by Christopher Barr
“The crime you see
now, it’s hard to even take its measure.
It’s not that I’m afraid of it. I
always knew you had to be willin’ to die to even do this job. But, I don’t want to push my chips forward
and go out and meet somethin’ I don’t understand. A man would have to put his soul at
hazard. He’d have to say: ‘O.K., I’ll be
part of this world.’ "
- Sheriff Ed Tom
Bell
“Once you quit hearing
‘sir’ and ‘ma’am’, the rest is soon to follow.”
No Country for Old Men was about a man that got his hands on two million dollars of drug
money from a cartel deal, in rural West Texas, gone wrong. Instead of
reporting the money or the site that he discovered where several men have been
shot and killed, Llewelyn Moss decides to keep the money for himself. As
a result he ends up getting a psychopathic killer named Anton Chigurh on his
trail, a man that is an evil force of nature that will stop at nothing to
retrieve the money and kill Llewelyn. As Chigurh closes in on Llewelyn
the blood trail they leave behind begins to flow like a river. While the
pursuit unfolds, a laconic sheriff, Ed Tom Bell blithely investigates the
carnage path left behind as he struggles with the enormity of the crimes themselves
and their seemingly meaningless nature.
The film was
beautifully shot by the always clever masterminds that are the Cohen
Brothers. The story was based on a Cormac McCarthy novel of the same
name. The story at its core is about right and wrong, good versus evil,
man versus himself and each other. It’s a reflection of the direction
civilization is heading if we are to remain on our current path of progress, a path where greed
and power outweigh the health and safety of the less fortunate and worse, the
future of the next generation.
No Country for Old Men
is best when it is understood as an allegory. Not quite to the level of
the Cohen Brothers’ Homeric comedy O
Brother Where Art Thou? (2000)
but certainly echoing Dante’s Divine
Comedy with a specific focus
on the first of three parts of the epic poem, The Inferno. I would argue
that the film’s characters rather than its mixed structure are Shakespearian in
nature. Unlike Dante’s realized characters of his comedy, Shakespeare’s
are all tragic in such a way, as they are usually the reason for their own fall
but are oblivious to that fact. Sometimes, even when it’s too late they can’t
see it or certainly don’t want to see it, like in the case of Richard III.
This tragedy is most
noticeable though in Hamlet as oppose to the more obvious downfall
of Macbeth. Hamlet
represents the death of the fantasy; we ruin our own lives, not the drama
that surrounds it. We do this by the choices we make and by the action we
take. Shakespeare’s psychological message here and most paradoxically is;
we ruin our lives but it was going to happen anyway. One is left with
feeling somewhat responsible for their overwhelmingly lack of free will.
Shakespeare’s characters set their own stage and travelled down a path that
they couldn’t see their uncontrolled desire for unattainable freedom.
If in Dante’s Comedy
the angelic figure of Beatrice is to be taken symbolically and not literally,
as she should be, then we are left with the conclusion that Beatrice is who
Dante wants us to be. He sees the secular Vigil as a man that understands
the path of real men in our real world but Beatrice is the beacon of light that
hangs miles ahead of us. Therein lies Dante’s conflict within his poem
because, unlike Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Dante witnesses a form of infinite
horror. Had Hamlet come before Dante, which is oddly like saying had you
come before your father, he would have had a place in Dante’s Inferno. He
almost would have made it into the less treacherous Purgatory but Hamlet’s
psychological motives did finally become realized in his actions, even if it
took him most of the play to get there.
No Country for Old Men
approaches the Divine Comedy from a more tragic trajectory - backwards.
Tommy Lee Jones’s character Ed Tom, is the beacon of hope here where the Josh
Brolin’s character Llewelyn is in purgatory and Javier Bardem’s character
Chigurh is the manifestation of the inferno. These main characters have
their various interactions, some more bloody than others, but in the end they
don’t knock each other off their respective paths. Ed Tom doesn’t catch
up to Llewelyn and help him off his downward spiral. Chigurh doesn’t
catch and kill Llewelyn and Ed Tom never faces off against Chigurh. These
characters’ paths were already made by them, this can easily be seen as them
slipping into a form of preordained fate - but it isn’t that at all. They
as characters made their choices much in the same way as Hamlet did but as
symbols, Ed Tom retired the old ways of ‘yes sir’ ‘yes ma’am’ politeness,
Llewelyn died as a result of ego and greed and Chigurh, whose the
personification of the unruly, unforgiving world and thus can’t die.
I think Llewelyn had
to die, symbolically, so we are able to see that there is no future for
mankind, if we try to get ahead on our own and not as a unified species.
Like Hamlet, Llewelyn tried to make his quest a solitary one, this is fine when
one is seeking enlightenment but when one seeks prosperity to its own selfish
end, one must realize that the future of mankind depends on all hands on deck,
not by one’s hands in the treasure chest and damn everyone else.
As Nietzsche pointed
out, it’s not human suffering that bothers people, its pointless
suffering. This is where the film explores its nihilistic angle, if
people don’t believe there is any point to their death, if they see
meaninglessness and irrationality at work, then what is the point to
life? I think that’s why Llewelyn dies in an anti-climatic way, the chaos
and ruthlessness that fuels the man chasing him, stripped Llewelyn of what
little meaning he had in his life. This was also the point where the
insignificant plot about money and drug cartels disappears and the focus is put
on the actual protagonist of the film, Ed Tom and his quest for meaning in a
meaningless universe.
