"No Country for Old Men" brought to the screen by co-writers and co-directors Joel and Ethan Cohen is being talked up for all kinds of awards. After seeing it today, I'd say it's going to win a bunch. Based on the novel by Cormac McCarthy and boasting a flawless cast that includes Tommy Lee Jones, Josh Brolin, Javier Bardem, Woody Harrelson and Kelly MacDonald, this could be THE film to beat come award season.
The Good: not going Hollywood and changing the story; Tommy Lee Jones, Josh Brolin, Javier Bardem, Woody Harrelson and Kelly MacDonald are perfectly cast; the scene where Chigurh brings the cuffs to the front, strangles the deputy and then calmly cleans his wrists; when Moss stumbles on the drug-deal-gone-bad aftermath; when Chigurh makes the old man "call it"; Moss barely escaping into the river and then coming out to calmly prepare for the "next attack" which is barreling at him; Moss' dialogue with his wife and later Carson Wells; Sherriff Bell's dialogue with everyone; the pacing; when Chigurh appears behind Carson Wells on the steps; Woody Harrelson's scene with Bardem; the direction.
The Bad: Anton Chigurh. Nothing else comes close to being "The Bad."
The Ugly: Doctoring your own gunshot wound; and when you hear "there's a bone sticking out of your arm."
If you haven't yet, you should read the book and then see the movie. That way, come Oscars you'll be ahead of the curve.
The Good: not going Hollywood and changing the story; Tommy Lee Jones, Josh Brolin, Javier Bardem, Woody Harrelson and Kelly MacDonald are perfectly cast; the scene where Chigurh brings the cuffs to the front, strangles the deputy and then calmly cleans his wrists; when Moss stumbles on the drug-deal-gone-bad aftermath; when Chigurh makes the old man "call it"; Moss barely escaping into the river and then coming out to calmly prepare for the "next attack" which is barreling at him; Moss' dialogue with his wife and later Carson Wells; Sherriff Bell's dialogue with everyone; the pacing; when Chigurh appears behind Carson Wells on the steps; Woody Harrelson's scene with Bardem; the direction.
The Bad: Anton Chigurh. Nothing else comes close to being "The Bad."
The Ugly: Doctoring your own gunshot wound; and when you hear "there's a bone sticking out of your arm."
If you haven't yet, you should read the book and then see the movie. That way, come Oscars you'll be ahead of the curve.
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