Posts tagged as:

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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