыл бұрын
    • I could take that scene seriously. Dude is attempting to sneakily look over the hood of a truck to try and see who is rolling up on him.......While wearing a giant ass cowboy hat. I also got tilted at dude for noticing his cowboy boots are not good for running so then when he goes to buy new clothes he buys more cowboy boots..... I was basically cheering for the idiot to die the whole movie.

      @Maibuwolf@Maibuwolf5 жыл бұрын
  • So many great examples of "show don't tell" in this movie. My absolute favorite film!

    @jasonwoodring4479@jasonwoodring447911 ай бұрын
  • I've seen a few explanations for this film so far and I gotta say, this review has gotta be the best one as it's so accurate. Good job.

    @liamnguyen2819@liamnguyen28192 жыл бұрын
  • I literally watched No Country For Old Men for the first time. AN d not sure as to why i waited so long. I bought it years ago, its been on my shelf. I knew it wasn't a conventional movie and I was waiting for the right time. It was worth the wait. Great video, I really enjoy your mind set on movies.

    @neppets4500@neppets45005 жыл бұрын
    • Nice!👍😁

      @evanabbott2737@evanabbott27375 жыл бұрын
  • Did not like this film at first, but the more I think about it, the more I like it. This and There Will Be Blood are two of the finest films of the 2000s.

    @YouFightLikeACow@YouFightLikeACow5 жыл бұрын
  • i just subbed after watching .... your on point with your assessments and your ability to recognize and describe what is AND isn't being portrayed... your on another level.... ty peace

    @bigtrouble4447@bigtrouble44474 жыл бұрын
  • I watched this for the first time yesterday and I loved everything about it.

    @thedaggonator@thedaggonator2 жыл бұрын
  • i didnt pick up on any of that when i watched it, still loved it but, didnt realize just how deep it went

    @GamerIsASlur@GamerIsASlur5 жыл бұрын
  • I love how this movie is not traditional of what we've seen... It is not predictable, it is not cliche, and I respect that... Original content. GREAT VIDEO

    @AndresGarciaMovies@AndresGarciaMovies5 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks!

      @LessonsfromtheScreenplay@LessonsfromtheScreenplay5 жыл бұрын
  • This is one of my favourite book-to-movie adaptions. Perfectly executed

    @GreifvogelSGE@GreifvogelSGE2 жыл бұрын
  • I love this movie and movies that challenge or asks things of the audience. Great video breakdown too! Ty for the content. 👍🏻

    @brianh9529@brianh95294 жыл бұрын
  • Michael, please keep the lessons coming. You have a gift and I look forward to many more videos 👍🏼

    @thespaniard_15@thespaniard_155 жыл бұрын
  • You know, I don’t really like No Country for Old Men that much. But this video kinda gave me a good idea of why people do like it. It was pretty interesting! Thanks.

    @ricopableo5553@ricopableo55535 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, I don't like masterful directing, cinematography, and writing either. ಠ_ಠ

      @DefThrone@DefThrone5 жыл бұрын
    • I was a little perplexed by it on first viewing. But, given that the Coen bros served it up, I had to watch again. On second viewing, I got it. I think I've seen it four times now. Maybe five.

      @JiveDadson@JiveDadson5 жыл бұрын
    • I also am not a big fan of the film, despite it being masterfully directed with wonderful cinematography. I can appreciate many things about the movie, both in craftsmanship and for being wonderfully ambitious, however I believe it is ultimately unsuccessful in delivering on the ambition with a meaningful statement regarding it's theme. In many ways it purposefully undercuts itself when it comes to showing the theme through story/character and then at the end delivers a monologue explaining the theme in a flat way. Theme should be felt, regardless if it is understood or not. I understood the themes of No Country For Old Men but did not feel it (I'm happy for you if you did). It felt like hearing a joke that is incomplete without an explanation but any joke that uses an explanation of the joke as a punchline isn't going to hit you in the gut. Especially if the punchline is "jokes don't always make sense".

      @DaneDavenport@DaneDavenport5 жыл бұрын
    • I think it's because people take the moral presented near the end at face value. The film is fundamentally about how people romanticize the past and their willful ignorance of moral flaws that are intrinsic to our society. A lot of people read the film as "The world is becoming more decadent. This is no country for old men.", when the actual message seems to be the rebuttal itself, "Things have always been this bad. You've just been naive." By the end of the film, Sheriff Bell resigns because he can't comprehend the direction society, and by extension criminality, is heading. He discusses it with a colleague and they run through the motions of blaming the youth; tattoos, piercings, hair, the whole 'chivalry is dead' spiel. Bell later discusses his resignation with his uncle and is abruptly set straight. His uncle recites a story about one of the old-timers Bell had been romanticizing since the start of the story and how he was brazenly shot by some outlaws on his front porch in 1909. They watched him bleed out for hours and later left his home out of bordem. The film begins with Bell uncertain of the future, believing it to be this dangerous unknown quantity, and ends with him realizing that he never had a firm grasp on just how cruel the world was to begin with. "What you got ain't nothing new. This country's hard on people. You can't stop what's coming... That's vanity." - Uncle Ellis

      @ContortedWhisk@ContortedWhisk5 жыл бұрын
    • @@ContortedWhisk To go even deeper I realized that humanitie's( law enforcement and citizens) efforts to desperately understand & balance the 'good and evil' morality is a waste of time. Causing the Sheriff to realize that he was niave his whole career because law enforcement causes you to be too close to the bigger picture to see the whole thing.

      @nerdseyeview5017@nerdseyeview50175 жыл бұрын
  • i absolutely loved this movie, and i was really happy to see a video about this because one thing i specifically noticed when watching this film is how much the movie respected my intelligence, and let me piece together the story by myself. you spend the whole first act trying to make sense of the story in your head and it makes it so much more dramatic and thrilling it works so well with the suspense of the movie. while im here gushing about the movie i mineaswell just gush. the first two opening scenes, the introductions of llewelyn and chigur were beautiful. they do that whole mystery respecting the audiences intelligence thing so beautifully. and the payoff when you find out what that air canister is for is so good, and collectively SIKE'D everyones expectations for what it was. side note i really like the small scene later when that cop is telling sheriff about a "entrance wound with no bullet" and they're both confused about it. so hilarious. this movie has a really good sense of humor the few times where its present are so pleasant one thing i didn't like and idk if anyone else felt this but woody harrelsons character didn't really fit with the movie and his role kinda just felt like he spews information about the killer, but it just felt like he was explaining things we already knew about him so that the other characters knew them. idk his character lacked the subtlety of the other characters it felt out of place. another thing i didn't like and all of us didn't like is how abrupt llewelyns death was. i can see where you're coming from with your point about it and i'm sure the writers had their reasons but it doesn't change the fact that it just feels unsatisfactory im already too tired and too (high) to keep writing so im stopping here

    @chiknnoodl8195@chiknnoodl81953 жыл бұрын
  • Stanton's 2+2 concept is intriguing and an excellent piece of knowledge to consider when crafting a story. Engaging the audience through leaving out the solution seems like an clear decision to make for active storytelling, but is quite difficult to do in practice effectively. Just one of the many reasons this movie is incredibly well done.

    @TimThoughts@TimThoughts3 жыл бұрын
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