Why THIS Was One Of The Most Terrifying Scenes In Film History

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 окт 2021
  • The Coen Brothers award winning film No Country for Old Men delivered one of the most terrifying villains in movie history. Javier Bardem, as Anton Chigurh, delivers a bone chilling performance that could rival any horror villain of the last 30 years. He is quiet, but calculated, going after anyone that might get in his way. No Country for Old Men will be remembered for a lot of things, but Anton Chigurh will be at the top of that list.
    Written by Chris Teregis & Richard Kuras
    Edited by Dan Smiley
    #NoCountryForOldMen #AntonChigurh #Nerdstalgic
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 3,8 тыс.

  • @Nerdstalgic
    @Nerdstalgic  2 года назад +1971

    What do you think is the scariest scene in film history?

    • @davidmckesey7119
      @davidmckesey7119 2 года назад +119

      The most jarring the thing I seen is at the end of Enemy. I am not going to ruin it for those who have not seen it.

    • @nicolasschultz7550
      @nicolasschultz7550 2 года назад +68

      I liked the clostriphobic scene from descent

    • @FortKnox5529
      @FortKnox5529 2 года назад +68

      I think the most jarring movie I've seen is American Pscho, definitely not the "scariest" but definitely the one movie that keeps me up at night thinking about

    • @first3017
      @first3017 2 года назад +152

      The cat in the hat

    • @metamech7383
      @metamech7383 2 года назад +43

      Hannibal and Texas Chainsaw Massacre (the original). When Hannibal fed the owners face to his dogs, that disturbed me for years.

  • @rhetiq9989
    @rhetiq9989 2 года назад +5662

    The best thing about this movie is how it manages to make us feel terrified of a guy branding a Lord Farquaad haircut in broad daylight

    • @WRLDconquer
      @WRLDconquer 2 года назад +160

      "some of you may die... and that's a chance I'm willing to take"

    • @GuardianAngel..
      @GuardianAngel.. 2 года назад +132

      When I first saw the haircut I was thinking he might be a Justin Bieber fan.

    • @ShaneJoshua1980
      @ShaneJoshua1980 2 года назад +18

      😂😂

    • @apexone5502
      @apexone5502 2 года назад +12

      😆😆😆

    • @davidottley2739
      @davidottley2739 2 года назад +56

      Good lord that made me laugh. Thanks for breaking the tension. 😂😂😂

  • @L3GioG57A
    @L3GioG57A 2 года назад +3348

    Man, that gas station guy must be terrified to talk to anyone ever again.
    “Haha, my kids can get annoying sometimes.”
    “That'll be $5.60”

    • @cothinker680
      @cothinker680 2 года назад +74

      He will have nightmares about that.

    • @wonkyeyewilly4575
      @wonkyeyewilly4575 2 года назад +79

      sometimes folks gotta lear the hard way. like when my neighbor leaves his mower out and i pawn it. im helping him.

    • @FractalRaver
      @FractalRaver 2 года назад +10

      Would he even know how close he came? It’s been a while since I saw this, but I dunno if he’s aware

    • @FractalRaver
      @FractalRaver 2 года назад +2

      @@wonkyeyewilly4575 not really you’re helping yourself. Chigur wouldn’t like that.

    • @L3GioG57A
      @L3GioG57A 2 года назад

      @@FractalRaver ?

  • @andiezero
    @andiezero Год назад +538

    In an article in GQ Magazine , Javier Bardem's own brother was sooo freaked out by his performance as Anton Chigurh in this movie, that when the lights turned on after the end of the film showing , he turned to Javier, and reportedly said : " Get the f__k away from me, man ! " .Bardem really nailed the ultimate homicidal psychopathic role !

    • @governorsid1
      @governorsid1 Год назад +5

      The movie was too violent and the Cohen brothers are too stupid.

    • @anonymoususer602
      @anonymoususer602 Год назад +83

      @@governorsid1 watch baby shark then

    • @aenima1
      @aenima1 Год назад +38

      @@governorsid1 Damn man. These guys make classic movies and have earned studios hundreds of millions in ticket sales but "RaGerard" on RUclips thinks they're "too stupid"

    • @videojuegos3dlocurasextrem949
      @videojuegos3dlocurasextrem949 Год назад +4

      @@aenima1 Yeay, poor Coen Brothers😧😭🤪🤣😂😂 My god, RaGerad was bored I suppose, greetings friends :=")!

    • @higherlunacy
      @higherlunacy Год назад +6

      ...procedes to like his own comment.

