"No Country for Old Men"

Tell us if you found a gem or a piece of shit, and who peddled it

Moderator: Dux


Topic author
The Venerable Bogatir X
Supreme Martian Overlord
Posts: 15563
Joined: Wed Jan 05, 2005 5:05 pm
Location: Nice planet. We'll take it.

"No Country for Old Men"

Post by The Venerable Bogatir X »

This movie, while slow, kept me engaged until the end, where it fell apart for me. WTF happened? Did the writer's strike cause them to run into a brick wall or what?

User avatar

Shafpocalypse Now
Lifetime IGer
Posts: 21382
Joined: Fri Feb 04, 2005 11:26 pm

Re: "No Country for Old Men"

Post by Shafpocalypse Now »

No, the book is exactly like that.

Seriously.

User avatar

beefheart
Sergeant Commanding
Posts: 5524
Joined: Mon Jan 03, 2005 5:26 pm

Re: "No Country for Old Men"

Post by beefheart »

Shaf is not kidding. Except for Brolin's length of tooth, it was as close of an adaption of a novel as I have seen in nearly half a century of movie watching.
ab g-d wrote:I can't understand how, given the training they did, the cavemen beat the dinosaurs.

User avatar

Holy Cow
Top
Posts: 1778
Joined: Wed Jul 16, 2008 7:37 pm

Re: "No Country for Old Men"

Post by Holy Cow »

I don't remember the end dream sequence / metaphor thing entirely well, but I do remember that the book made more sense of it than the movie did. The book was able to do this because we got a lot of information directly from the old man, whose dream-thing you've got to interpret at the end. I can't recall the "meaning" of any of it without getting the book back out, though.

User avatar

Shaun B. O'Murnecan
Sergeant Commanding
Posts: 8624
Joined: Tue Mar 20, 2007 3:13 pm

Re: "No Country for Old Men"

Post by Shaun B. O'Murnecan »

Saw in the theater when it first came out. Thought it was amazing then. Picked up the DVD for nothing and watched it tonight. Very re-watchable. This will be a film I probably watch every nine months or so.

Usually films that rely heavily on suspense only work once or twice for me, but the pacing, cinematography, acting, and dialogue are perfect in this one. The end is brilliant.
Image

User avatar

Holland Oates
Lifetime IGer
Posts: 14137
Joined: Thu Feb 07, 2008 8:32 am
Location: GAWD'S Country
Contact:

Re: "No Country for Old Men"

Post by Holland Oates »

Great movie and a great book. Anton was the perfect bad mother.
Southern Hospitality Is Aggressive Hospitality

User avatar

Shafpocalypse Now
Lifetime IGer
Posts: 21382
Joined: Fri Feb 04, 2005 11:26 pm

Re: "No Country for Old Men"

Post by Shafpocalypse Now »

I just rewatched this and Eastern Promises.

I think I liked Eastern Promises a bit better, but it was a close call, but No Country for Old Men is visually stunning and astonishingly true to Mccarthy's book.

User avatar

vern
Top
Posts: 2340
Joined: Mon Oct 06, 2008 6:08 am
Location: Down in the cane brake, close by the mill

Re: "No Country for Old Men"

Post by vern »

I was soooooo happy that Eastern Promises DIDN'T end with a car chase.
“Wherever the crowd goes, run the other direction. They’re always wrong.” Bukowski


Dick Cracy
Recruit
Posts: 12
Joined: Sun Feb 14, 2010 12:56 am

Re: "No Country for Old Men"

Post by Dick Cracy »

Friend-O.
That character turned out better in the film than the book for me 'cause I never would have visualized him like that, nowhere near as close to perfect as that.
The movie ending was weakly done and didn't do shit for me, but hell, I read the book quite a while before seeing the movie and forgot so all the way through it was like deja vu Yogi Berra style. There were chemical additives with the movie though.

Eastern Promises, hey, I mean how beautiful was Viggo's role in that.
Steambath Viggo!

Post Reply