Movie: No Country for Old Men (2007)
“In rural Texas, welder and hunter Llewelyn Moss discovers the remains of several drug runners who have all killed each other in an exchange gone violently wrong. Rather than report the discovery to the police, Moss decides to simply take the two million dollars present for himself. This puts the psychopathic killer, Anton Chigurh, on his trail as he dispassionately murders nearly every rival, bystander and even employer in his pursuit of his quarry and the money. As Moss desperately attempts to keep one step ahead, the blood from this hunt begins to flow behind him with relentlessly growing intensity as Chigurh closes in. Meanwhile, the laconic Sherrif Ed Tom Bell blithely oversees the investigation even as he struggles to face the sheer enormity of the crimes he is attempting to thwart. Written by Kenneth Chisholm (kchishol@rogers.com)”
- Release Date: 21 November 2007 (USA)
- Run Time: 122 min
- Country: USA
- Genre: Crime , Drama , Thriller , Western
- MPAA: Rated R for strong graphic violence and some language.
Tagline: There Are No Clean Getaways
Trivia: Joel Coen and Ethan Coen share the record of four Oscar nominations for a single person for the same film (in this case, shared by the two) with Orson Welles’ four nominations for Citizen Kane (1941) and Warren Beatty’s for Reds (1981). The Coens’ four nominations are for Best Picture (as producers with Scott Rudin), Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Editing (under the pseudonym Roderick Jaynes). Welles was nominated both Best Picture (also as producer) and Best Director, as well as Best Original Screenplay (won, and shared with Herman J. Mankiewicz), and Best Actor. On the other hand, Beatty was nominated for Best Picture (also as producer), Best Director (won), Best Original Screenplay with Trevor Griffiths and Best Actor.
Goofs: Audio/visual unsynchronized: Obvious voice-over. In the hospital scene when Woody Harrelson’s character, Carson Wells, says Chigurh’s full name. “Anton Chigurh”.


