The guy's wife is the Scottish actress who was Renton's schoolgirl love interest in Trainspotting. She does a great job with the American accent. She's a brilliant actress. Underrated in my opinion.
@johnfriday51694 ай бұрын
Kelly MacDonald
@byron25214 ай бұрын
Agree, I like her too. I love her line in T2 when she tells Renton that the girl he is with, "she's too young for you"
@seanstinchfield-mp2xm4 ай бұрын
Boardwalk Empire!
@TheNeonRabbit4 ай бұрын
@@seanstinchfield-mp2xm I didn't realize that was her. She was Irish in that I think. Being able to believably do accents seems to get her a lot of work.
@Hexon664 ай бұрын
By 'great', if you mean overly broad, which is how she would have been directed, then yeah. And she was great in Boardwalk Empire, too. Though some take issue with her Irish accent there.
@Hexon664 ай бұрын
Why does it come as no surprise that Dawn Marie is the first person whose reaction to meeting Anton Chigurh was "Hehehe... I like you!" ?
@PeterEvansPeteTakesPictures4 ай бұрын
That reaction is probably the only immediate defensive action with any potential of success with Chigurh. "You... you mean I'm not your dark inexorable fate...?" "Naw brah, let's us go 'ave a beer." (Later climbs out of toilet window while Chigurh is making tricky jukebox decisions)
@julia2k84 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@ShogunOfHarlem4 ай бұрын
"Imaging she had a button under her desk that made a flusher noise." You're hilarious.
@tigerburn814 ай бұрын
It's like something a child would say.
@Flesharrower4 ай бұрын
Immediately identifies with the sociopath. Not surprised.
@hulkhatepunybanner4 ай бұрын
*psychopath
@jacktilghman979719 күн бұрын
Psychopath.
@clarencewalker39254 ай бұрын
This one is for you, Dawn Marie. Kelly McDonald, who plays Josh Brolin's wife, is from Glasgow. That's acting.
@OneArmedRetroGamer4 ай бұрын
The first time I saw this film, I was mad the way Brolin died off screen. I wanted the epic showdown. Upon further watches, I realize how brilliant it is
@seanstinchfield-mp2xm4 ай бұрын
It’s true to life, usually nothing ends in an epic showdown.
@ItDoesntMatterReally4 ай бұрын
Same. I saw it and knew it was a great movie, but it took me another viewing to realize why.
@confucius120124 ай бұрын
Me too. Like her, I didn’t even realize that was him on the floor in the room. I didn’t care about a big showdown but yeah, the way he was killed off was a very poor choice, imho.
@foilhattiest14 ай бұрын
I thought it was stupid and after about 5-6 watches I still think it's about equally stupid.
@OgreProgrammer4 ай бұрын
Llwellyn's off screen death is actually foreshadowing for the unseen death of Chigurh, just after the end of the film. Chigurh says to Carson, "If the rule you followed brought you to this, of what use was the rule?" He didn't see that it applied to him too; he thinks his rules and behaviour keep him safe, yet he has an infected leg wound, a broken arm, a head wound, and possibly abdominal injuries, all from insisting on doing things his way, and there are sirens in the distance as he tries to walk away, one armed, and unarmed. All the main characters insist on doing things by their own rules, and all die off screen. The only one that doesn't have a violent death is Ed Bell, because the rules he follows are to take the safe path, to think twice, to go home, to listen to the common sense of others, and his way allows himself to back down and retire.
@FollowingGhost4 ай бұрын
No music, the three main characters never acted a scene face to face, even the gunfight was in the dark at a distance. Parts are left unsaid and to your imagination. One of the best written movies in years.
@michaeldavid62843 ай бұрын
And...not one word of profanity.
@cillianmclaverty93923 ай бұрын
There was a few
@k.t.54054 ай бұрын
min 0:03 Who told you its not a western? Oh fer Pete's sake! 🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄 Westerns are all about iconic visuals, a good guy v. bad guy struggle locked in a mythical narrative, along with various elements including cowboys, villains, gunslingers, saloons, horseback riding, shootouts, and the vast, rugged landscapes of the American West...all of which this movie has IN SPADES!🥰🥰🥰
@Hexon664 ай бұрын
I think the point would be that this is superior to that kind of stereotypical Hollywood fabrication.
