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Movie review | Coen Brothers bring McCarthy novel to silver screen

Three out of five stars

Cory Lewis

Issue date: 11/13/07 Section: Arts
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While a surprisingly large number of movies are based on novels, rarely does a film's effect on its audience match the novel's effect on its readers. Luckily, "No Country for Old Men" succeeds in this arena. Ethan and Joel Coen - "Fargo" (1996), "The Big Lebowski" (1998) - have joined Billy Bob Thornton, who directed "All the Pretty Horses" (2000), in the category of successful Cormac McCarthy adaptors. While viewers should have a bit of a stomach for realistic shots of carnage, "No Country for Old Men" is well worth the price of admission, and will leave audience members mulling over the information for days.

In the true fashion of the Coen brothers' movies, the plot of the film is initially confusing, but it is tied together quite well as the story plays out - coming to a thrilling philosophical climax. The story opens to Llewelyn Moss (played by Josh Brolin), a blue-collar metal-welder from West Texas, who is out hunting when he stumbles upon a drug deal gone horribly wrong. Not far off from the collection of bullet riddled pick-up trucks and bodies at the scene, Llewelyn uses his hunting prowess to spot the perpetrator of the killings lying dead under a tree, with a briefcase full of money on his lap.

The briefcase and the allure of its contents are naturally too much for a poor welder to resist, setting off a strange and thrilling chain of catastrophic violence. A wild chase through the bleak expanse of West Texas ensues, complete with drug cartels, murder, a psychopathic mercenary named Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) and a whole lot of shooting. It all goes down right under the nose of the law, Sheriff Ed Tom Bell (Tommy Lee Jones), a jaded but shrewd man who just wants to get Moss out of trouble.

As Moss tries to escape his pursuers, he ignores several opportunities to get out of his predicament, in the form of yet another mercenary Carson Wells (Woody Harrelson), Sheriff Bell and Chigurh. The result is that Moss must pay for his mistakes, putting the people he loves in harm's way. The film peels the wrapper off the plight of lower class America and shows that no matter what, choices always come with consequences. As Chigurh so philosophically states, "We all get what's comin' to us."
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