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No Country For Old Men
TrailerLlewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin), who is a US veteran, discovered $ 2 million while struggling to face with bad memories postwar .He found money along with a fairly large amount of heroin, which was concealed behind truck, and Moss decided to flee. A mysterious killer was hunting Moss. Besides, the Sheriff Bell (Jones Tommny Lee) determined to arrest Moss to curb violence.Actors: Tommy Lee Jones, Javier Bardem, Josh Brolin, Woody Harrelson, Kelly Macdonald, Garret Dillahunt, Tess Harper, Barry Corbin, Stephen Root, Rodger Boyce, Beth Grant, ...»Director: Ethan Coen, Joel CoenCountry: United StatesDuration: 122 minQuality: HDRelease: 2007IMDb: 8.20 CommentsSort By- Newest
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Actors of "No Country For Old Men"
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Characters of "No Country For Old Men"
Ed Tom BellPlayed by: Tommy Lee JonesAnton ChigurhPlayed by: Javier BardemLlewelyn MossPlayed by: Josh BrolinCarson WellsPlayed by: Woody HarrelsonCarla Jean MossPlayed by: Kelly MacdonaldWendellPlayed by: Garret DillahuntLoretta BellPlayed by: Tess HarperEllisPlayed by: Barry CorbinMan who hires WellsPlayed by: Stephen RootEl Paso SheriffPlayed by: Rodger BoyceCarla Jean's MotherPlayed by: Beth GrantPoolside WomanPlayed by: Ana ReederSheriff Bell's SecretaryPlayed by: Kit GwinStrangled DeputyPlayed by: Zach HopkinsMan in FordPlayed by: Chip Love'Agua' ManPlayed by: Eduardo Antonio GarciaGas Station ProprietorPlayed by: Gene JonesCabbie at MotelPlayed by: Jason DouglasMexican in BathtubPlayed by: George Adelo -
Directors of "No Country For Old Men"
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Creators of "No Country For Old Men"
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Critic Reviews of "No Country For Old Men"
CNN.comFebruary 22, 2015Played by Spanish actor Javier Bardem, Chigurh is the most original bogeyman to bloody up the screen in a while.
NPR.orgOctober 18, 2008For a film that traffics in implacable malice, this movie remains remarkably grounded in the everyday.
The New RepublicSeptember 18, 2008McCarthy's ferocious tale gives the Coens room to unleash their cinematic gifts, but keeps them from wandering too far afield and losing themselves in the marshes of technical prowess or easy irony.
I.E. WeeklyFebruary 03, 2008The Coens stir up more panic by quietly flicking off a light switch than Michael Bay did with a fleet of Decepticons.
Time OutJanuary 18, 2008A masterly tale of the good, the deranged and the doomed that inflects the raw violence of the west with a wry acknowledgement of the demise of codes of honour, this is frighteningly intelligent and imaginative.
Christian Science MonitorNovember 20, 2007With its dizzying alternations of comedy and horror, the film is unmistakably a Coen brothers movie -- albeit a much better one than they've made in a while.
Tulsa WorldFebruary 23, 2016The road to doom is paved with blood and bad decisions in one of the best pictures of 2007.
Fort Worth WeeklyFebruary 23, 2016There's no denying the movie and this character's power to shake you. The implacable Chigurh dominates the proceedings like no other Coen villain before him.
Cinemaphile.orgMay 17, 2015One of the most thoughtful and startling snapshots of the human condition of the last ten years.
Financial TimesFebruary 22, 2015The last word on the modern-day western used to be Peckinpah's. No Country for Old Men is Peckinpah gone post-Peckinpah.
Canada.comFebruary 22, 2015Beautifully photographed (by Roger Deakins) in leathery Texas tans, No Country For Old Men is filled with twists and surprises, hypnotically engaging from its very first scene.
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Gallery of "No Country For Old Men"