@trondwillyfry80004 ай бұрын
She probably meant not a western, in like the old or wild west sense of the word.
@foilhattiest14 ай бұрын
A modern day western/neo-western sure, but usually when people say "western movies" they're referring to something set in the late 1800s.
@danielglenn9154 ай бұрын
Lol you definitely don't snipe pronghorn in Orlando
@krisbrown66924 ай бұрын
Whoever told her this was not a Western lied. This might not take place in the 1800s but it 100% is a Western.
@diarrheagondola4 ай бұрын
Llewellyn did 2 tours in Vietnam. He had been in the shit, and seeing a drug deal gone wrong pales in comparison to the horrors of war (especially one as miscalculated as Vietnam). He was practical in the way he approached the scene (and tracking the money). He just shouldn't have gone back.
@nscollay4 ай бұрын
He might've been tracked down still. He should have reported it to the police. By taking the money, he puts Chigurh on his trail, and mixes his wife up in it.
@flerbus4 ай бұрын
@@nscollay yes, if he never went back, he would have had no idea he was in danger probably would have been killed at his trailer home
@MikeB128004 ай бұрын
The tracker was in the bag, he would have been tracked down.
@diarrheagondola4 ай бұрын
@@MikeB12800 It was a proximity tracker with a short range. Chigurh didn't even get a reading until he was about a quarter mile away. If Llewellyn and Carla Jean picked up and left (with no truck to lead Chigurh to them), he would never have found them, and he would have had time to break down the money and remove the tracker in the process.
@t0dd0004 ай бұрын
Plus. After you hit a certain age, and especially if you are a person of the earth (farmer, hunter, outdoorsman), the less rattled you are by life and death. And at the same time, more appreciative.
@uconnapharm4 ай бұрын
The air tank weapon is known as : a captive bolt pistol or a cattle gun . It is used in the beef industry by slaughterhouses in the United States to humanely euthanize cattle before processing them into meat. The compressed air drives forward a sharp spring loaded steel bolt from the grip/handle .
@MarcosElMalo24 ай бұрын
And beeves is the plural of beefs.
@rayhume19714 ай бұрын
This movie actually is a western. All of the elements are present.
@davemcbroom6954 ай бұрын
Personally I think westerns require horses.
@ianinkster22614 ай бұрын
neo-Western is the term. Breaking Bad fits the genre.
@philmakris85074 ай бұрын
There are plenty of horses, even figuratively.@@davemcbroom695
@ErikIversen4 ай бұрын
@@davemcbroom695 The sheriff and deputy ride horses in a few scenes. Another "western" element!
@shinrapresident70104 ай бұрын
@@ianinkster2261 You explain to me how Breaking Bad can be a western. You do it right now. Just because 40% of the show happens in the desert and there's a plot about Mexican outlaws and fighting the local law enforcement and there's a bunch of shootouts doesn't make it, oh wait it might actually be a western...
@chimpinaneckbrace4 ай бұрын
2:25 “I never stop for a police car. NEVER.” - Dawn Marie, outlaw
@THOMMGB4 ай бұрын
Don't worry Dawn - When you get caught, eventually, I will wait for your release or escape, whichever comes first. By the time you leave, I'll bet you'll have everyone in your whole cell block liking and subscribing.
@t0dd0004 ай бұрын
My sister was stopped by a fake police officer. Terrifying. Luckily, she sensed the danger and drove off after he approached her car. Though he did not carry a captive built gun, he was definitely up to something evil.
@argentokaos26294 ай бұрын
"You're so frickin' cool. I like him. I like him a lot."
@solongdentahlplaan79754 ай бұрын
Won't even pay her bounties.
@prp24 ай бұрын
@@argentokaos2629Right?!
@vermithax4 ай бұрын
There are movies that not only bear a rewatch, but are better upon rewatching them. This is definitely one of those films.
@progunliberal3 ай бұрын
This isn't a movie about the "story". It is a philosophical film about good and evil, life and death. About the older ones always thinking things were better in the past, and they never were. "You can't stop what's coming".
