Simplest-shop.com

     

online shopping, the simple way

Welcome | Help
Search for
in
Home > Dvds > Genres > Art House & International > Country Men
This website will be shutdown on 2008-04-01.
my cart Add to shopping cart

No Country for Old Men

 Rating 3
no image found
60% Recommended by our customers.
Studio: Miramax
Catalog: DVD
Release date: 2008-03-11
Media: DVD
released in theatres: 2007-11-21
Running time in minutes: 122
DVD aspect ratio: 2.35:1
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Format: Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC
DVD Region code: 1
released in theatres: 2007-11-21
Ean: 0786936746754
Upc: 786936746754
tip Tip: compare prices with similar DVDs

Director:
Ethan Coensee more Dvds by Ethan Coen
Joel Coensee more Dvds by Joel Coen
Actors:
Javier Bardemsee more Dvds with Javier Bardem
Rodger Boycesee more Dvds with Rodger Boyce
Josh Brolinsee more Dvds with Josh Brolin
Barry Corbinsee more Dvds with Barry Corbin
Beth Grantsee more Dvds with Beth Grant

Top stores Description Price Link to shop
amazon.com Availability: in 24 hours
Current discount:46% off !!!!
$15.99
used49 used offers, as low as...$7.75see more used offers
all new52 thirdParty new offers, as low as...$10.79see more ThirdParty new offers
collectible1 collectible offers, as low as...$29.99see more collectible new offers

Professional Review:
The Coen brothers make their finest thriller since Fargo with a restrained adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's novel. Not that there aren't moments of intense violence, but No Country for Old Men is their quietest, most existential film yet. In this modern-day Western, Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin) is a Vietnam vet who could use a break. One morning while hunting antelope, he spies several trucks surrounded by dead bodies (both human and canine). In examining the site, he finds a case filled with $2 million. Moss takes it with him, tells his wife (Kelly Macdonald) he's going away for awhile, and hits the road until he can determine his next move. On the way from El Paso to Mexico, he discovers he's being followed by ex-special ops agent Chigurh (an eerily calm Javier Bardem). Chigurh's weapon of choice is a cattle gun, and he uses it on everyone who gets in his way--or loses a coin toss (as far as he's concerned, bad luck is grounds for death). Just as Sheriff Bell (Tommy Lee Jones), a World War II vet, is on Moss's trail, Chigurh's former colleague, Wells (Woody Harrelson), is on his. For most of the movie, Moss remains one step ahead of his nemesis. Both men are clever and resourceful--except Moss has a conscience, Chigurh does not (he is, as McCarthy puts it, "a prophet of destruction"). At times, the film plays like an old horror movie, with Chigurh as its lumbering Frankenstein monster. Like the taciturn terminator, No Country for Old Men doesn't move quickly, but the tension never dissipates. This minimalist masterwork represents Joel and Ethan Coen and their entire cast, particularly Brolin and Jones, at the peak of their powers. --Kathleen C. Fennessy

User Reviews:
 Rating 5   Written on August 23, 2008
   Summary: Intense
This movie is great. It gives all of us a look at what is happening in our country. A man thinking he can take 2 million dollars from the drug dealers can only hope to make it. This movies depicts the wars on the southern borders that happens every day here. Both my husband and I would have liked a better ending. It is well directed, well acted and intense. Keeps you watching so you won't miss anything.

 Rating 5   Written on August 23, 2008
   Summary: The Bad Guy Didn't Win
Most everyone that criticizes this movie doesn't bother to dig deeper into what it all meant. It is an analogy for what happened to America in the early 80's. Nothing more, nothing less.

The bad guy isn't a guy. He is a symbol of the brutality and needless violence surrounding the drug trade that hit America in the 80's. He's soulless, and follows his own flawed logic down a path of destruction. The look on his face when confronting the wife at the very end, tells it all. He seems to know that she is right, and that he is indeed warped, but he can't grasp what's broken inside of him. He leaves the movie a desperate and illogical broken menace, like the violence that consumed entire communities when hard drugs exploded into our cities.

Its a brilliantly executed take on a often swept under the rug social issue. And the acting ain't bad either.

