Sunday, December 9, 2012

Looking At The Darker Side (Hyperlinks)


Nicholas Arrazola
December 5, 2012
Dr. Childs
English 1301
Looking At The Darker Side in “No Country for Old Men
We live amongst a world where good and evil lurks everywhere. We as humans acquire humane traits that help guide us to make the best decisions for our life and everyone around us. Some people however, have a sense of unexplainable evil that lingers inside them. The actions of evil are cold blooded and ruthless. The Character in the movie “No Country for Old Men”, Anton Chigurh, plays a relentless villain who brutally kills anyone within his sight with no feeling of remorse while he hunts down Llewelyn Moss. “No Country for Old Men” really touches subjects with cruelty and bloodshed violence shown in society all around the world represented by the actions of Anton Chigurh. This movie not only provides a less romanticized ending but also portrays the darker light on violence through Anton Chigurh.
The movie was based on Cormac’s McCarthy’s First Novel, “No Country for Old Men”.  (Cooper 38) The movie setting is in West Texas and starts with a man named Llewelyn Moss, who finds two million dollars in drug money in between what we see as a Mexican drug battle. Moss takes it in hopes of a better life for him and his wife. Moss eventually finds himself running away from the ultimate hit man, Anton Chigurh. Throughout the movie, Anton Chigurh comes off an unknown monster that everyone is dodging. Many people actually never meet Chigurh and when they do, a series of unfortunate events follow. (Cooper 51) Chigurh follows Moss, tracking his every move. In the beginning of the movie, you see the scene where Chigurh is being taken to the police station. As the deputy talks on the phone, Chigurh comes up behind the deputy and puts him in a chokehold with his handcuffs until the man is choked to death. This man is very capable of murder and doesn’t take peoples lives seriously. He seems to look at living as more of a chance kind of deal. Such as the scene where Chigurh offers the working man in the gas station a choice of heads or tails on a coin. If the coin did not favor the man’s choice, Chigurh probably would of blown the man’s head off with the oxygen tank weapon he notoriously carries around. Novelist Cormac McCarthy tends to point out the “widespread violence in the world”. (Collado-Rodriguez 46)  The movie portrays all sorts of evils in the world that happen. Everyday there are homicides, rape, and murder all over the world. There could be thousands of reasons for a person’s wrongdoing but what happens when someone commits a crime just for the sake of it? That brings us up to a whole new level of violence that no one can explain. (Nichols 211)
Violence is created in the world for many reasons. We as people have feelings like being happy, sad, and angry. People often commit crimes out of some sort of anger and spite. In some cases, people are also in some sort of trauma and have psychological problems. (Collado-Rodriguez 47) For example, Colorado’s more recent tragedy with the Dark Knight Rises Batman Premiere shooting that wounded over thirty people and killed twelve. (Sandell, Dolak, and Curry) The alleged gunman, James Holmes, was said to have mental issues and did have a rough time his prior months in Aurora, Colorado. Many people claim to say he is mentally insane and I feel like that’s what’s people really want to hear. When tragedy’s like this happens, it scares society to see that people are plotting and planning acts of destruction similar to this one. It is foreign for people to see that there are humans in the world who would actually commit meaningless actions like this. (Nichols 211) Everyone in the world has a sense of humanity but I think its safe to say that for some people, its just not there. McCarthy’s evil character, Anton Chigurh, is the epitome of the evil in our world.
Anton Chigurh Character does do a good job of killing people so quick that it doesn’t look painful. He just points up his oxygen gun and punctures a perfect circle through their brain and that’s done. They’re dead. Chigurh often kills his victims like he is playing a game of russian roulette. He kills people as he was just taking the spin and pointing the revolver at his victim. His view in life is like a game of chance, a big theme in the movie. Llewelyn’s wife, Carla Jean gets offered a chance for survival. He waits for her in a house and gives Carla Jean a choice of heads or tails; similar to the earlier scene at the gas station. Carla refuses to pick and goes on telling Chigurh that it was not up to the coin for her fate of life or death but only his choice. (Nichols 209)  It was his choice to kill her and it has always been a choice he could of made with all the other people he has murdered. Chigurh doesn’t seem to grasp that concept as a good enough reason and is a firm believer that it wasn’t his choice. As Curl says, He is the “killer of principal who frequently forces his victims to choose their own fate.” Even though “he seems to use this “system of fate” as an excuse for his actions, it is him who is making these dictions not a higher power” making it not anyone’s fault but himself. (Reynolds) Many scenes in the movie show evidence that Chigurh’s actions are brutal and he wont stop for anyone. He believes that he was sent out to do these acts of immortality and it was just fate that he was in right time and place. (Cooper 37)
Chigurh does not show any mercy or any sign of emotion throughout the whole film. He gets wounded twice and at both times; he handles it as if he could not feel the immensity of the pain. In the ending scene of the movie, Chigurh gets into a collision with a car, which wounds his arm. A kid goes up to Chigurh looking worried as he sees that Chigurh has a bone sticking out of his arm. The wide-eyed kid looked frantic and exclaims that the ambulance was coming. Instead of waiting for help, Chigurh pays the kid a generous amount of money for the kid’s shirt and a closed mouth. Chigurh will then move on with his life, on the way to kill more people. (Nichols 209) Through the movie, His character remains impersonal and frigid. He never shows a lighter side of humanity in him and brings us to see that evil does not stop. (Cooper 51) Chigurh “is responsible for the deaths of many, justified in his own moral less mind.” (Clark)
Chigurh chilling presence remains consistent and that’s probably what made the movie a thriller. (Cooper 52) In scenes where he would come close to Llewelyn left people at the edge of their seats. He became the ultimate bad guy that seemed invincible. His actions are never explained throughout the film and Chigurh barely even talked. The beginning starts with Bell narrating about the boy he sent to the electric chair. The boy murdered a girl and authorities started to say it was a crime of passion. The boy tells the sheriff that it was not a crime of passion but only the desire to kill someone. He had no purpose to kill her besides the fact that he just wanted to do it and if he had another chance; he’d do it again. This boy acknowledges that he is going to hell and doesn’t care as he quotes he’d “be there in about fifteen minutes.” Chigurh and this boy shared similar characteristics. They both show no mercy for victims and no explanation of violence. His eerie character brings violence to reality. In many ways Chigurh represents a grim reaper. He comes to get you when your time is over. The movies touches bases with the reality of brutality in violence. (Cooper 54) Our fate has brought us to our death and when our time is over, we will be sent on our way.
The movie shows that his character was a psychotic road killer on the loose. It doesn’t end with the villain dead or caught by high authority. It ends with all the victims dead except the perpetrator. Most movies nowadays do like to give viewers the satisfactory ending. They show the typical hero and villain story where the hero gets away and saves the day while the villain dies or gets put in the doghouse. Viewers aren’t often shown the actuality of some cases. There are cases out there that exist where the good guy doesn’t get away but instead the bad ones do. Not everyone can have their cake and eat it too. Chigurh shows many of our evils in the society. Society has grown used to being nice bloody battles that end up having a hero ending. Today’s well-known superheroes such as Batman, Superman, and Spiderman are well known for defeating their nemesis in heroic ways. That’s why they are showcased all over the world because they represent the good in the world. This movie definitely does not end the way you’d expect and more than likely no kid would walk out a theatre saying Chigurh was their next acclaimed favorite hero. (Nichols 211)
The movie was a harsh representation of reality that many people overlook. There might not be serial killers walking the street for as long as Chigurh is in America but there is such violence occurring. People are constantly acknowledge the good and ignoring the bad. Big Networks and money catching stories pollute most of the news we see on TV today. We are constantly obsessing over the next big thing and losing the raw news. “No Country for Old Men” made a good representation and touched subjects with greater evils in life. Many people often fantasize life ignoring the realism. Our life isn’t guaranteed everyday and that’s just something many people take for granted. We never know what is going to happen when we wake up everyday. Like Bell says in the movie, “Whatcha got ain't nothin new. This country's hard on people, you can't stop what's coming.”

