filmnoir

No Country For Old Men

No Country For Old Men (Directors: Joel and Ethan Coen, USA, 2007): Based on the Cormac McCarthy novel of the same name, No Country For Old Men is a wel­come return to form from the Coen brothers. The West Texas set­ting and the noirish storyline recall their first film, Blood Simple (1984), but with more than twenty addi­tional years of film­making exper­i­ence as well as strong source material, this is a much more accom­plished film. Josh Brolin turns in an excel­lent per­form­ance as Llewellyn Moss, a pre­ma­turely “retired” welder who stumbles upon a crime scene while hunting in the desert. It’s obvious that it’s a drug deal gone bad, and among the bodies and shot-up pickup trucks is a suit­case full of cash. Finding the tempta­tion too strong, he takes the money. From there, he is pur­sued relent­lessly by Javier Bardem, sent in as “the per­fect tool” to retrieve the money. Tommy Lee Jones is the inef­fec­tual but philo­soph­ical sheriff whose des­pair finally gets the better of him.

Bardem’s per­form­ance, while seem­ingly over the top, is remark­able. He is less a person than a force. While Tommy Lee Jones rep­res­ents the law, Bardem is law­less­ness, chaos and death all rolled into one. And yet he fol­lows his own twisted logic, tying up all loose ends according to his own code of ethics.

The film fol­lows a very simple storyline, and the lack of a musical score keeps the sus­pense at almost unbear­able levels. Bardem’s intro­duc­tion also leaves the viewer unsure what he will do in any given scene for the rest of the film. Brolin is the not quite inno­cent but still sym­path­etic victim-hero of the story, and as he mem­or­ably says to his wife early in the film, “Stuff hap­pens. I can’t take it back.” Indeed, stuff hap­pens. And you won’t be able to look away while it does.

Trailer
Official site for the film

9/10(9/10)

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Brick

by James McNally on March 31, 2007 · 1 comment

in DVD

Brick

Brick (Director: Rian Johnson, USA, 2005): After meeting Joseph Gordon-Levitt at SXSW a few weeks ago, I was determ­ined to track down this film, in which he plays a high school stu­dent whose ex-girlfriend turns up dead. The inter­esting thing is that this is not a typ­ical teen movie, but instead is a highly styl­ized film noir, with hard­boiled dia­logue right out of the 1940s. It just hap­pens to be set in a con­tem­porary California high school.

Gordon-Levitt’s per­form­ance as Brendan is spot-on, and each of the young actors come across as fully com­mitted to the unusual and intricate script. The only draw­back is that some of the dia­logue is spoken so quickly and softly that it can make the com­plic­ated plot hard to follow. I almost con­sidered turning on the sub­titles. But I figured that this is a film that I’ll want to watch a few times, so I’ll just let the dia­logue work its way gradu­ally into my mind. An auda­cious debut from Rian Johnson, dir­ecting from his own script.

Official Film Site

9/10(9/10)

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