This nihilism is
further explored in Chigurh’s coin flip. The gas attendant was not killed
by Chigurh at the beginning of the film because he guessed ‘correctly’, while
toward the end of the film, Llewelyn’s wife, Carla Jean died because she
didn’t. Ed Tom didn’t confront Chigurh in the motel room after Llewelyn’s
death, even though he seen his reflection in the door tube where Chigurh had
blown the lock through, and Chigurh at the end getting into a car accident, all
represented chance. Not only do we live under the illusion of free will
but we also live under the whims of chance in the universe. Although
Chigurh has remnants of a Greek god of chaos, an avatar of death, he uses ‘sir’
and ‘ma’am’ and follows many of the rules invented by men, but adds to the
undefinable chaos that he unleashes on his unsuspecting victims, while
attempting to psychologically disarm them to free up his own sick need to
kill. Like the Joker in The Dark Knight, Chigurh’s madness is unquantifiable
by psychological standards; they are both ‘agents of chaos’ that only
wish to ‘watch the world burn’.
“Momma, take this badge offa me, …I feel I’m knockin’ on heaven’s
door.”
– Bob Dylan
Good versus evil
becomes no longer significant is this chaotic world which leaves our values in
many ways, not applicable. Good in this form of chaos cannot triumph in
the ways we would like it to, like in the case of Llewelyn dying or in the case
of Ed Tom retiring. Chaos on the other hand can be shot and survive a
serious car crash, only to walk down the street and into the future.
The interesting thing
about the car accident is the car that smashed into Chigurh’s failed to stop at
the red light, failed to halt according to the rules of the road. Chigurh
was following the rules of the road and proceeded as one would through the
green light. One must then reflect on an earlier line of dialogue by Chigurh;
“If the rule you followed brought you to this, of what use was the rule?”
This is likely a question about the ever expanding universe itself versus the
security we all think we have built for ourselves.
This film seeks some
comfort in Ed Tom’s telling of his dream in its last minutes, where his father
makes a fire for him up ahead, as he travels on horseback in the mountains
through the dark stormy bleak night. This is where the film doesn’t let
its audience off the hook and likely is why so many have disliked the
ending. Ed Tom was the shinning knight on horseback to save the day but
he didn’t. He quit and left the crazy world behind him. He gave up
because he finally realized that he can’t “stop what is coming”.
During a coffee break
at a relative’s place at the end of the film, Ed Tom speaks to an old feller in
a wheelchair about the chaos of the world and the absurdity of what he is
chasing, stating; “I don’t
know. I feel overmatched. …I always thought when I got older God
would sort of come into my life in some way. He didn’t. I don’t
blame him. If I was him I’d have the same opinion about me that he
does.” Life didn’t turn
out the way he thought it would and Ed Tom is angry about that fact. He’s
angry that his father wouldn’t like the man that he’s become, a man in
retreat. Like in his above quote relating to God, Ed Tom has the same
opinion about himself as he thinks his father would.
The great irony of No
Country for Old Men, relating to Macbeth is; it
is a tale told by idiots. Its characters and narrative is a chaotic
mess, with no order or structure in its message, this is demonstrated when the
capricious Chigurh at the end, confronts Carla Jean, after her mother’s funeral
no less, and gets her to choose a side of his coin flip. Chigurh is attempting
to push his chaos theory on everything but Carla Jean refuses and thus proves
to be freer then he is. We must go back to philosophy and apply
reason and meaning to this whirlwind of chaos. We need to structure our
thoughts and organize our lives; we must never retreat to save ourselves
because we think we are special and are worth saving above all others, while we
face the evil in the world. ........That would be vanity.
Thus Spoke Zarathustra:
It is time for man to
fix his goal. It is time for man to plant the seed of his highest
hope.
His soil is still rich
enough for it. But that soil will one day be poor and exhausted, and no
lofty tree will any longer be able to grow there.
Alas! There
comes the time when man will no longer launch the arrow of his longing beyond
man - and the string of his bow will have unlearned to whiz!
I tell you: one must
still have chaos in oneself, to give birth to a dancing star. I tell you:
you have still chaos in yourselves.
Alas! There
comes the time when man will no longer give birth to any star.
Alas! There comes the time of the most despicable man, who can no longer
despise himself.
Lo! I show you
the Last Man.
"What is
love? What is creation? What is longing? What is a
star?" - so asks the Last Man, and blinks. - Friedrich Nietzsche
popcornflix - The message of this film is that there is no symmetry to life. What goes around does not come around. The fall of the coin has no bearing on the way the cookie crumbles. There is no right or wrong to the fates of men. No justice. Opportunities seized may lead on to fortune, but they could just as well lead on to dusty death. Only children expect things to be fair. As things once were they need no longer be. Now that IMDb has decided to list reviews by date there is a slightly increased possibility that this effort will be read by someone. Performance reviews are absolutely not read by me for helpfulness, but for interest and entertainment.
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