This modern day classic would have done Hitchcock proud.
By Elise Nakhnikian
”It’s very good that the Coens took the words Cormac wrote and didn’t try to ‘improve’ them,” said Tommy Lee Jones, sounding a lot like the master of understatement he plays in the movie, after a New York Film Festival press screening of No Country for Old Men.
Joel and Ethan Coen were incredibly faithful to Cormac McCarthy’s tale of an unstoppable killer and the good man he has on the run when they adapted it for the screen — but then you’d expect as much from two such smart cookies. With its distinctive and near-mythic characters, vivid imagery, spectacular violence, propulsive pacing, comic relief and minimalist dialogue, the novel is nothing if not “cinematic”: Take out some description, collapse a few scenes, and run it through Final Draft and you’ve got yourself a kick-butt screenplay.
What I hadn’t expected was the way McCarthy and the Coens bring out the best in each other. Both the novelist and the filmmakers take a pretty dim view of people in general, though apparently for different reasons. McCarthy’s bleak pessimism seems to spring from a despairing view of human nature as essentially feral, while the coldness that characterizes much of the Coens’ work feels like the contempt a couple of smart, nerdy boys turn back on the crowd that once froze them out. Merging the two sensibilities, No Country for Old Men brings out the Coens’ often latent humanity and lightens McCarthy’s sometimes oppressively dark tone by a shade or two.
McCarthy’s story takes the Coens back to Texas, where they started their career more than 20 years ago with their own Blood Simple. But instead of the mouth-breathing yokel caricatures of their clever but snarky debut, this tale features a rich range of fully rounded characters — and a wise but plain-as-dirt local lawmaker who rivals one of the brothers’ greatest fictional inventions, Fargo’s Marge Gunderson.
A killer named Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) cuts a swath through the heart of this story, leaving corpses in his path the way Hansel and Gretel left bread crumbs. Chigurh is a human demon, implacable and unplaceable. Even his name seems to come from nowhere in particular, and so does his anti-stylish Prince Valiant haircut, a look so weird that it has gotten more press than some of the excellent supporting cast.
With his thousand-yard stare and the innocuous-looking but lethal machine he totes everywhere, Chigurh is a nightmare figure, the personification of the horror beginning to be rained down on either side of the Mexican border by dueling drug dealers in 1980, the year of the story. When Chigurh steals drugs and medical instruments and holes up in a hotel room to tend to his own gunshot wound, he brings to mind the Terminator, another unstoppable killing machine.
No Country for Old Men is a warning bell sounded about the damage being wrought by the U.S.-Mexican drug trade, and the general degeneration of social codes in a world where, as Bell puts it, everything started going downhill when kids stopped saying “sir” and “ma’am.”
Yet this ranks as a relatively hopeful story for McCarthy, whose post-apocalyptic landscapes are sometimes too sere to nurture the merest drop of human kindness. Chigurh may be the ultimate bad guy, but he’s facing off against an old-fashioned hero and another good ol’ boy gone slightly bad, and they give him a tightly paced run for his money.
Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin in a breakout role) is a welder who stumbles upon the gory aftermath of a gunfight between rival drug runners in the West Texas brush and impulsively makes off with the abandoned case full of cash, seizing a chance to transform his and his wife’s hardscrabble existence. Jones’ Bell is the sheriff who sizes up the situation and tries to save Moss and regain the money before the killers get both. Both are smart, capable men who know how to read people and how to get things done — and both strive to do the right thing, though Moss can’t resist the call of more than $2 million in cash. Both are also married to good women, loyal wives who keep them grounded and soften their hard edges. (The wives are played by Tess Harper, who was born for roles like this, and by Kelly Macdonald, the Scottish star of The Girl in the Café, who plays that girl’s West Texas equivalent with the same quiet strength and a flawless accent.)
In his best role since Lonesome Dove, Jones draws on all his Texas bona fides, his dust-dry sense of humor and his love of McCarthy’s prose (he’s currently writing a screenplay of the novelist’s Blood Meridian) to play the story’s moral center. Bell is struggling to stem the tide that threatens to flood his little corner of the world. He also muses, in asides that dot the book and become voice-overs in the movie, about how much more brutal things are getting — even in his part of Texas, where life has never been easy.
The story lopes forward relentlessly, as lean and focused as the three men at its core. It passes through a typical Southwest Texas landscape of dusty towns with just one main street; gas stations and hotels and diners that haven’t had a facelift in half a century; miles and miles of featureless highway; and the Mexican border, that portal to an alternate reality.
The dialogue is also pure Texas. Full of wry understatement, it’s as much about what isn’t said as what is. “It’s a mess, ain’t it, sheriff?” Bell’s deputy remarks as they survey the scene of one of Chigurh’s killings. “If it ain’t, it’ll do ‘til the mess gets here,” Bell replies.
Add in a couple of indelible minor characters like Woody Harrelson’s Carson Wells, a cocky mercenary sent to kill Chigurh, and you’ve got a modern-day classic that would have done Hitchcock proud.
Rated R for strong graphic violence and some language.

