Budget
$25,000,000 (estimated)
Gross US & Canada
$74,283,625
Opening weekend US & Canada
$1,202,000
Gross worldwide
$171,627,166
Budget
$25,000,000 (estimated)
Gross US & Canada
$74,283,625
Opening weekend US & Canada
$1,202,000
Gross worldwide
$171,627,166
Movie reviews
( 105 )
Add reviews
By Eunice 2022-07-28 20:04:41
No Country for Old Men: There is No Way to Rely on It Forever
The 9th screening day of the main competition unit of the 13th #Faro IslandFilm Festival # will bring you "No Country for Old Men", and the following will bring you the evaluations of the frontline western group portraits!
By Nadia 2022-04-23 07:01:03
The ending is more important than the ending
I saw Tommy Lee Jones muttering to himself about his dream last night, ready to take the time to Google the list of winners of the 80th Academy Awards.
I'd like to know which four Oscars this movie that has been rated 3 in my heart so far has won.
At this time, the music suddenly started, the subtitles rose, and the film ended.
So the irreparable film became a well-deserved 5-point film. Best picture, director and screenwriter are well deserved.
Because...
By Zelda 2022-04-23 07:01:03
Who was the climax of the Oscars for?
The Oscars, like Christmas, come once a year, and China is now broadcasting live every time. I have never been interested in these ceremonies, it looks like dividing fields. Actresses show off big breasts and hips, the latest from Chanel, Versace, and Armani. Those who won the award were elated, those who didn't get it were downcast, and those who didn't expect to win the award should show a PATTY. In addition, in recent years, Hollywood has not been enterprising, using technology to replace...
By Kraig 2022-04-23 07:01:03
I don't know because of the length of the movie or what they want to express. The Coen brothers cut the plot to pieces, omitting a lot of key plot points, and even won an Oscar.
Here are a few places that are clearly explained in the original novel, but not explained in the film
1. The death of Moss
In the original book, after the killer Anton...
By Aletha 2022-04-23 07:01:03
Nowhere to go, disappointment, despair.
A killer who never had any hope for the future, a hunted person who was desperate and desperate, and a policeman who began to doubt his own life when he got old.
Everything revolves around despair. The killer never thought of anything else to rely on. He was used to living on his own at all times, he was used to hiding, because only then could he hunt and escape. He's used to shooting when he thinks it's time to shoot, so simply. The...
User comments
( 54 )
Add comments
By Assunta 2022-03-26 09:01:01
This kind of pure, clean, dehumanized and inherently deep in human evil makes people feel powerless and desperate. Just like abnormality meets high IQ, when there is no desire, it just meets evil, and without the trigger point, there will be no deterrent point. You can't kill him, at best, you can win miserably from a spiritual...
By Delia 2022-03-26 09:01:01
This killer is very cold. . Action drama has reached the realm of...
By Don 2022-03-26 09:01:01
Fanying has seen the best hunting scene in the atmosphere. Against the old western movie template, the old police sighed the whole story, and the Coen brothers are very meaningful. The killer and the clown are separated from each other. Passing the bridge to kill a crow is evil and not selfish. Evil is a pastime for no reason. It is the horrible place of modern evil. This is not an old elegy for helplessness and loneliness, it is the perplexed sorrow of the older generations who are hard to...
By Hilma 2022-03-25 09:01:05
Baden Shumie is facing such a battered 28th development type (at one time I thought it was a wig). The Phantom Shifting Sajia, who can be so deceitful that he will be expressionless every time he kills people, really admire...
By Alfonso 2022-03-25 09:01:05
Pure good cannot beat pure...
Carla Jean Moss: Sheriff, was that a true story about Charlie Walser?
Ed Tom Bell: Who's Charlie Walser? Oh! Well... uh... a true story? I couldn't swear to every detail but it's certainly true that it is a story.
Ed Tom Bell: Carla Jean, thank you for coming.
Carla Jean Moss: Don't know why I did. I told you, I don't know where he is.
Ed Tom Bell: You hadn't heard from him?
Carla Jean Moss: No, I ain't.
Ed Tom Bell: Nuthin'?
Carla Jean Moss: Not word one.
Ed Tom Bell: Would you tell me if you had?
Carla Jean Moss: Well, I don't know. He don't need any trouble from you.
Ed Tom Bell: It ain't me he's in trouble with.
Carla Jean Moss: Who's he in trouble with then?
Ed Tom Bell: Some pretty bad people. These people will kill him, Carla Jean. They won't quit.
Carla Jean Moss: He won't neither. He never has. He can take all comers.
Ed Tom Bell: [Ed Tom sighs heavily] You know Charlie Walser's, got that place out east of Sanderson? Well, you know how they used to slaughter beeves, hit 'em right there with a maul, truss 'em up and slit their throats? Here, ol' Charlie's got one all trussed up, all set to drain him and the beef comes to, starts thrashing around. Six hundred pounds of very pissed-off livestock. If you'll excuse the... Well... Charlie grabs the gun there, shoot the damn thing in the head, but with all the swingin' and the thrashin', it's a glance-shot, ricochets around, comes back and hits Charlie in the shoulder. You go see Charlie, he still can't pick up his right hand for his hat... The point bein', that even in the contest between man and steer, the issue is not certain.
Carson Wells: Call me when you've had enough. I can even let you keep a little of the money.
Llewelyn Moss: If I was cuttin' deals, why wouldn't I go deal with this guy Chigurh?
Carson Wells: No no. No. You don't understand. You can't make a deal with him. Even if you gave him the money he'd still kill you. He's a peculiar man. You could even say that he has principles. Principles that transcend money or drugs or anything like that. He's not like you. He's not even like me.
Llewelyn Moss: He don't talk as much as you, I give him points for that.