NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN

November 10, 2009

This will be one of the shortest reviews in history, and certainly the shortest anything I have ever banged out.

No Country For Old Men is near perfect. At equal turns harrowing, terrifying, hilarious, and honest, this film is as brutal and unflinching as anything seen on American screens in quite some time.

Career-best work from writers/directors Joel and Ethan Coen. Brilliant performances by Tommy Lee Jones and especially Josh Brolin, who redefines his career here. Towering over everything is the astonishing Javier Bardem as villain Anton Chigurh. We now have the successor to Anthony Hopkins’ Hannibal Lecter thanks to Bardem’s magnetic and unforgettable performance.

Don’t listen to what others have said about the ending – it perfectly captures the hopelessness and bleakness that drenches this film.

Four words: GO SEE IT IMMEDIATELY!

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1-31-10

With the DGA and the Producer’s Guild lining up behind Kathryn Bigelow’s The Hurt Locker, it’s pretty much guaranteed to take the Oscars for Best Picture and Best Director. And that’s a good thing; it was the best film of 2009 in a weak year. Just as long as Avatar doesn’t win, I’m fine.

1-29-10

It’s hard to believe that Miramax will now be absorbed into Disney and will disappear forever. This is the studio that produced gems like Pulp Fiction, Sex, Lies, and Videotape, and Clerks. Of course, it also produced over-hyped crap like The English Patient and The Aviator.

Hmm … perhaps it was for the best after all.

1-22-10

My first thought when I saw these promotional stills for the upcoming Oscar show was: “Geez, Steve Martin looks like he’s lost or in the beginning stages of Alzheimer’s.” My second thought was: “Man, this show is going to feel like it’s Oscars 1978.”

1-21-10

This is a surprisingly in-depth look behind the scenes at the making of Avatar. Like the movie itself, there is very little attention paid to the story, while the effects take center stage.

1-20-10

This news segment is interesting in that it shows how defensive and weird Mel Gibson has become in recent years. That 2006 anti-Semitic remark still haunts him. I say it’s time to move on.

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