@gggallin827926 күн бұрын
I think it’s less about good and evil and more about violence and consequence being a force in itself. That’s what makes the car crash scene so awesome to me since the whole movie Anton gets build up as this force of nature himself who acts more like a calamity than a human. But in the end even he is not safe from sudden violence he’s just a human like everybody else
@flippert04 ай бұрын
16:46 "I wonder where he gets his hair cut" This was one of the biggest mysteries in that movie
@PolferiferusII4 ай бұрын
I remember so many reviewers commenting on the hairstyle when it first came out; "sporting a _terrifying_ pageboy(!)," and the like 😆 ...Yeah, I agree, it's ugly af, but come on!
@threeminuteshate22 күн бұрын
Without question he cuts it himself 😂
@seanstinchfield-mp2xm4 ай бұрын
Whenever someone asks me where I got something, I always reply “at the gettin place”.
@deadassdgaf1004 ай бұрын
that's just simply standard if Southern 😉.... EVERYBODY knows ya get everything at "the gettin place"
@NativeNewMexican4 ай бұрын
@@deadassdgaf100 Out here, we do somethin particular if our spouse is mouthin off.
@4Kandlez4 ай бұрын
@@NativeNewMexican What's that?
@NativeNewMexican4 ай бұрын
@@4Kandlez "You keep runnin' that mouth I'm gonna' take you in the back and..." is a quote from the movie that might remind you.
@cgbleak4 ай бұрын
If you want another fine "regional" movie by the Cohen Bothers, please watch "Fargo."
@Wowzersdude-k5c4 ай бұрын
I prefer Fargo. I thought No Country was overrated and I love the Coen Bros.
@innocentbystander18534 ай бұрын
Possibly the best final line delivery ever…”And then I woke up.” - (cut to black / roll credits)
@Scary__fun4 ай бұрын
His dreams of his father I took as being in heaven (the father going on ahead and he'd be waiting when he got there). Waking up is him returning to the hell on earth he still lives in... where people kill others for sometimes unknown reasons. There's a lot of symbolism with Chiguhr being an angel of death handing out people's fates at times with a flip of a coin. Llewelyn's offscreen death is subverting how most people think they are the hero of their own stories, but in actuality evil sometimes wins instead. Even good people on Earth meet untimely fates like being accidentally shot when attempting to kill a steer, a mom getting cancer, or stopping to help someone whose car runs down and being killed. It's a very pessimistic story about life.
@martyemmons18594 ай бұрын
Watching your videos is guaranteed to make me laugh, Dawn Marie. "Beer with benefits" I never would have been able to put that situation into those words.
@rx7dude20064 ай бұрын
Bell’s allegorical dreams genuinely encapsulate the meaning behind No Country for Old Men. The retired sheriff doesn’t appear to give much thought to his first dream, but it symbolizes his lingering guilt over Moss’ death all the same. Like in his dream, he was entrusted with a task but failed, despite his promise to Carla Jean. It is implied that Bell feels this failure subconsciously, but he can’t put the feeling into words, hence the dream. The second of Bell's dreams is where people become split over the No Country for Old Men meaning. As Bell notes before recalling the second of his dreams, he’s 20 years older than his father ever was, meaning he has become the old man his visions enact. He and his father are back in simpler times in the dream, riding through the snow and cold together.
@DavidAntrobus4 ай бұрын
@rx7dude2006 Also, his dream father is "carrying the fire" referred to in Cormac McCarthy's other novel, _The Road_ . In that, "carrying the fire" means love and hope and the passing on of honour and knowledge through the generations, making moral decisions, something that makes us human.
@dan_hitchman0074 ай бұрын
Javier Bardem is a chameleon-like actor. He is so gentle and vulnerable in "The Sea Inside." It is an amazing, heart-wrenching film.
@uconnapharm4 ай бұрын
Wikipedia defines No Country For Old Men as : an American neo-Western crime thriller film
@BM-hb2mr4 ай бұрын
As we all know wiki is garbage wn no one should take anything they put on the internet. Wiki is crap
@robpeterslaypaul4 ай бұрын
Fascinating that you connected the Biker from "Raising Arizona" to Chigurh. The two films hit so many of the same notes for me, in re fate, etc.
