8.5 | / 10 |
Users | 4.4 | |
Reviewer | 5.0 | |
Overall | 4.5 |
Llewelyn Moss finds a pickup truck surrounded by a sentry of dead men. A load of heroin and two million dollars in cash are still in the back trunk. When Moss takes the money, he sets off a chain reaction of catastrophic violence that not even the law—namely aging, disillusioned Sheriff Bell—can contain. Moss tries to evade his pursuers, in particular a mysterious mastermind who flips coins for human lives.
Starring: Tommy Lee Jones, Javier Bardem, Josh Brolin, Woody Harrelson, Kelly MacdonaldDrama | 100% |
Crime | 91% |
Thriller | 70% |
Period | 60% |
Film-Noir | 25% |
Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
English: LPCM 5.1 (48kHz, 16-bit)
English: Dolby Digital 5.1 (640 kbps)
English SDH, French, Spanish
50GB Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
Region free
Movie | 5.0 | |
Video | 5.0 | |
Audio | 4.5 | |
Extras | 4.0 | |
Overall | 5.0 |
A satchel packed with two million dollars in cash. A pressurized canister used to punch holes in
deadbolts and skulls. A West Texas stage of flatlands, small towns and old-fashioned, honest folk.
These props, places and people, molded by the skillful hands of filmmakers Joel and Ethan Coen,
float on the surface of a deeper melodrama that has played out since the beginning of time: the
battle of good versus evil and the role of fate in shaping the fight. Based on the novel by Cormac
McCarthy, No Country for Old Men is unconventional and brilliant, earning four Academy
Awards, including best picture, best director and best screenplay adaptation. And the BD-50 may
deliver the best video definition you will ever see.
Set in the 1970s, the story focuses
on three main characters, sheriff Ed Tom Bell (Tommy Lee Jones), Lewellyn Moss (Josh Brolin)
and Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem), who embody law, the average man and lawlessness,
respectively. Moss hangs suspended somewhere between light and darkness. A twist of fate
thrusts him into a fight against evil, even though he never consciously chose to participate in it.
But fighting the surging force of evil is Bell's lifelong call of duty, and that of his father and his
father's father--three generations of Texan sheriffs. For Bell, this call of duty is a haunting,
elusive exercise. He can reconcile the threat of evil on a physical level and intellectual level, but
not a spiritual level.
As the sheriff says in the narration that opens the film. "You can
say it's my job to fight it but I don't know what it is anymore. More than that, I don't want to
know. A man would have to put his soul at hazard." This notion of testing one's soul against evil
is frequently explored on film; but rarely as dramatically and disarmingly as in No Country for
Old Men. The test is portrayed as glibly as the flip of a coin; temporally as a cat-and-mouse
shootout; and as spiritually as Bell's pursuit of the other characters, the way he is haunted by the
darkness of humanity and his acceptance that he can never shine a light on it.
Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) sets a new standard for psychopathic villains. Bardem's performance earned an Academy Award for best supporting actor.
With its AVC MPEG-4 video on BD-50, the picture quality of No Country for Old Men
stands on the highest rung of the home video ladder. Color vibrancy, black level, resolution and
contrast are reference quality. Together, the specifications add up to lifelike detail; skin so
realistically colored and textured you'd think you could touch it; depth so convincing it will put
you in the middle of the landscapes and action. There is simply no way to overstate the quality of
the video, from the way the Coen brothers shot the film to the way it was produced in 1080p.
The Prestige and Bridge to Terabithia come close, but No Country may
be in class of video quality by itself. Contributing to the immediacy of the imagery is the Coens'
unflinching look at the unique characters. Every line and wrinkle in Bell's face is resolved and
Chigurh sports a pageboy haircut in which every strand of hair appears individually
distinguishable. No other film brings its characters to life so vividly solely on the merits of visual
technicalities.
Unlike many films on Blu-ray, No Country does not shy away from lingering on the
makeup used to portray blood and wounds. With the level of detail possible at 1080p, makeup
and special effects can be problematic, but this movie shows gunshot wounds close up, and they
appear ultrarealistic. After one of the main characters suffers a shotgun blast to the leg, the
camera shows the
wound as the injured man cleans and disinfects it, injects the surrounding skin with lidocaine,
removes pieces
of buckshot and dresses the wound. Throughout the scene, the camera lingers on the skin as it
oozes blood and exposes a nasty circular radiation of blast pellets. But mostly, the scene delivers
reference-quality video footage that shows the wound so convincingly, it elicits winces and groans
from everyone in the audience.
And the closeups are the least of it. Sweeping scenery
like that of Moss walking in the desolate plains early in the film best shows why No
Country is a visual stunner. Nearly every shrub appears in gorgeous detail, stretching off into
the distance. A lone tree in the countryside appears in mesmerizing definition, with seemingly
every
leaf individually resolved. The earthtones of chaparral, ground and sky gracefully complement
their
respective
forms. Dark scenes are equally impressive, predominantly noise-free, even in areas of inky blacks.