  • @JimmyOlsson
    @JimmyOlsson Год назад +228

    We know what Javier Bardem contributes to this iconic scene, but we must not forget how good Gene Jones is as the Gas Station Proprietor. The confusion and uncertainty in his face is absolutely believable and adds a lot to the fateful tension in the scene!

    • @bit1733
      @bit1733 2 месяца назад +3

      Exactly. He displayed an intense mix of fear, timidity, and lack of self respect flawlessly. That old man is a damn fine actor.

    • @miker6090
      @miker6090 2 месяца назад +1

      The scene works so well because we believe Gene Jones' character.

  • @joeyeulo1489
    @joeyeulo1489 2 года назад +6395

    Gene Jones, the actor playing the gas station owner, is so good. He's so harmless here but is also so intimidating in a movie called The Sacrament, where he plays the leader of a Jonestown-like cult. Extremely underrated actor.

    • @mysterylovescompany2657
      @mysterylovescompany2657 2 года назад +110

      Can confirm, The Sacrament is great & he is _incredible_ in that film. I highly recommend it!
      Anyone wanting to see a more straightforward & less subtle horror treatment of the same subjects should check out a 2016 film called The Veil, with Thomas Jane in the analogous role.

    • @mattmcd3523
      @mattmcd3523 2 года назад +10

      🤨👉Great observation Joey (second cousin to Gene Jones) Eulo

    • @J.S325
      @J.S325 2 года назад +7

      That movie literally lost 4 million dollars how tf does that happen? I haven’t watched it btw.

    • @kevinmack8411
      @kevinmack8411 2 года назад +22

      He's also Sweet Dave, in H8ful 8.

    • @timothystephenson2498
      @timothystephenson2498 2 года назад +1

      cool

  • @BillykOTW
    @BillykOTW 2 года назад +2541

    I find it hilarious that Anton seems to be please that he won the coin toss. His whole demeanor changes, like he just saved his life.

    • @papabird4425
      @papabird4425 2 года назад +308

      Fate is the only law Anton believes he is bound to. It's possible that he didn't want the man to die at all, although he was ready to carry out the orders of fate, but relieved when he doesn't have to. What do you think?

    • @BillykOTW
      @BillykOTW 2 года назад +99

      @@papabird4425 It’s an interesting take. In this instance he may have not wanted to do it. But in others, as the case for Woody Harrelsons character, he took great pleasure out of killing him.

    • @papabird4425
      @papabird4425 2 года назад +41

      @@BillykOTW and in that situation, I'm sure he relished being fates hand.

    • @mm6461
      @mm6461 2 года назад +7

      The coin is from 1958…not 1957

    • @flamitaz
      @flamitaz 2 года назад +68

      I don't think he was relieved because fate had it that he let the man live, because it seems to Anton that whether the man lives or dies makes no difference to him. I think he smiles because he finds it funny that the gas station attendant will never know how close he came to dying. About the breadth of the edge of that coin. One more flip, or one less flip would have been a different fate. Also, i think he smiles because he doesn't have to do the extra work. He can just think to himself "huh. Guess I won't have to add to my to do list by killing this man." Although he may enjoy killing, i think he enjoys getting the job done/completing his mission more.

  • @jasonnewbery
    @jasonnewbery Год назад +140

    I LOVED his final line. “Then it will get mixed with the others and become JUST a coin…..which it is”. Absolutely chilling, intelligent, and deliberate. Awesome scene

    • @OUTLAWinTX
      @OUTLAWinTX Год назад +8

      That’s your lucky quarter!! I love this movie.

    • @samuelburton302
      @samuelburton302 10 месяцев назад +8

      then that look he gives the proprietor just cracks me up

    • @christopherwellman2364
      @christopherwellman2364 8 дней назад

      I recently lost an Italian coin because I accidentally mixed it in with the others 😑

  • @coffeetalk924
    @coffeetalk924 2 года назад +151

    Also creepy was when another man asked Anton the question, "Are you going to kill me?" To which Anton remaining quiet for a moment as if amused partly smiles and then replied, "That depends. Do you see me?"

    • @runningbetweenspaces
      @runningbetweenspaces Год назад +14

      That's when we all would say "I don't even remember your face... Whoever you are"

    • @CS-ui4qj
      @CS-ui4qj Год назад +21

      @@runningbetweenspaces in real life if you are ever in that situation. do not ask dumb questions or make snarky comments like that. just say "if you are going to kill me then just get it over with, its not like i have a choice anyways". That or something similar. Especially if they ask the typical "you think i won't do it?". Make it very clear that you have no choice and do not add "please" or other words that sound like pathetic begging. Killers' thought processes are that they enjoy the fact they are absolutely in control of that moment, because they are never in control any other time in life. However, begging adds animosity and will have reverse effect. But that "enjoyment" will more likely than not ease them up enough to let you live. Take it from experience. 3 out of 3 moments so far and still alive and unharmed. So take it for what its worth.