@notabritperse4 ай бұрын
Yeah, forcing your way into a passing pick-up truck goes worse for the driver, in this case.
@Morris1581Ай бұрын
Maybe its because both movies from the Coen Brothers.
@robpeterslaypaulАй бұрын
@@Morris1581 Well, in all honesty I tend to think of them of as the same film, just one is a comedy while the other is a traditional tragedy.
@ianinkster22614 ай бұрын
When the trailer park manager refuses on principle to divulge information, Chigur spares her life because he respects her adherence to principle, for which he himself is a stickler. Had she wavered, he'd have done the coin thing.
@darrylw58514 ай бұрын
Jack McCall killed Wild Bill.
@deadassdgaf1004 ай бұрын
@@Bothorthand WHY would THAT matter....what makes you think THAT would stop him from killing anyone?! there's just as many scenes where he kills a room of at least 2 or more ppl together than scenes with him killing a single person.
@glenmcdonald3754 ай бұрын
us that how to spell "Sugar"?
@glenmcdonald3754 ай бұрын
he checked his boots for blood as he left - which means he killed her
@jacktilghman979719 күн бұрын
It’s “Chigurh”
@kennyw78954 ай бұрын
Garret Dillahunt, who plays Wendell, also plays Jack McCall in Deadwood. That's where you know him from!
@Hexon664 ай бұрын
Don't remind her about that guy. Remember how gutted she was when Wild Bill was killed.... until she didn't really care about it a few episodes later. 😉
@clarencewalker39254 ай бұрын
If you like a good comedy, watch him in "Raising Hope."
@nicholasbellofatto4 ай бұрын
And he played Wolcott (Hearsts man) in season 2.
@keithrichman69184 ай бұрын
And John Dory!
@terencemccormick81784 ай бұрын
@@keithrichman6918 And the leader of the baddie henchmen in the last season of Justified.
@leniobarcelos17704 ай бұрын
Fun Fact: The actress that plays Carla Jean, Kelly Macdonald is Scottish and has a Scottish accent in real life. I was pretty surprised to find that out because she delivers an American Texas accent so well. It sounds completely natural to me.
@PolferiferusII4 ай бұрын
A lot of southern US accents were derived in large part from Scottish settlers, or so I've heard. Over the centuries, in gradual and subtle ways, both have changed from what they were to what they sound like today. Obviously, there were other influences as well, and currently US accents are flattening to where there's less and less difference between US regions. When I hear 1950s Pennsylvania people speaking in old news reels, they sound incredibly different from what my PA relatives sound like now. Even Chicago, where I live now (moved here from PA in the late 1960s), many people no longer sound like those SNL "Da Bears" characters. I think it's the god-awful internet that's causing it, mostly.
@aussierob38604 ай бұрын
Never before have people been so terrified of a haircut.
@rubydragon10344 ай бұрын
Long in the short places, short in the long places. It should be from both the future and the past. Something a child would do to a doll.
@seanstinchfield-mp2xm4 ай бұрын
Lol watch Sam Spruell in Fargo season 5!
@littleghostfilms30124 ай бұрын
What about Richard Simmons?
@foilhattiest14 ай бұрын
It's what little boys with bowl cuts grow up to be if nothing gets in their way.
@argentokaos26294 ай бұрын
"Buster Brown" in Hell.
@nawfsider854 ай бұрын
Hell or High Water...... is the next Modern Western Movie you need to watch!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@vermithax4 ай бұрын
Great film. That whole trilogy of films is amazing (the other two being Sicario and Wind River).
@RandomDudeOne3 ай бұрын
Or maybe "There Will Be Blood".
@Chamomileable4 ай бұрын
"He should strap it to a pigeon" Dawn, honey, I don't think you'd be getting away with the 2 million. Just a hunch lmao.
@woahhbro29064 ай бұрын
Fun Fact: Woody Harrelson's real dad was a hitman, and one of his cases is mentioned in this movie.
@Casper500023 ай бұрын
His father was involved in the JFK murder
@Mickey-kh9hb4 ай бұрын
A lot of buildings in America don't have a 13th floor, it's an old superstition
@foilhattiest14 ай бұрын
Oh wow that would be disappointing, I always thought the observation meant that there was some huge secret hiding on a secret floor in the building.
