Here's our review,
Adapted from a novel by Cormac MaCarthy, this Coen brothers' movie is about the evil that men do. Like an unstoppable plague, this evil is represented in all its sick f**king glory by Javier Bardem's character. There has never been a more frightening villain in cinema, even with that hideously funny hair. At times the suspense created by the Coens is so thick it is almost unbearable and this adds to the film's brilliance as well.
Regards,
Either i dun understand or totally lost interest...Tis movie broke my record of fallin aslp in the theater for the 1st time.
Originally posted by RedizAlertz:Either i dun understand or totally lost interest...Tis movie broke my record of fallin aslp in the theater for the 1st time.
I'm guessing it's the former. Which part of the show did you start losing interest?
Saw this movie recently and it was simply awesome. And yeah, the suspense created by the Coen Brothers really kept me riveted to my seat, especially the gun battle at the hotel room.
Is it anything like Fargo?
Fargo was nice.
Originally posted by Paradise Lost:Saw this movie recently and it was simply awesome. And yeah, the suspense created by the Coen Brothers really kept me riveted to my seat, especially the gun battle at the hotel room.
No country for old men, no country for any soul.
A man would have to put his soul at hazard. He'd have to say, "Ok, I'll be part of this world."
It had me the minute Bardem strangled his first kill at the station. The
kick didn’t come from violence. It was how they manipulate tension with
precision.
Originally posted by maurizio13:Is it anything like Fargo?
Fargo was nice.
Im not too sure as I have not saw Fargo before. Hows the storyline like?
Originally posted by soleachip:No country for old men, no country for any soul.
A man would have to put his soul at hazard. He'd have to say, "Ok, I'll be part of this world."
It had me the minute Bardem strangled his first kill at the station. The kick didn’t come from violence. It was how they manipulate tension with precision.
Yeah, especially the part whereby they showed the furious boot marks made on the floor after the struggle.
Fargo was a sensible story. Story about a down and out man (WIlliam Macy) who hired 2 guys to kidnap his rich wife for ransom in winter. Things went wrong, and he lost grip on his sanity, killed his wife in the famous woodchipper scene.
But no country for old men was brilliant.
Originally posted by Paradise Lost:Yeah, especially the part whereby they showed the furious boot marks made on the floor after the struggle.
"Would you please hold still sir?"
Then he takes the second one down with an oxygen tank and hose. Innovative crime.