Sometimes movies don't have happy endings. And sometimes the ending isn't even about who wins. If you often need to have stories explained to you, then this isn't for you. And its not even that vague or hard of a movie to digest... Some people just hate putting for any effort in understanding a story. Their loss. This film doesn't come with a spoon to feed you.

Also, the opening 20 minutes of near word free storytelling is a lesson to all future writers and directors. Sometimes less is more. Utterly fantastic beginning to a great movie. It has the surreal feel of Raising Arizona, with the cold touch of Fargo. Probably the Coen's best work yet.


 Rating 4   Written on August 22, 2008
   Summary: Violent and gory but it'll stick with you
Javier Bardem as Chigurh in this movie FREAKED ME OUT. This is a very violent and sometimes just plain gory movie. But Tommy Lee Jones is awesome as the sheriff who, although very savvy, always seems to be one step behind the bad guys... Josh Brolin's character is smart and seems like he can outsmart the psycho killer. The tension in this movie will literally keep you on the edge of your seat wondering what is going to happen next. You'll be looking in the shadows for a day or two later, just to make sure there's no one there.

 Rating 1   Written on August 19, 2008
   Summary: No Plot, No Hope, No Country for Anyone
This slow, dull, morbid film stumbles along without a single thread you can cling to. The opening scene is a graphic murder and that is by far the most uplifting thing your will see for the next two hours.

The story of a drug deal gone bad and the hunt to recover the money should be the stuff of any red blooded boy's dreams, Sonny Crockett and a Ferrari and maybe a neeked girl or two...all you'll get here is the sub-blasted landscape of west Texas.

The bad guy laughingly drags a cylinder of air and a shot rod, used for killing cattle, to all of his crimes. But that isn't the worst, no, he also has a silencered shotgun. Assuming that the muzzle blast didn't send the silencer across the room in a cloud of shrapnel, the gas vent when the action opens would wake the dead even in a county where the nearest neighbors are fifteen miles away. Of course it doesn't matter, there is a shotgun duel in the middle of town which wakes no one so one must assume that everyone is dead already.

No if you have two hours to waste try Scooby-doo on Monster Island. At least Jennifer Love Hewitt gets to act whch is more than anyone in No Country For Old Men.

This is a film to run from, don't buy it, don't rent it, don't even speak of it, the sooner it goes to video and dissappears the better


 Rating 5   Written on August 17, 2008
   Summary: No Country For Old Men, A Poignant Film
*Beware of spoilers within*

I was highly skeptical of this film ever since I heard of the infamous pre-Oscar buzz, because pretty much any movie today that wins any Oscar is mostly due to political reasons and not so much its quality. Well I'm glad to say that this wasn't one of them, I was pleasantly surprised.

The movie starts out with Josh Brolin's character going out into the Texas desert where he stumbles upon this drug deal that's gone terribly wrong. He finds a large stash of cash which he takes, as well as a few guns that are laying around. After this he goes straight home and we find out that he's a simple man who's down on his luck, doesn't have a job and he lives in a trailer home with his wife, so naturally this find was of considerable boost to his otherwise destitute life. From here on out is where his life begins unravelling, unfortunately, as he goes on the run from the hired gun who's out to collect what belongs to the Mexican drug cartel.

What struck me about this film were the performances, first and foremost, particularly fom Javier Bardem who really shined in his role as the evil antagonist Anton Chigurh, he truly steals the show. Josh Brolin does a great job as the unlikely hero Llewelyn Moss, and together him and Javier really cement this film as a tour de force show between the every man vs. great evil, kind of an epic struggle on a minor scale. As soon as Chigurh is introduced, there's no mistaking what he's all about and what he's capable of. He is very cold, mechanical and highly efficient at what he does, yet he lives his life by a set of seemingly arbitrary yet unbending principles revolving around destiny. Chigurh is so incredibly evil, it bothered me far more than any 'Saw' type movie and its ilk. He just oozes the essence of darkness, he is evil personified. The only one that compares would be Hannibal Lecter from 'Silence of the Lambs', and that says quite a bit. He deserved the Oscar for that role, hands down. Even though he's evil, there's a certain kind of respect that he commands, because he's so good at what he does, because of his discipline and dedication, that makes him quite intriguing, which made me wonder about his past and what caused him to be this way. I rooted for Moss the entire film, but I couldn't help being fascinated by this methodic killer on his trail, which made the experience a very haunting and intense ride from beginning to end.