@ilionreactor10794 ай бұрын
It's not that it has more labels than floors (skipping 13, which is common), but that there are FEWER labels than floors, implying there is a hidden, non-public floor.
@MarcosElMalo24 ай бұрын
@@foilhattiest1have you seen Being John Malevich?
@foilhattiest14 ай бұрын
@@MarcosElMalo2 Ha, yes I have! Well Malkovich anyway ^^
@maximillianosaben4 ай бұрын
All this time, I never considered that the reason behind this humerous dialogue, and I've been in plenty of building that go 12 to 14. I always just found it do be funny stuff from the Coen's, but that makes so much sense (and obvious).
@vermithax4 ай бұрын
"I would just be on the toilet all the time. Having nervous poops." Relatable.
@dougpowers67844 ай бұрын
The Templeton Eagles jacket he gets on the bridge was Josh Brolin's actual high school jacket
@michaelkeenan34373 ай бұрын
That is soooo cool,
@robertzapata53954 ай бұрын
Dawn Marie about Chigurh..."i wonder where he gets his hair cut?" Lol. That's why I love watching her more than any other channel.
@Archerjr14 ай бұрын
Your pigeon idea was brilliant. The airspeed velocity of a homing device laden homing pigeon is sufficient to fly far away. Much better than even an African swallow.
@harryrabbit28704 ай бұрын
For my money, Javier Bardem's portrayal of Anton Chigurh is the most frightening screen villain of the last 50 years. And for the record, the Coen brothers insisted on that haircut to make him scarier. As for Tommy Lee Jones' character, his world is disappearing, the society he knew. "You can't change what's coming" which is why he needs to retire. It's no country for old men.
@radioroscoe4 ай бұрын
To answer a couple of your questions: Woodie found the brief case in the grass because crossing that bridge is the only path berween the US/Mexican border there. He is guessed that he would not chance trying to take it into Mexico, that he was in a hurry to hide it, and it was a decent hiding place being a "no man's land" between the borders. As to the case in the hotel vent: he rented the room, put the case in the vent because (1) is was a decent hiding place and (2) he could retrieve it from another room if he had to. The Mexicans tracked him down and were waiting in HIS room, the same room Chigur shot them all in.
@uconnapharm4 ай бұрын
There are some people that remain calm and cool under any situations ie) soldiers from elite military units , bodyguards / protective service agents etc etc
@ilionreactor10794 ай бұрын
And psychopaths...
@philmakris85074 ай бұрын
Because of superstitions about the number 13 many buildings don't have a labeled 13th floor.
@OgreProgrammer4 ай бұрын
Because they were laundering money/making drugs, they were missing a floor button in the elevator, and Wells mentioned it to the accountant as a way of demonstrating his skills and knowledge.
@RobertLutece9094 ай бұрын
I've heard that, but I'm old now and I've never once run across a building with a missing 13th floor.
@aerthreepwood80214 ай бұрын
Fun fact but Carla Jean is a Scottish actress.
@EllisThings4 ай бұрын
Cool that you mentioned Raising Arizona - it's the same directors. Also did The Big Lebowski. You should definitely check out more Coen brothers films: Fargo, The Hudsucker Proxy, Miller's Crossing, etc.
@norwegianblue20174 ай бұрын
I second this. Keeping to the crime theme, Miller's Crossing, Fargo, Blood Simple and The Man Who Was Not There should be first on the list!
@Wowzersdude-k5c4 ай бұрын
How can you forget Blood Simple?
@EllisThings4 ай бұрын
@@Wowzersdude-k5c the "etc" covers that lol, but yeah all of the above
@flippert04 ай бұрын
7:12 everyone: "we are extremly creeped out by Chigurh" Marie: "I like him" *laughs manically*
@user-wr9ej6xe4j3 ай бұрын
Woody knew the briefcase was likely thrown over the fence because Llewelyn didnt have it in the hospital with him after he crossed the border. Took me a few times to figure that part out. I love this movie so much
@Captwalker704 ай бұрын
Have to remember that Moss was a Vietnam Vet so all that he goes through is probably almost like a boring day at the office for him, which would explain his rather calm demeanor throughout the movie.
