Hot Indie News
Hot Indie News
Hot Indie News   HOT INDIE NEWS
Indie News Resource for Movies, Music, Politics, and more...
 

this site the web
Hot Indie News
NEWS
  Entertainment News
  Environmental News
  Fashion News
  Political News
  Sports News
  Technology News
  Other News
Hot Indie News
REVIEWS
  Movie Reviews
  Music Reviews
  Restaurant Reviews
  Other Reviews
Hot Indie News
INTERACT
  MySpace.com
  Yahoo! Groups
Hot Indie News
ABOUT US
  Contact Us
  Mission Statement
  Privacy Statement
Hot Indie News
MOVIE REVIEWS

No Country for Old Men (2007) - Movie Review

By Tingyu Shen, HOT INDIE NEWS .com

Date Published: August 25, 2008

No Country for Old Men (2007) - Movie Review Directors: Joel and Ethan, the Coen Brothers
Rating: 10/10

I have loved the Coen Brothers’ movies ever since I watched "Fargo" four years ago. I didn’t think they would ever make a movie than that. Now I feel stupid for doubt their abilities. It is rare when a film makes you feel that whatever the highest rating score I can give or whatever I can write would never be enough to do justice to the movie. The movie has a couple of entwining stories with Josh Brolin, Javier Bardem, Tommy Lee Jones, and Woody Harrelson collaborating to make this movie perfect.

The movie is essentially a chase. We meet two characters, one a psychopathic killer played by Bardem who is later revealed to be chasing Josh Brolin’s character, who stumbles upon a drug deal gone wrong, takes the money, and we later meet a sheriff (Jones) who tried to protect Brolin and his family, and a bounty hunter (Harrelson) who tried in vain to stop Chigurh (Bardem). Confused? Trust me, it sounds more confusing than the actual movie, or the book. Having read the book, I have to say that this is probably one of the only instances than the book is not as good as the movie.

Javier Bardem may be a stranger to most Americans, but he is an established international star who had made movies with Milos Forman, Pedro Almodovar, Julien Schnabel, and Michael Mann. He was the paralyzed man in "The Sea Inside," and he had collaborated with Penelope Cruz, Johnny Depp, and Sean Penn. I am personally familiar with the work of the actor, and it came to be as no surprise that the Coen Brothers chose him, except that I really did not foresee him being such a creepy and frightening presence. How can I describe Anton Chigurh? All I can do is to ask you to imagine a less well educated, but likewise polite, and even more brutal Hannibal Lecter who doesn’t eat people. Yeah, that’s the best I can do.

Aside from Bardem’s acting, the other actors were superb as well. Especially Tommy Lee Jones. His role reminded me of his performance in "The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada", which featured a similarly hard-boiled character with a similarly unforgiving landscape. Josh Brolin is everywhere this year, including "American Gangster", "In the Valley of Ellah", and "Grindhouse". He’s been busy and it’s no wonder so many directors cast him. He brings toughness to his character that is just what this movie needs.

The movie is deeply influenced by Alfred Hitchcock, well, let’s face it, Hitchcock invented all chases. But I love the fact that the Coen Brothers stage no elaborate car chases lesser directors would surely have done so; instead, they use this movie as an observation post to let the audience discover the characteristics of the characters by themselves. It takes guts to make a movie as good, as edgy, and as uncompromising as this one. Infused with sharp humor that has become the Coen Brothers’ signature, "No Country for Old Men", with not doubt in my mind and among stiff competition from other great movies, was the best movie of 2007. It was also the best movie from the last 20 years, best since Wim Wender’s magnum opus "Wings of Desire" in 1987.


MORE INFORMATION
  • http://nocountryforoldmen.com

  • Hot Indie News
    advertisement
    Hot Indie News
    LATEST UPDATES
  • A.L.X.: No Eyes for the Future - Music Review
  • Gamma Ray: Land Of The Free - II - Music Review
  • Baskervilles: Twilight - Music Review
  • Polydream: Send Me To The Sun - Music Review
  • The Stately Gentlemen: The Hyperion Sessions - Music Review
  • Dave Barnes: Me And You And The World - Music Review
  • Radium 88: Metamorphosis - Music Review
  • Grayscale: That Flawless Flashing Day - Music Review
  • Tenby: Tenby - Music Review
  • Yesan Damen: Chronos/Kairos - Music Review
  • The Milwaukees: American Anthems Vol. 1 - Music Review
  • Transistor Radio: A Legacy Between - Music Review
  • Painted Saints: The Bricks Might Breathe Again - Music Review
  • The Red Plastic Buddha: Sunflower Sessions - Music Review
  • The Mission Veo: New York Scum - Music Review
  • affiliate sites
      Class6pr.com
      HotIndieClassifieds.com
      HotIndieLinks.com
      HotIndieMedia.com
      HotIndiePolitics.com
      HotIndieRecords.com
      HotIndieTalent.com
      HotIndieVideos.com
      M3radio.com
      MiaMindMusic.com
      VideoCity.tv
    Hot Indie Erotica
    advertisement
    Hot Indie Erotica

    Hot Indie News
    All contents © 2004-2008 HotIndieNews.com unless otherwise specified.
    Web hosting for this site is provided by Webair.com