No Country For Old Men
The movie follows a transition of mayhem when a drug deal goes wrong and accidentally pulling a drug dealer into the whole drama.
February 5, 1957 in Denver, Colorado, USA
17 November 1951, Sarasota, Florida, USA
25 April 1979, Overland Park, Kansas, USA
1 March 1969, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Gran Canaria, Canary Islands, Spain
22 May 1981, Bronx, New York, USA
24 November 1964, Castro Valley, California, USA
25 May 1997
7 August 1970, Radford, Virginia, USA
15 August 1950, Mammoth Spring, Arkansas, USA
13 August 1952, Harris County, Texas, USA
27 January 1955, Ballinger, Texas, USA
30 January 1971, Clearwater, Florida, USA
31 July 1958, Dallas, Texas, USA
February 23, 2016
There'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.October 18, 2008
For a film that traffics in implacable malice, this movie remains remarkably grounded in the everyday.November 20, 2007
With 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.May 17, 2015
One of the most thoughtful and startling snapshots of the human condition of the last ten years.August 13, 2016
... a perfect match of story and storyteller.February 22, 2015
Played by Spanish actor Javier Bardem, Chigurh is the most original bogeyman to bloody up the screen in a while.September 18, 2008
McCarthy'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.February 23, 2016
The road to doom is paved with blood and bad decisions in one of the best pictures of 2007.February 22, 2015
Beautifully 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.January 18, 2008
A 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.February 22, 2015
The last word on the modern-day western used to be Peckinpah's. No Country for Old Men is Peckinpah gone post-Peckinpah.February 03, 2008
The Coens stir up more panic by quietly flicking off a light switch than Michael Bay did with a fleet of Decepticons.