Friday, 21 September 2012

No Country For Old Men



There are some movies that are just that, movies. There are others that cross the line and stare you right in the face. No Country For Old Men obliterates this line.

Directed by the Coen brothers whose oeuvre includes movies such as The Big Lebowski and Fargo, this is a simple enough story. Set in 1970's Texas, it is a story with three men at it's centre. These men are Sheriff Ed Tom( Tommy Lee Jones), Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) and Josh Brolin (Llewelyn Moss). Their lives intersect in a mire of fate, consequences and pure evil. Adapted from Cormac Mccarthy's book of the same name, it is a highly faithful adaptation and fans of the book will be delighted with the efforts of Joel and Ethan Coen.

The movie starts off with a drug deal gone sour and a hunter, Moss (Josh Brolin) spots the scene of the altercation. He clambers down and finds dead bodies all over the place and a suitcase full of cash which he pockets. There is a barely alive man who asks him for water but Moss shows glimpses of the heartlessness that is at the core of the film by refusing to help him.


Josh Brolin as Moss

To recover the money, a psychopathic hit man, Anton Chigurh is hired. Chigurh is the archetypal psychopath with a taste for refined cruelty. A scene where he strangles a policeman to death with his handcuffs is one of the few times where his face betrays any emotion. When it does, it is an expression that could translate as pure animalistic joy, the very sensation of being alive. After his deed is done, his face returns to being a cold, violent mask.

Looking over all this carnage is Sheriff Ed Tom (Tommy Lee Jones), a veteran whose bitter and rueful humour betrays the trials and tribulations he has faced. He is tired of all the crime in the world and we hear it in the starting voice over when he says "He killed a 14-year-old girl. Papers said it was a crime of passion, but he told me there wasn't any passion to it. Told me that he'd been planning to kill somebody for about as long as he could remember. Said that if they turned him out he'd do it again. Said he knew he was going to hell, be there in about 15 minutes. I don't know what to make of that."


Tommy Lee Jones as Sheriff Ed Tom


The three men and their paths intertwine and a game of cat and mouse ensues. The storyline is nothing spectacular, but the Coen brothers are masters of the unsaid. There are scenes which feature nothing more than characters shuffling across doors, waiting in anticipation. The characterisations are vivid and purposeful.

Another factor that contributes to the gloomy outlook is the lack of background music. Carter Burwell comes up with a score that sounds like an indistinct machine hum that you could hear in the street if you listened hard enough. Movies have long used background music to lead watchers on, especially horror ones. But here, this experimental score works like a charm. It breaks the barrier and transports you to dusty, hot Texas.

The film is chock full of scenes that you simply do not want to end. When Chigurh makes an unknowing shopkeeper call a coin toss to decide whether he should live or die, it is the knowledge of knowing that the man we see could die in an instant if he was unlucky enough to call wrong. Moss's wife when faced with the same situation is however aware of what that toss represents. Her defiance in not letting a coin decide rather than being the 'wimpy wife of a tough man' is refreshingly not naive.

Javier Bardem plays Chigurh to his brutal best. He rarely flinches, even when stitching up his own bullet wounds. While The Joker may probably be the best negative character of the previous decade, Anton Chigurh provides stiff competition. While the Joker came across as the devil himself with all his devilish dialogues, Chigurh is more practical, letting his cattle shotgun do the talking.


Javier Bardem as Anton Chigurh

The film works so well simply because it reminds us that cinema exists beyond mindless, verbose dialogue and redundant special effects. One of the major feats that this movie achieves is in the darkness that it creates, even though much of it set in bright sunlight. The funereal atmosphere hangs like a giant, gloomy cloud engulfing us and leaving us grateful.

At the risk of sounding like a sadist who enjoys violence,  I will say this. "No Country For Old Men" is a beautiful film, with beauty stemming from it's violence. This despondency is best summed up when the sheriff says " I always figured when I got older, God would sorta come into my life somehow. And he didn't. I don't blame him. If I was him I would have the same opinion of me that  he does."



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