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As the Coen brothers' Oscar-winning 'No Country for Old
Men' arrives on DVD, we celebrate two of America's most original filmmaking
voices
By Richard T. Jameson Special to MSN Movies
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Lee Jones
There are hundreds of things thrillingly right with "No Country for Old Men," the Oscar-winning film from Joel and Ethan Coen, and the temptation to describe a few
dozen of them must be resisted at this time. But let's allow ourselves just one,
from early in the movie.
A Texan named Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin) has left his trailer-park home in the
middle of the night, climbed into his pickup, and driven to a remote area where,
the previous day, he happened upon a grisly scene. Moss pulls his truck right up
onto the rim overlooking the place, gets out, and starts walking down into the
gully where the bad thing happened.
Never mind what he's up to, especially since he may not be entirely sure
himself. He's come to a lonely and dangerous location where a shocking number of
people got themselves killed, and as he descends, somehow it matters that the
filmmakers keep his truck in view behind him, crisply silhouetted on the rim.
It's a small thing, but so satisfying. It means that whatever happens down
below, Moss still has a way out, a way back to the rest of the world.
But it also means more, is more. Just the sight of the truck is
peculiarly thrilling. The truck is unquestionably real, not a special effect,
yet there's a preternatural vividness about its stark black outline against the
charcoal night sky. Cinematically, it's too good to be just a truck -- it's the
corner of a pattern yet to be disclosed. And a minute later, after Moss has
discovered a gruesome new dimension to the scene in the gully, he looks back up
at the rim and sees that alongside the truck's silhouette is that of another
vehicle. And the silhouettes of men who now almost certainly will come to kill
him.
The Coen brothers, Ethan and Joel, have made 12 feature films in twice that
many years. Some of them are movies to which people return again and again, and
carry pieces of in their memory and nerve ends. Several of them no sane person
would revisit except under duress. But all are uniquely and unmistakably theirs.
These films transcend genres, categories, even separation into comedies and
dramas. They're Coen pictures, transpiring in a world all their own.
And yet the Coens and their films address, sometimes exhilaratingly, the
world we all share. More to the point, they create occasions where mundane world
and movie world intersect to our shivery satisfaction.
Consider their debut, that first, still-bounteous toy box of tension and
delight, "Blood Simple" (1984). It has a good story to tell -- and
tells it impeccably deadpan -- about a wife in a Texas town that seems to be all
edge-of-town, and the tavern-owner husband she doesn't love anymore, and the man
she wants to be with instead, and a grinning, resourceful lump of lard who's a
private detective with a private agenda. The situation plays out in two-hander
scenes with twists that take your breath away, before you can decide whether you
were going to use that breath to gasp or guffaw. But "Blood Simple" is also the
movie that vouchsafes these special pleasures:
- A point-of-view shot through the windshield of a car driving down a
country road; a flock of birds, in a field off to the right, suddenly taking
flight, rising, and crossing the road; the car reaching and passing through
that spot at just the moment the shadows of their vanished wings flicker
across our vision ...
- Two deliciously paranoid details to harass a man on an isolated road at
night with a body to bury: the scraping, demented music of a shovel being
dragged along the blacktop; and the headlights of a vehicle, beyond the
horizon yet unavoidably approaching, sending their rays high into the night
...
- Camera tracking smoothly down the length of a saloon bar, a familiar bit
of movie choreography that's about to be scuttled by the tipped-forward upper
body of a drunk -- until the camera simply lifts, passes over the obstacle,
and settles back down to bar-top level to continue its fluid itinerary ...
That last one is a self-conscious moviemaking joke (at which audiences
invariably chuckle conspiratorially). The others almost could be found art,
shards of experience and texture glimpsed where they lay. What all share is the
joy of, "We get to do this" -- to put into a film the kind of accidental,
trivial, evanescent, but piercingly evocative detail we've all noticed, while
walking along a lane or registering the tricks of perspective when looking out
of a moving vehicle, and thought, "Somebody ought to put that in a movie
sometime."
The Coens put stuff like that in movies all the time. That's one of the best
reasons for valuing them, and for not being stampeded by those critics --
professional and amateur -- who decry them as heartless ironists and mere
connoisseurs of the grotesque.
Then again, "the critics" have sometimes been startlingly obtuse about what a
couple of serious stylists might be up to. A lot of them looked at "Miller's Crossing" (1990), the brothers' third movie, and
saw only a shell game, an imitation old-fashioned gangster movie by a couple of
smart postmoderns. A few others (and legions of subsequent viewers on video and
DVD) saw a film of uncommon beauty and power -- the best picture of 1990.
Among other things, "Miller's Crossing" is a reverent, rigorous reimagining
of the world of Dashiell Hammett (especially "The Glass Key" and "Red Harvest").
Hammett's hard land is no country for sentimentalists, and a great deal of the
movie's lighting, staging, and narrative reticence is dedicated to defining the
character and existential principles of its protagonist, Tom Reagan (Gabriel Byrne), as a man who must conceal his deepest
feelings at all cost. The cunning right hand of Leo O'Bannon (Albert Finney), the political and underworld power broker of
their mythical "Eastern city in the United States, toward the end of the 1920s,"
Tom has to look out for Leo's interests when the boss' brashness may be his own
worst enemy -- though the field is crowded in that town. He also has to conceal
he's the lover of the very woman Leo, an aging boy, has fallen in love with.
Tom's being torn apart inside, and he can never, ever let it show for one
second, up to the very last shot of the film.
That doesn't sound like a frivolous agenda, for a proto-gangster or a couple
of filmmakers. As it happens, the two (three) have something in common. For the
Coens, "Miller's Crossing" first stirred to life with the image of a black hat
landing in a forest clearing, then sailing away down an avenue of trees. That
image supplies the movie's title shot, and later Tom describes something like it
as part of a dream he's had. Well might he dream of a hat: His own is a
constant, signatory presence, even when he's not wearing it, and he lives in the
shadow of its brim. For their part, the filmmakers began with the enigma of the
hat and then dreamed a world and a story to contain it. Contain it, not explain
it.
For the world of their next picture, the Coens moved deeper into their
collective imagination -- indeed, made the writerly imagination their overt
subject. "Barton Fink" (1991) tells of a smug playwright of the
social-realist strain (very like Clifford Odets, and brilliantly played by John Turturro) brought to Hollywood around 1940 to hammer
out a script for a schlocky studio boss (Harry Cohn aspiring to be Louis B.
Mayer and played by Oscar-nominated Michael Lerner). He gets writer's block instead
and goes certifiably nuts, with the assistance of the serial murderer next door
and a demonic mosquito.
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