Watch the nighttime shoot-out between Moss and Chighur outside the hotel. The dark streets
come alive with detail, highlights and sharpness bursting from the screen with the impact of the
gunshots themselves. As bullets slam through the windshield of Moss' getaway car, watch as
every crack and bullet hole in the glass is extraordinarily defined.
While the video is reference quality, the audio performance of No Country is not, but few
will have complaints. Listen to Bell's narrative that
opens the film. The center channel delivers a detailed presentation of Tommy Lee Jones' voice
with good microdetail and macrodetail in the casual, drawl and delivery. The audio is ever so
slightly constricted, colored and thin. But overall, the 24-bit 48 kHz lossless
PCM serves voices well, and excels in more treble-prone sounds. Technically, the 5.1 PCM yields
4.6 Mbps. The BD sounds at times like well-engineered Dolby Digital; at other times more open
and detailed. Subtleties in the sounds of car and engines, explosions and especially firearms are
easily resolved.
Perhaps the most audibly dynamic sequence is the
dawn chase scene after Moss returns with water. Close your eyes and listen to Moss' breathing
and footsteps as he runs, the truck in pursuit as it labors over rocks and shrubs, the crack of
the rifle and hissing of bullets as they rip through the air and hit the ground. When Moss reaches
the river, other sounds filter in: flowing water, the initial barks and panting of the pitbull, the
clicking of Moss' handgun
as he emerges from the water, checks the chamber, blows into the barrel, replaces the clip, fires
a shot, the yelp of the dog and the thud as the bodies hit the ground, the far-off rumble of
thunder. The whizzing bullets sound especially
impressive. With no soundtrack or large crowds, the soundscape is sparce. The entire sequence
and the film
overall sounds very convincing. Almost no effects are assigned to the surround channels--only
some incidental ambient sound, adding to the realism and immediacy of the action.
At first inventory, the bonus features appear disappointing because they are in standard definition
with two-channel audio. And by-and-large they are disappointing, but some solid material and
revealing content is included--particularly with the Coen brothers
themselves.
Working with the Coens: Reflections of Cast and Crew (8 minutes)
includes mostly meaningless banter from Javier Bardem and the other actors gushing about their
chance to work with Joel and Ethan Coen. But it is the moments with the brothers themselves
that are rewarding. They are very quirky, but appear more mature and "PR-savvy" than they
came across in the '90s.
The Making of No Country For Old Men (24 minutes)
is the gem of the supplementary material. It includes important discussions with Joel and Ethan
Coen regarding their inspiration to adapt the book into a film, and some nuts and bolts of
production. Jones, Bardem and Brolin also play a big role in this featurette.
Diary of a County Sheriff (7 minutes) covers sheriff Bell from several angles. Much of the
seven minutes are spent comparing Bell to Chigurh, but frankly I find the comparison between
Moss and Chigurh more apropos. Unfortunately, no such featurette is included.
Fans of
the Coen brothers hoping for a commentary track will be disappointed. It is not surprising that
the featurettes are somewhat lacking with only four short months between the film's debut in
theaters and its release on BD and DVD.
What makes No Country for Old Men so unconventional? Several factors, but the main
reason is no final showdown in the classic sense. This lack of conventional resolution led to undue
criticism from those who did not understand the story. Part of the film's appeal and genius lies in
the way it dispenses with tying up the loose ends of conflict/resolution as deftly as it sets them
up. The juxtaposition of Moss and Chigurh is fascinating. We watch them operate with
comparable efficiency, both sustain injuries, both treat themselves. Both are motivated by the
money. Both are skillful with firearms. We learn that Moss has served two tours in Vietnam.
Chigurh's past is never revealed but, unlike Moss, he lacks any hint of remorse or conscience and
he believes only in fate.
Characters as strong as these are not new to the Coen
brothers. But in the Coens' earlier films like Fargo, the most brutal violence was often
followed by quirky levity than can be described as comic relief. Even the most horrific acts, for
example when a man is ground into tiny pieces, are minimized by farcical dialogue: "I guess that
was your accomplice in the woodchipper." The sardonic humor, quirky facial expressions and odd,
lilting accents are all legitimate devices that make Coen brothers films endearing and special to
audiences. But those moments of levity are nowhere to be found in No Country. One can
argue it is the first film from the Coens in which they despensed with the comic relief and made a
movie that doesn't flinch from its own narrative flow or bend under its own weight.
In
no way does this minimize the importance and success of the Coen's earlier body of work. As in
Shakespeare's plays, comic relief makes the tragedy easier to take. And let's face it: part of the
Coen brothers' gift is their sense of humor and timing. But to successfully tackle a story like
No Country, they needed to dispense with humor for the most part, and I'm glad they
did. Had they made this film in the 1990s, dialogue like that during the coin flip scene in the
convenience store would have been peppered with humor. Instead, the Coens made sure the
drama escalated with no hint of levity. The Coens simply execute. That is a great achievement for
No Country because its real message is not tragic. It is merely an observation: evil can
never be defeated, but when you're no longer gung-ho to face it and fight it, it's time to step
aside.
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