The supporting cast is good too, with solid performances from Woody Harrelson as another mercenary, Barry Corbin as the sheriff's dad and Tommy Lee Jones as the sheriff who's hunting both Moss and Chigurh. Despite its theme and related genre, the movie actually works as a humanistic one as well, a look into human nature and our failings, how we too easily succumb to our frailties.

What I liked about this movie is that its cleverness lies in its subtleties, it doesn't clobber people over the head with its messages like some other, supposed masterpieces do. I'm a big believer in less is more, and this movie delivered that in spades, on so many levels. The Cohen brothers clearly know their art form.

This was one of the few movies in which the title plays an extraordinarily large part in the story, it was quite apt and does make one think more about the overall meaning and how it applies to the human race.

I'm sure there are multiple interpretations to this film, but for me it all came home in the final scene where sheriff Ed Tom Bell hangs up his belt and talks about why he can't do it anymore. He's an old man, and he's quitting because he can't take the pain and misery that he sees on a day to day basis, he's fed up and it's just too much at this stage in his life. From his point of view, he's living in a country that doesn't have any room for old peace officers, he's an ancient relic and he needs to retire, because he failed in what he set out to do, and that there is no point in going on if evil wins. This reminds me of an old quote by Edmund Burke who once said that, paraphrasing, all it takes for evil to win is for good men to do nothing, which fits this movie to a t. If all the kind, decent people like the sheriff become completely apathetic or simply give up fighting against evil, then evil WILL conquer the world, so the movie is a message about tenacity and having the will to fight the good fight, to continue no matter what obstacles lie in the road. Sure, sometimes evil will win and get away scott free, but that's not a good enough reason to throw in the towel, one has to keep on duking it out, because if one does not, then we are all doomed for sure.

Comparison map
Wondering how the DVD "No Country for Old Men" relates to similar DVDs? Find out at a glance here:
Price comparison no image found
No Country for Old Men
no image found
There Will Be Blood (Two-Disc Special Collector's...
Gone Baby Gone
Gone Baby Gone
In the Valley of Elah
In the Valley of Elah
Before the Devil Knows You're Dead
Before the Devil Knows You're Dead
The Savages
The Savages
Our price$15.99$21.99$9.99$15.99$12.99$14.99
List price$29.99$34.99$29.99$19.98$19.98$27.98
Lowest used price$7.75$12.97$6.98$6.03$3.93$6.35
Lowest new price$10.79$17.00$9.98$10.60$9.72$11.45
Collectible price$29.99--$27.98$27.98$27.98
CatalogDVDDVDDVDDVDDVDDVD
Release date2008-03-112008-04-082008-02-122008-02-192008-04-152008-04-22
MediaDVDDVDDVDDVDDVDDVD
released in theatres2007-11-212008-04-082007-10-122007-09-2820072007
Running time in minutes122158114121112114
DVD aspect ratio2.35:12.35:11.85:12.35:11.85:11.85:1
Audience RatingR (Restricted)R (Restricted)R (Restricted)R (Restricted)R (Restricted)R (Restricted)
FormatColor, Dolby, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSCWidescreen, Color, Dolby, DubbedAC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, NTSC, Subtitled, WidescreenAC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSCAC-3, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, NTSC, WidescreenAC-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
DVD Region code111111
Ean078693674675400973613257430786936727487008539117627500143814875270024543506799
Upc786936746754097361325743786936727487085391176275014381487527024543506799
Link to shop*
(opens in a new window)
BUY IT NOW*BUY IT NOW*BUY IT NOW*BUY IT NOW*BUY IT NOW*BUY IT NOW*
take one out?

I am here:
Home > Dvds > Genres > Art House & International > Country Men
This website will be shutdown on 2008-04-01.

tell a friend about this pageE-mail this page

 
About the Simplest Shop | Help | Term of Use | Privacy Policy
Home | Contact us | Bookmark us | get paid for writing
Copyright Simplest-Shop.com 2004. All rights reserved