No Country for Old Men Comments

  • Dessie 2022-03-23 09:01:07

    The core of traditional westerns lies in the confrontation between civilization and wildness. The confrontation between the complex modern good and evil is no longer black and...

  • Elinore 2022-03-23 09:01:07

    Very depressing...

  • Brett 2022-03-23 09:01:07

    Second brush. Greed and hypocrisy are a dead end; treating others with sincerity is also a dead end. It's okay today, maybe it's your turn tomorrow. So no matter what happens, you can only admit it. Every policeman and a gangster understand the truth. The sheriff understands but is unwilling, leaving only melancholy; the killer understands but considers himself to be the spokesperson of chance, and is ultimately disabled by chance. If there is a devil, it is not money and drugs, it is above...

  • Taryn 2022-03-22 09:01:05

    A / The relationship between the film's narrative and the characters and the three lines is like the gun at the beginning and the prey in the wilderness, always in a state of careless friction/tracking/missing. The tension of the undercurrent makes the seemingly separated and life-and-death characters seem to be a natural stretch of the same scroll, invisibly completing mutual speech and even psychological overlap. After reading, I just want to feel that "The Blood Is Coming" was not...

  • Jazmyn 2021-10-20 18:59:38

    With his non-professional cameo appearance, Zhao Zhongxiang won the best supporting actor Oscar for his role as a perverted...

  • Lea 2021-10-20 18:59:34

    Oscar would award the best film to such a dark work, and the reed killer played by Javier Baden is as cold-blooded as death. The narrative is calm and temperate, but most of the time it is frightening. The empty and lonely Texas wasteland reflects the individual's powerlessness and fragility in the face of the mysterious and unpredictable evil. When the emotions were strained to the limit, the Coen brothers directly omitted the climax, leaving only the staring audience silently savoring despair...

  • Noemie 2021-10-20 18:58:28

    A work that can withstand interpretation. The movie has successfully portrayed the three roles of cowboy, killer, and police detective. All three actors are outstanding. This movie is weird. The three characters can each hold up a movie, put together and then suddenly become more...

  • Caden 2021-10-20 18:58:25

    "In the world and in life, people, like anything as small as anything else, are moving by accident. This accident has logic. One thing is indeed guided by another thing, but logic is not in the hands of people. In God’s accidental hands. So the Coen brothers’ movies are always backfired. Things always go in the opposite direction of hope, and they go straight and confident, because there are always inevitable and unexpected coincidences that will...

  • Ivory 2021-10-20 18:58:22

    Why did Javier Baden remind me of the lunatic in a Clockwork...

  • Clotilde 2021-10-20 18:58:20

    The one that Cohen has convinced me the most so far. The sophisticated lens and depressive control make people think of the French drug trafficking network and double compensation. The performances of the three protagonists are all beautiful, one third of the coin game, one second of the MOTEL hide-and-seek exciting, the factional battles of the drug lord group, the family history of Sheriff and the Vietnam War veterans are entangled in a dark line, and the background is more See thick. You...

Extended Reading
  • Grady 2021-10-13 13:05:35

    No one to rely on

          In 2007, "Old Nowhere" was born out of nowhere. It was highly praised by many media, especially academics, and it has almost become the first film in 2007. Recently, it has finally seen its glory. Frequently, films popular by the media and academies are not necessarily welcomed by...

  • Kristy 2021-10-13 13:05:35

    The blackest of the Coen brothers

    The old policeman said at the beginning that at that time, some policemen were not equipped with guns. It's a pity that times have changed. Not long ago, he personally sent a murderer to the electric chair. This murderer did nothing but kill one person. "He is a perverted killer. So what,...

No Country for Old Men quotes

  • Carson Wells: [sitting by bed] Buenos Dias. I'm guessing this isn't the future you had planned for yourself when you first clapped eyes on that money. Don't worry, I'm not the man who's after you.

    Llewelyn Moss: [in bed] I know that. I've seen him.

    Carson Wells: You've seen him, and you're not dead?

    Llewelyn Moss: What's this guy supposed to be, the ultimate badass?

    Carson Wells: No, I wouldn't describe him as that.

    Llewelyn Moss: How would you describe him?

    Carson Wells: I guess I would say he doesn't have a sense of humor. His name is Chigurh.

    Llewelyn Moss: Sugar?

    Carson Wells: Chigurh, Anton Chigurh. Do you know how he found you?

    Llewelyn Moss: Yeah, I know how he found me.

    Carson Wells: Called a transponder.

    Llewelyn Moss: Yeah, I know what it's called. He won't find me again.

    Carson Wells: Not that way.

    Llewelyn Moss: Not any way.

    Carson Wells: Took me about three hours.

    Llewelyn Moss: Yeah, well, I been immobile.

    Carson Wells: No, you don't understand.

  • [last lines]

    Loretta Bell: How'd you sleep?

    Ed Tom Bell: I don't know. Had dreams.

    Loretta Bell: Well you got time for 'em now. Anythin' interesting?

    Ed Tom Bell: They always is to the party concerned.

    Loretta Bell: Ed Tom, I'll be polite.

    Ed Tom Bell: Alright then. Two of 'em. Both had my father in 'em. It's peculiar. I'm older now then he ever was by twenty years. So in a sense he's the younger man. Anyway, first one I don't remember too well but it was about meeting him in town somewhere, he's gonna give me some money. I think I lost it. The second one, it was like we was both back in older times and I was on horseback goin' through the mountains of a night. Goin' through this pass in the mountains. It was cold and there was snow on the ground and he rode past me and kept on goin'. Never said nothin' goin' by. He just rode on past... and he had his blanket wrapped around him and his head down and when he rode past I seen he was carryin' fire in a horn the way people used to do and I could see the horn from the light inside of it. 'Bout the color of the moon. And in the dream I knew that he was goin' on ahead and he was fixin' to make a fire somewhere out there in all that dark and all that cold, and I knew that whenever I got there he would be there. And then I woke up...