    • @runningbetweenspaces
      @runningbetweenspaces Год назад +37

      @@CS-ui4qj ummm this is a Wendy's lol

    • @CS-ui4qj
      @CS-ui4qj Год назад +12

      @@runningbetweenspaces triple baconator and a large chocolate frosty then please. lol

    • @INDRIDCOLD83
      @INDRIDCOLD83 Год назад +6

      @@runningbetweenspaces The correct response would be "See what'?

  • @grapeshot
    @grapeshot 2 года назад +4016

    He was without a doubt one of the best villains I've seen in a movie.

    • @Nerdstalgic
      @Nerdstalgic  2 года назад +153

      Agree!

    • @termonic2542
      @termonic2542 2 года назад +88

      The only time I got terrified by someone in a movie, Javier Bardem killed the role.

    • @dc9662
      @dc9662 2 года назад +47

      Anton Chigurh is as scary and unstoppable as the T1000.

    • @jasdanvm3845
      @jasdanvm3845 2 года назад +19

      The fact that the movie ends the way it does tho...

    • @jr2904
      @jr2904 2 года назад +16

      @@termonic2542 no way, this is the guy playing Stilgar in Dune... It's gonna be epic

  • @pythagorasaurusrex9853
    @pythagorasaurusrex9853 2 года назад +2076

    Usually it's a common thing in a movie theatre you hear people mumbling, slurping drinks and chewing popcorn. During this scene I realized that suddenly there was no sound at all but the two characters on the screen. It was dead silence, people literally holding their breath from the tension. Indeed one of the most iconic scenes in movie history ever.

    • @NoNo-pw1fw
      @NoNo-pw1fw 2 года назад +9

      As great as the scene is I don’t know if ur aware of the meaning of iconic

    • @jm8997
      @jm8997 2 года назад +85

      I was just about to let one rip when the movie theater went silent. I had to hold it in until the scene ended.

    • @sanddabz5635
      @sanddabz5635 2 года назад +5

      @@jm8997
      🤣

    • @CliveNebula71
      @CliveNebula71 2 года назад

      @@jm8997 Did it make your breath stink? :-)

    • @chaserogers2999
      @chaserogers2999 2 года назад +14

      The film as a whole is a true masterpiece. The weight of the old Sheriff while aware of the ruthlessness of the world but also being unpleasantly surprised of the evolution of the crimes. I love these breakdowns and your analysis is fantastic but I would also press for a moment of silence for the scene itself to live. So experience in real time even in portions even if it’s just the beginning, the middle, or the end. Great job! I also think Cohen Brothers most underrated film is probably Miller’s Crossing. A must see for those that haven’t.

  • @MERKAMGCLK
    @MERKAMGCLK 2 года назад +115

    Javier Bardem is a spectacular actor. His role here and as the villian in James Bond. Everything is so subtly under played. Yet is so powerful and dangerous .
    What is so great about Bardem is that in real life he is so nice, funny and self deprecating. A true class act.

  • @jeolban3287
    @jeolban3287 2 года назад +57

    That was the scariest and tensest scene I have ever seen in my life. I watched the film thinking it would just be another serial killer flick I'd forget about minutes after watching it, but that scene is something I will never forget.

  • @FinancialShinanigan
    @FinancialShinanigan 2 года назад +2515

    Gas station guy on his deathbed:
    "That guy with the coin was weird."

    • @Nerdstalgic
      @Nerdstalgic  2 года назад +101

      Ha!

    • @davidking4838
      @davidking4838 2 года назад +97

      Then he dies and his hand falls and releases an object - like in Citizen Kane - and.....you guessed it, it's a 1957 Quarter.

    • @TheEntity0
      @TheEntity0 2 года назад +6

      Hahaha

    • @davidegaruti2582
      @davidegaruti2582 2 года назад +42

      @@davidking4838 only if the 1957 quarter falls on tail as he dies

    • @MsAggie78
      @MsAggie78 2 года назад +2

      😂😂😂

  • @rayneozier
    @rayneozier 2 года назад +1747

    Hitchcock had a great speech about building suspense. “You show 2 people at a table talking about baseball. Then you have the camera pan down to reveal a bomb with a 2 minute timer under the table. Then you have you characters continue talking about baseball. The audience is gonna be like OMG stop talking about baseball, there’s a bomb under the table!” Having the audience be knowledgeable about stakes that your characters are unaware of is an excellent way to build suspense/tension. This scene is a great example of that. We as the audience and Anton are aware of the stakes, but the shopkeeper isn’t. I think that’s a big reason why Anton seems so terrifying in this scene in particular.