@Hexon664 ай бұрын
Yet he can't manage to survive El Paso.
@Captwalker704 ай бұрын
@@Hexon66 Yeah and you can blame on the Cohen brothers, who could have even made it a much better film... but for whatever reason decided to stick with this ending... never read the book but am assuming it was very much like that...?
@sluglife97854 ай бұрын
Is it actually mentioned at any point in the movie for us to remember it?
@winstonmarlowe52544 ай бұрын
@@sluglife9785 Woody Harrelson's character briefly talks with him about it at his bedside.
@bb.buchanan3 ай бұрын
@@winstonmarlowe5254 The lawman at the border also asks Moss directly if he was in 'Nam and what unit he was in
@craigmccuistian4 ай бұрын
It’s gonna get a ‘BEST MOVIE EVER!’
@Whateva674 ай бұрын
“Beer with benefits” 😅 love it.
@polyglot124 ай бұрын
This film is absolutely chilling. Javier Bardem has got to be one of the most intense villains. And the middle part is so suspenseful. By the way, you do a great southern accent! If you ever want to see another side of Javier, 'Vicky, Cristina, Barcelona' is excellent.
@THOMMGB4 ай бұрын
Dawn Marie, You did such a nice job editing this. I was hesitant about watching this as I've never seen this movie before. But with your editing skills and insightful commentary on full display, I was able to follow right along. Best Editor Ever! -Thomas Hamilton, Southern California
@dafterite4 ай бұрын
Dawn Marie: "I never stop for a police car." Don't ever visit Arkansas.
@ianinkster22614 ай бұрын
Can you do Kelly McDonald's accent in the movie? She has yours in real life.
@shotbybrady87934 ай бұрын
Hoping Dawn reads enough of these to realize Kelly Macdonald is Scottish. Sure adds to appreciating the voice acting performance
@asciishallreceive38714 ай бұрын
@@shotbybrady8793 And yet my first experience with her was in Boardwalk Empire where she played an Irish woman, she was captivating as always. kzbin.info/www/bejne/jZWakoumpbhnhNk
@philmakris85074 ай бұрын
Enjoying listening to Dawn do the accents.
@dnish66734 ай бұрын
The gas station scene is so great.
@woeshaling64214 ай бұрын
Together with "there will be blood" (coincidentally shot around the same area and time), 2007 gave us 2 bonechilling characters with Anton Chigurh and Daniel Plainview
@Zseventyone4 ай бұрын
Why are you so convinced it’s oxygen in that tank?
@aerthreepwood80214 ай бұрын
I mean, it is. It's compressed air, at least, maybe not pure oxygen.
@Zseventyone4 ай бұрын
@@aerthreepwood8021 *certainly not pure O2.
@LockeDemosthenes23 ай бұрын
When I saw this in the theater, someone actually yelled "oh, come on!" when the credits came up.
@Chris_McC4 ай бұрын
Anton Chigurh is the best villain in film history, in my humble opinion. Bardem's psychopath acting was perfect.
@pnutbutrncrackers3 ай бұрын
Some of her comments cracked me up. "Strap it to a pigeon!", "Wonder where he gets his hair cut", LOL Brilliant film. Much more than a suspense movie. A probing reflection on modern life/modern evil.
@EgbertWilliams4 ай бұрын
This deserved about a 50-minute reaction with more clips.
@BogeyDopeYT4 ай бұрын
“ I never stop for a police car”…..if you ever visit the U.S……stop for police cars. They get very upset when you don’t stop.
@OklasoonaHomer4 ай бұрын
Especially in Arkansas #Jacob Byrd kzbin.info/www/bejne/pIDVkIeMabagi7M
@nahnotsomuch22924 ай бұрын
The deputy towards the end while Bell is reading the paper is played by Garrett Dillahunt. He played the Jack McCall (the guy that shot Wild Bill Hickok) in Deadwood. He also plays another, different character in a later season of Deadwood. Which, by the way, you need to get after watching season 2!.
@ForeverInDreams2374 ай бұрын
One of my all time favorites...thank you for choosing so many great films and not just whats trending at the moment.
@TD-mg6cd3 ай бұрын
Woody Harrelson is following in his father's footsteps.
