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		No. 16 - 
				No Country for Old Men (2007) 
				
				Paramount Vantage/Scott Rudin Productions/Mike Zoss Productions, 
				Miramax Films 
				THERE ARE NO 
		CLEAN GETAWAYS 
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				No Country for Old Men (2007), 
				DML Rating: 
				★★★★★★★★★★ 
				- perfect 
		Directors and Screenwriters: Joel and Ethan Coen;
		
		Rated R for language and violence 
		Starring: Tommy Lee 
		Jones, Javier Bardem, Josh Brolin, Woody Harrelson, Kelly Macdonald, 
		Garret Dillahunt, Tess Harper, Barry Corbin, Beth Grant  
		Movie Introduction: While out hunting on the 
		Southwestern plain, Llewelyn Moss (Brolin) comes across the aftermath of 
		a grisly drug deal gone wrong. Everyone is shot to hell and dead except 
		one mortally wounded Mexican who begs Llewelyn for water. Llewelyn 
		tracks the last man alive (the “ultimo hombre”), finding him under a 
		lone tree, dead from his wounds, with a suitcase full of money. Llewelyn, 
		whose been down on his luck since Vietnam, decides to keep the cash, but 
		his guilt takes him back to the scene that night to take water to the 
		dying man. Other drug thugs also come on the scene, and almost kill 
		Llewelyn, but he escapes. However, they get is truck license number and 
		those interested set a merciless killer, Chigurh (Bardem) on his trail. 
		Also looking for Moss is local Sheriff Bell (Jones), an aging lawman, 
		who often reflects on a changing world. Bell knows the situation and he 
		wants to find Moss, to hopefully keep him alive.  
		 
		
		 Defining Moment: 
		the coin 
		flip 
		Chiguruh, already established as 
		a brutal murder, goes into a gas station and banters with the down-home 
		owner about what he owes. He wants the owner’s fate to rest upon a coin 
		flip, which the nervous owner reluctantly agrees to. The result of the 
		flip reveals a side of Chigurh we did not know existed: a code he will 
		not break.       
		
		Something subtle you might have missed:  Woody's connection 
		Sometimes facts are too damn 
		strange to make up. Apparently Woody Harrelson's father was a contract 
		killer in real life. He died in federal prison in Colorado for the 
		murder of Federal Judge John Howland Wood. He was paid $250,000 by Jimmy 
		Chagra to perform the hit. Woody plays Carson Wells in this film. 
		 
		Memorable Quotes: 
		 
		"If the rule you followed 
		brought you to this, of what use was the rule?" - Anton Chigurh 
		"All the time you spend trying 
		to get back what's been took from you, more is going out the back door. 
		You can't stop what's comin', they aren't waitin' on you - that's 
		vanity." - Ellis 
		
		Dad's Review: 
		
		America’s appetite for drugs has 
		created a deadly business called the drug trade. Most citizens are 
		unaware of it. Every Texas lawman lives it every day. Every year it gets 
		tougher to keep up. The bad guys are winning.  
		 
		This is the setting for No Country For Old Men. A drug deal goes 
		bad, and everyone dies. A savvy Vietnam vet, Llewelyn Moss, stumbles across 
		the death scene, and tracks the final living man who walked away from 
		the massacre. He finds him, dead 
		from his wounds, under a lone tree, in possession of a large black 
		suitcase of lots of money. After a lot of consternation, Moss decides to keep 
		the money. Bad idea. 
		 
		On the trail of the money is merciless hired killer (and complete 
		psychopath), Anton Chigurh. This guy is everyone’s worse nightmare. He 
		has the tracking device to the hidden transponder in the suitcase, so it’s only a matter of time 
		until he catches up with Llewelyn and the dough. This is going to end badly.  
		 
		
		 Caught 
		in the middle is Terrell County Sheriff Tom Bell. His main focus is to 
		find Llewelyn, and try to keep him safe, because he knows the kind of 
		killer that's hunting him. 
		 
		Chigurh (portrayed expertly by newcomer Javier Bardem) is a compelling 
		package of contradiction. He kills without hesitation especially if you 
		are in his way. Yet he has a strange set of rules he follows without 
		exception. He will refrain from murdering you if you show strength. He 
		may also flip a coin to decide your immediate future. Otherwise, he'll 
		use whatever tool he has available to terminate you without prejudice.  
		 
		 
		Via phone, Chigurh tells Llewelyn that he’s headed to El Paso to kill 
		his wife. He then offers: “So this is what I'll offer: you bring me the 
		money and I'll let her go. Otherwise she's accountable, the same as you. 
		That's the best deal you're going to get. I won't tell you (that) you 
		can save yourself, because you can't.” By this point in the film, we 
		know that he will follow through. 
		
		 
		Sheriff Bell is also a compelling 
		character. A man on the verge of retiring. He has witnessed the crime in 
		his part of the world get more and more severe. He also expected more 
		out of life, as if somehow, he'd reach enlightenment in his old age. But 
		none of that has happened. Here he remains, still a part of the 
		violence. Unable to stop it, just hoping he can survive it.
		
		 
		This taut thriller will keep you on 
		edge of your seat. The suspense is intense as Chigurh mercilessly 
		pursues Llewelyn and the money. Our poor sheriff is always two steps 
		behind, usually only able to witness the deadly aftermath of events he 
		could not prevent.  
		 
				Onto No. 17: Space Venue: The 
		Anger of Genghis 
		  
		  
		  
		  
		  
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