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CANNES — Joel and Ethan Coen's In Competition film is titled No Country for Old Men, but it's set in an unforgiving 1980s West Texas landscape that appears to be populated with nothing but old men.
If you like the bleak, existential neo-Western "No Country for Old Men," here are a dozen films that explore similar narrative and thematic territory.
“What’s the most you ever lost on a coin toss?” That line, uttered by Javier Bardem’s sadistic and psychopathic mercenary Anton Chigurh, opens Joel and Ethan Coen’s neo-Western crime thriller No ...
Hawke's portrayal of a man who finds the war within and is navigating the grief of the people left behind makes A Midnight Clear a must-watch.
In 2007, Joel and Ethan Coen, popularly known as the Coen brothers, adapted McCarthy’s No Country for Old Men, which received massive critical acclaim and was largely celebrated for its ...
Breaking down the ending of the Coen brothers' No Country for Old Men, including what happens to Chigurh and what the Sheriff's final speech really means.
“‘No Country for Old Men’ is as good a film as the Coen brothers, Joel and Ethan, have ever made, and they made ‘Fargo,’” the legendary critic Roger Ebert wrote in his review.
Though the Coen Brothers' No Country for Old Men is a fairly faithful adaptation, there are still a few major differences between the book and movie.
"No Country for Old Men" cinematographer Roger Deakins reveals he told the Coen Brothers to direct the film.
Joel Edgerton, Oscar Isaac and Ethan Hawke explain how they worked with the writer-director, known for solitary characters grappling with sin and redemption.