@joesixpack8305Ай бұрын
I watched this movie and liked it. Then about 7 months later I watched it again and thought it was the best made movie I ever saw. Probably seen it at least 30 times since. Just a perfectly made movie. Period.
@NidhCthon2 ай бұрын
The book and movie cover the inevitability of change and the denial of death. The cast simply lives in the world they cannot stop. A study in our terror in the face of a world we cannot control.
@jefftheref723 ай бұрын
"We can't give out no information" I enjoyed you pointing out what the trailer park manager was actually saying by using a double negative.
@fenianbastard62264 ай бұрын
When I saw this in theaters, I was very disappointed at the ending, but I’ve grown to love it.
@cog4life4 ай бұрын
This is a sick movie. I’m not saying good. I’m saying truly SICK. The man is pure evil! Hard to watch for me. Not sure I’ll make it through. 😊
@keithr-xj7zx4 ай бұрын
Awww... poor baby. 😅
@winstonmarlowe52544 ай бұрын
@@keithr-xj7zx you just owned that person with FACTS and LOGIC
@cog4life4 ай бұрын
@@keithr-xj7zx 😂
@katec87964 ай бұрын
This is definitely a Western and a Thriller lol. It's also one of the finest films ever made no matter the genre. The more times you watch it the more you fall in love with it.
@user-tb2jy9lu3d4 ай бұрын
The tank and mechanism is basically a form of Captive Bolt Pistol used for killing cattle for slaughter.
@jeffsherk70564 ай бұрын
The book is by Cormac McCarthy. Same title. It is worth reading.
@thegorn684 ай бұрын
Lleweyln's wife, Carla Jean, is played by Scottish actress Kelly Macdonald who lives in Glasgow. Just does an excellent Texas accent. I couldn't believe it when I heard her in an interview.
@tylergay72214 ай бұрын
Holy hell, you can actually hear the silenced shotgun blast at 14:42. Ive seen this movie a million times and never caught that.
@RwandaBob3 ай бұрын
british woman: hasn’t heard of the name llewelyn
@USCFlash4 ай бұрын
Great movie, but what has happened with Deadwood? It's been ages 🤕
@asciishallreceive38714 ай бұрын
Yeah Deadwood, Dawn, the actor that was the Sherriff's deputy played Jack McCall in Deadwood that killed Wild Bill. He returns later in the show as another very odd character in Deadwood. You need to continue that one, for sure!
@jethrobodine85634 ай бұрын
Cormac McCarthy (the guy who wrote this book) also wrote a book called "Blood Meridian" .... a story so diabolical that movie studios tried several times to adapt a screen play for a movie but had to change/cut so much they trash canned the whole thing
@dogawful3 ай бұрын
There's a film adaptation being written.
@zegh85784 ай бұрын
loooool I love that you went on about bees during *the* scene where Anton's oxygen tank thing finally got explained :'D Fun reaction, fun personality (maybe also a bit dangerous!)
@brandonmartin084 ай бұрын
My grandma RIP talked exactly like the 2 double beds lady 😆
@hollywoodpotato52894 ай бұрын
NCFOM is the tragedy to the comedy of Raising Arizona.
@maceomaceo114 ай бұрын
Fargo is the bridge connecting them
@michaelescareno70483 ай бұрын
"You need to find a John Wick doctor" LOL!!! "You should strap it to a pigeon" LOL!!! "I wonder where he gets his hair cut" LOL!!! 😂 Enjoyed your reaction!! If you want to see another fantastic Texas country crime movie, I highly recommend "Hell Or High Water"!!! Promise you will love it!!!! It has Jeff Bridges and Chris Pine!
@franklubbock84004 ай бұрын
i live and grew up in west Texas. This is exactly how everything and everyone looked back in the early 80s. hell we lived in a trailer that lloks axactly like moss trailer.
@angelomaurizio16684 ай бұрын
Dawn, im surprised you never heard of Kelly McDonald who'd played Carla Jean as she is a Scottish actress. Living in Texas, Kelly in my opinion had one of the best Texas accents I have ever heard from acting.
@thekamotodragon8 күн бұрын
Never have i seen someone enjoy Anton's character before lol... like he's really good as a character but to LIKE him as a person... That's a bold strategy cotton, let's see if it pays off for her.
