No Country For Old Men

1824 Words4 Pages

I will be analyzing the film, No Country for Old Men. First, it is one of my favorite films of all time and not because I am a Coen brothers band wagoner. I do appreciate the Coen brothers skill in directing, writing, and producing. But my appreciation for this film may be connected to my love of Josh Brolin and Tommy Lee Jones’ performances. Javier Bardem gives a brilliant performance too, obviously, I am not the only person that thinks this, as he won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance. The Coen brothers also took home top honors from the Academy for Best Motion Picture, Best Achievement in Directing, Best Writing (adapted screenplay), and Best Achievement in Editing (as Roderick Jaynes). No Country for Old Men was also nominated for Best Achievement in Sound Editing and Best Cinematography. It is a dark tale of three men from different walks of life whose paths …show more content…

It begins and ends with Sheriff Bell narrating in voice over while the long shots of landscape shift. In the beginning of the film it is the start of the day as the sun is rising, images of early morning in west Texas and parched ground. In the last voice over, as Sheriff Bell’s journey has come to an end, he recounts a dream about his father. He is sharing this dream with his wife over morning coffee, but the images of evening and late night and snow on the ground is in complete contrast to the opening wide landscape shots. It makes for a completeness, bookends for the film. This final monologue continues in the theme of nostalgia and shifting times. Sheriff Bell is retiring after this last case of senseless violence, with the killing of multiple people in an El Paso motel, lawmen and drug dealers and innocent bystanders shot down in daylight. Sheriff Bell is ready to move on, or maybe move back to a simpler time. The film ends with a fade out of what he describes as a fire horn, light fading in the

More about No Country For Old Men

Open Document