Inaccurate Vernacular: No Country for Old Men

January 2, 2008

Get rich quick schemes used to be reserved for late night television preaching riches if you mailed a nominal sum for the packet containing instructions on how to master said system. Currently at all hours of the day can you find someone promoting a “system” or insider knowledge that has as much to do with chance as anything else.

Surprisingly this is a main theme of the Coen Brothers’ latest film No Country for Old Men. Llewelyn Moss (James Brolin), arguably the main character, stumbles on a drug deal gone the way most movie drug deals go – poorly. A number of poor moral decisions lead him to finding a large sum of money that belongs to another man Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) who is probably the most terrifying villain since Robert Mitchum in both the 1962 Cape Fear and Night of the Hunter. Llewelyn’s desire to hold on to the $2 million leads him running down a path for his own life and the life of others.

As always with a film by the Coens the dialogue is the strongest point of the film and technically this is probably their best work. The big gripe about the film is the ending. It doesn’t really have one but at the same time it does. Sheriff Ed Tom Bell (Tommy Lee Jones) opens and closes the picture with a monologue. By paying attention to his scenes additional themes begin to develop and emerge from the story. The film isn’t so much plot driven - although it is for 80% of it - but revolves around the characters and their traits.

If you go in expecting everything to be tied up in a nice package like National Treasure then you will be disappointed. No Country for Old Men is closer to John Steinbeck’s East of Eden where the aforementioned Nicholas Cage project is closer to Where’s Waldo. The man in the striped red and white costume is there on the page, you just need to keep your eyes open. Steinbeck requires you to dig a bit deeper and examine the story and not just on the superficial Cain and Abel that they make reference to multiple times.

No Country for Old Men has layers of depth and meaning to it but it will require some work on the viewer’s part to dissect it. It is definitely worth seeing and might be one of the big winners come Oscar Night.

**** (4/4)

Comments

One Response to “Inaccurate Vernacular: No Country for Old Men”

  1. Corey on January 3rd, 2008 9:17 pm

    You don’t even know how much I want to see this, but in my stubbornness I’ll probably end up waiting until I’ve read the book. Which means I’ll have to go buy the book. Which means I’ll probably never see it. Lame.

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