@norcalboy25724 ай бұрын
Dawn, you and your reactions are a treasure. So perceptive. And so funny - you crack me up. Very enjoyable.
@r.b.ratieta61114 ай бұрын
It's not necessarily a "traditional western" that takes place in the 1800s, but in some ways it's a "modern western" because it basically involves hitmen, bandits, a headstrong protagonist, a wise and cautious Sheriff, all of them chasing after a large sum of money, and it takes place in Texas. Thriller is more accurate for sure, but it has a lot of western elements.
@BrooklynBeTheBoro2 ай бұрын
@24:25 looks at Llewellyn dead on the floor, @24:35 "Llewellyn guy didn't die. I never saw him"! 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@BobDylan-sk9yl3 ай бұрын
I usually watch the 80% of the movie, and that is enough to understand the most of the story.
@CrownlessKing884 ай бұрын
He knew where the money was because he’s smart haha. It’s his job to find things and people.
@Elerad4 ай бұрын
No Country is definitely one of those films you think about and ponder and turn over in your mind for ages after watching it. Then you watch it again and start the whole process over again. I'd love to see you react to another Coen Bros flick, Barton Fink, which will mess with you like nothing else outside of a Lynch or a Jodorowsky flick.
@Ozai753 ай бұрын
Notice that most of the money was $1 bills after the top rows. Also it was hilarious that you didn't recognize that the MC was killed.
@davidisbell40334 ай бұрын
All Carson Wells had to do to find the case full of money was to follow the blood trail to where it deviated onto the concrete barrier that Llewelyn Moss stepped up on, accompanied by the dried puddle of vomit. The trail was off camera when Carson tracked it, but it would still have been there and likely swarmed by flies and other insects. Easy to put two-and-two together and look over the chain-link fence.
@cleonmagabeefy85004 ай бұрын
god damn Dawn Marie, your reactions are always freakin awesome!!!! Thank you for all your time and effort, it's definitely appreciated 😊😊😊
@LezArtist5iG4 ай бұрын
2:55 The pressurized air, pushes a bolt out at fast speed and makes a hole. It's used for killing cows.
@julsarmijo78364 ай бұрын
Filmed in my lovely state of New Mexico. Such a classic!
@treystone94643 ай бұрын
5:54 Chigurh is alarmed by the nice cashier who told him "I saw you were from Dallis" which means "I saw your license plate on your stolen car for anyone to ask", he's asking questions, not be mean, but to decide if he should not kill him. Ultimately, the coin decides.... Later, In the motel he pulls out change, he has a bloody quarter.
@treystone94643 ай бұрын
@TE.LE.GRAMDawnMarieYT I won what? Like the nice cashier won? Is this a bot?
@hissatsu49374 ай бұрын
This was the perfect movie for you to watch for this channel. Definitely one of your best so far 👍
@gabrielrosenberg67344 ай бұрын
Putting it deep in the vent make it seem like its in a different room
@jollyrodgers72724 ай бұрын
It's in West Texas, so it IS a 'Western', just a modern western. It's not "normal" for him - he's just keeping his cool. It's not Oxygen - it's just compressed air. He said "Beeves" (beefs).
@ajb76154 ай бұрын
I absolutely adore your accent and your personality!!! I also enjoy your reactions every time!!!❤😊
@TheseDarkWoods3 ай бұрын
Incredible movie! When I watched this on the big-screen back in 2007 I found the ending to be a little bit of a let-down, but now it’s fucking brilliant. Death happens randomly. Our hero dies off-screen. It’s ballsy. The film doesn’t need a Hollywood-y shootout. ”If you think this has a happy ending, you haven’t been paying attention” (Tyrion, ”Thrones”). Oh, and THAT guy is Garrett Dillahunt who played both Jack McCall and Francis Wolcott on ”Deadwood”. You’re lovely. Keep ’em coming! Hugs from Sweden. 💙🥂
@philmakris85074 ай бұрын
It is a Western, a Western set in modern times. And the best Western set in the modern age ever made. 🐎
@dan_hitchman0074 ай бұрын
Modern is relative because the story takes place in an earlier decade.