Work Cited
Collado-Rodríguez, Francisco. "Trauma And Storytelling In Cormac Mccarthy's No Country For Old Men And The Road." Papers On Language & Literature 48.(2012): 45-69. Academic Search Complete. Web. 27 Nov. 2012.

Cooper, Lydia R. "He's A Psychopathic Killer, But So What?": Folklore And Morality In Cormac Mccarthy's "No Country For Old Men." Papers On Language & Literature 45.1 (2009): 37-59. Academic Search Complete. Web. 28 Nov. 2012.

Nichols, Mary P. "Revisiting Heroism And Community In Contemporary Westerns: No Country For Old Men And 3:10 To Yuma." Perspectives On Political Science 37.4 (2008): 207-216. Academic Search Complete. Web. 29 Nov. 2012.

Sandell, Clayton, Kevin Dolak, and Colleen Curry. "Colorado Movie Theater Shooting: Suspect Bought 4 Guns, 6,000 Rounds of Ammunition in Past 60 Days ." n. page. Web. 9 Dec. 2012. <http://abcnews.go.com/US/colorado-movie-theater-shooting-suspect-bought-guns-6000/story?id=16817842>

No Country for Old Men. Dir. Joel Coen. Prod. Joel Coen and Ethan Coen. Perf. Tommy Lee Jones and Javier Bardem. Miramax, 2007. DVD.
Curl, Brandi. "Choice and Consequence in Country for Old Men." Brandi's Blog. N.p., 12 2012. Web. Web. 9 Dec. 2012. < http://bcurl.blogspot.com/2012/12/choice-and-consequence-in-no-country.html>

Reynolds, David H. "The Struggle for Control in the Coen Brothers’ No Country for Old Men." D-Blog. N.p., 12 2012. Web. Web. 9 Dec. 2012. <http://hilton-j.blogspot.com/2012/11/david-h.html>
Clark, Jeremy. "Destiny or Coincidence ." JWC's Blog. N.p., 08 2012. Web. Web. 9 Dec. 2012. <http://jeremywaynec.blogspot.com/2012/11/jeremy-clark-dr.html>


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