Ah, we finally disagree!Damien wrote:No Country is back in the same milieu as Blood Simple and has some of the same themes. All I can say is that its acclaim mystifies me.
No Country for Old Men: The Poll
I really need to see 'No Country for Old Men' a second time. The abrupt shift doesn't seem as glaring in memory but I remember it being quite the cold finger up the ass at the time. Josh Brolin gave the best performance in 'No Country' and I prefer him to all the Best Actor nominees this year save for possibly Tommy Lee Jones. I'm inclined to agree with Sonic that it may have worked better on page but in terms of film it feels wrong. It may work better to think about it than to actually watch it. It's clearly what the Coen brothers wanted to do, and it's one of the sharpest genre subversions in some time, making us think we're in for something satisfying and then our suspicions that Llewelyn Moss will never get away are proven understatement at best. But this is all rationalization. I think 'No Country' is an incredibly strong film and a deserving Best Picture-winner but one I need to re-watch.
"How's the despair?"
Javier Bardem is a wonderful actor -- and should have won the Oscar in 2000 for "Before Night Falls" -- but add me among those who thinks his performance in No Country was the LEAST impressive of the bunch. It's fun but it's completely one note, and the kind of "easy" performance that typically wins awards. Much more interesting and nuanced work was done by Brolin, Jones, MacDonald and yes even Harrelson.
Edited By Akash on 1203137341
Edited By Akash on 1203137341
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It was the abrupt disposal (there really is no other word for it) of Josh Brolin's Llewelyn towards the end. Not only does it cheat us out of a final confrontation, but more importantly it minimizes the importance of his character. At the very least, Llewelyn deserves a satisfying "exit scene", so to speak. But after the story places so much weight on his storyline, he's then arbitrarily disposed of. Maybe this works in the book, and maybe it works beautifully thematically and metaphysically. But it throws an otherwise very deliberately made film off-kilter, as well as the parallel narratives between him and Chigurh, which the Coen's otherwise take great pains to establish. (It also probably robbed Brolin of a deserving Oscar nod.)dws1982 wrote:So Damien and I seem to have less and less to agree on this year than before; He's strongly disliked two of my favorites of the year (Bug and now this) and while I didn't strongly dislike them, I didn't much care for some of his favorites--Redacted, Away From Her, and 2 Days in Paris. I think my Damienite status is in jeopardy.
Sonic-But although I felt that much of the final fifteen minutes was very much of a piece with what came before, there was one aspect that left me frustrated, and while this is may be fealty to the novel, it still smacks of disloyalty to the viewer.
I had noticed this awhile back, but I just read the novel a few days ago, and now I'm wondering what this aspect was?
And since it diminishes the importance of Llewelyn, it also robs the film of a true central character. Sheriff Bell ain't it, because he's viewing everything from the periphery. And Chigurh isn't a character at all but a symbol. Bardem's performance is the only point of agreement I have with Damien. I have no problem with his performance per se, but there's nothing substantial to Chigurh. He's the Terminator.
"What the hell?"
Win Butler
Win Butler
I'm intrigued though Damien to see what you'll think of "There Will Be Blood." PTA vs. The Coens, two director-writers (well...three) you despise. And now you're gonna have to choose one film over the other. Oh the humanity!
Of course you could always just support Michael Clayton or Juno for Best Picture. But you wouldn't be that crazy, would you?
Of course you could always just support Michael Clayton or Juno for Best Picture. But you wouldn't be that crazy, would you?
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Et tu, Daniel?dws1982 wrote:So Damien and I seem to have less and less to agree on this year than before; He's strongly disliked two of my favorites of the year (Bug and now this) and while I didn't strongly dislike them, I didn't much care for some of his favorites--Redacted, Away From Her, and 2 Days in Paris. I think my Damienite status is in jeopardy.
"Y'know, that's one of the things I like about Mitt Romney. He's been consistent since he changed his mind." -- Christine O'Donnell
So Damien and I seem to have less and less to agree on this year than before; He's strongly disliked two of my favorites of the year (Bug and now this) and while I didn't strongly dislike them, I didn't much care for some of his favorites--Redacted, Away From Her, and 2 Days in Paris. I think my Damienite status is in jeopardy.
Sonic-
I had noticed this awhile back, but I just read the novel a few days ago, and now I'm wondering what this aspect was?
Edited By dws1982 on 1202999316
Sonic-
But although I felt that much of the final fifteen minutes was very much of a piece with what came before, there was one aspect that left me frustrated, and while this is may be fealty to the novel, it still smacks of disloyalty to the viewer.
I had noticed this awhile back, but I just read the novel a few days ago, and now I'm wondering what this aspect was?
Edited By dws1982 on 1202999316
I spent about 45 minutes reading this thread because I had avoided reading much about No Country til I got to see it. (I always like knowing next to nothing about a picture before I see it, unless it's adapted froma book I read.)
Lots of interesting input. Tee ,your analysis was particularly fascinating, even if I disagree with your critique, (But then again, I don't think we're EVER agreed about a movie, unless it's maybe Casablanca. I think you gibe the Coens more credit for intellectualism than they deserve -- I think basically their development seems to have stopped when they were college sophomores.
Slant's Nick Schager, who seems to have a pathological need to prove his "hipness," is silly, but rolomatasi is very smart.
Edited By Damien on 1202970062
Lots of interesting input. Tee ,your analysis was particularly fascinating, even if I disagree with your critique, (But then again, I don't think we're EVER agreed about a movie, unless it's maybe Casablanca. I think you gibe the Coens more credit for intellectualism than they deserve -- I think basically their development seems to have stopped when they were college sophomores.
Slant's Nick Schager, who seems to have a pathological need to prove his "hipness," is silly, but rolomatasi is very smart.
Edited By Damien on 1202970062
"Y'know, that's one of the things I like about Mitt Romney. He's been consistent since he changed his mind." -- Christine O'Donnell
Thanks Sonic. I keep forgetting about that.Sonic Youth wrote:Damien wrote:I’m surprised there’s not a separate No Country thread here other than the poll.
Five pages worth.
It's that damn "last 30 days" option again.
"Y'know, that's one of the things I like about Mitt Romney. He's been consistent since he changed his mind." -- Christine O'Donnell