    • @user6008
      @user6008 2 года назад +24

      4:45 the shopkeeper's arm drops out of sight, where he grips the trigger on the double barreled sawed off shotgun mounted under the counter. Then sighs in relief knowing he isn't being robbed again, nor having to blow Antone Chigurh straight through the gates of hell :)

    • @iainsteele5737
      @iainsteele5737 2 года назад +5

      @@user6008 that’s not true.

    • @user6008
      @user6008 2 года назад +20

      @@iainsteele5737 Truth is one's interpretation applied to fictional reality.

    • @iainsteele5737
      @iainsteele5737 2 года назад +29

      @@user6008 yes, but there objectively was not a gun though ya fucking weirdo

    • @adrianpillai6645
      @adrianpillai6645 2 года назад +14

      This scene is so rich because you could make 2 other (less great, but still entertaining) movies just from this one setup scene. 1) Anton kills the man, and this is the crime that sets off a tale of vengeance and a police manhunt for Anton. Or 2) the man kills Anton, and his troubles are just beginning.
      But this scene, whatever the other alternative outcomes could have been is perfection.

  • @klhmia
    @klhmia 2 года назад +177

    The weapon he used was one of the most insidious parts of the movie for me, especially after looking it up. It's called a 'Captive Bolt Stunner' and was invented with the sole intention of euthanasia which I also found interesting. Anton Chigurh seems brutal and savage, yet uses a tool that is meant to minimize pain and suffering on inevitable death.

    • @donmcron3334
      @donmcron3334 2 года назад +8

      I’ve been thinking about that a lot too. He’s this big scary maniac but you never see him torture anyone. I’m curious what county he’s supposed to be from. He’s Mexican right? There’s plenty of torture goes on down there… I think it’s implied he’s not Mexican though and an outsider.

    • @MarcusConstantine_Cavalida21
      @MarcusConstantine_Cavalida21 2 года назад +63

      ​@@donmcron3334 What business is it of yours where he's from?

    • @ijnet9247
      @ijnet9247 2 года назад +2

      @@MarcusConstantine_Cavalida21 LOL

    • @RPG-oh1yf
      @RPG-oh1yf 2 года назад

      Since you didn't share enough information. A Captive Bolt Stunner is used to humanely killer hogs and beef cattle during slaughter. The bolt punches through the brain and renders the animal unconscious/dead and allows the animal's jugular to be slit, letting it bleed out quickly but the heart continues to pump for up to 2 minutes after being "stunned". Animal feels nothing however.

    • @RPG-oh1yf
      @RPG-oh1yf 2 года назад +2

      @@donmcron3334 A captive bolt stunner is not designed for torture. Read my above response. I am familiar with how it's used in slaughterhouses.

  • @scottrobertson6949
    @scottrobertson6949 Год назад +17

    This scene is brilliantly crafted to create an immense emotional response. You are literally saying No!! ...this poor old insignificant innocent man does not deserve what he could possibly by chance get. The brothers are true artisan's!

  • @NotRetulf
    @NotRetulf 2 года назад +2006

    The scariest part wasn't the movie itself, but that this was the most accurate to a real life sociopath/psychopath than any other movie.

    • @amazantaarchives9289
      @amazantaarchives9289 2 года назад +185

      And his decisions are quick not prolonged no empathy no specific evil just results being ahead being clever

    • @ttudoc5690
      @ttudoc5690 2 года назад +26

      Psychopath*

    • @NotRetulf
      @NotRetulf 2 года назад +9

      @@ttudoc5690 Thanks!

    • @oscarhaydenperditionbound1195
      @oscarhaydenperditionbound1195 2 года назад +63

      Not really. Most psychopaths don’t act like him. Though many of them probably think like he does deep down

    • @barnacleboi2595
      @barnacleboi2595 2 года назад +137

      Psychopaths dont act like psychopaths, they act like normal humans in real life. You wouldnt be able to spot one by sight or sound, no psychopath would willingly act like a psychopath lol

  • @richmoreno9938
    @richmoreno9938 2 года назад +3055

    I actually saw this scene at a friends house when I came over. She was already watching it. Without even knowing Anton’s character or what movie it was, I was already creeped out and captivated by this scene. If something can pull you in that quickly from one scene alone, I consider that to be excellent script writing.

  • @JerreMuesli
    @JerreMuesli 5 месяцев назад +3

    This is easily one of my favorite movies of all time. The setting, the minimalism, the pace, the constant tension... Everyone involved in the making of this motion picture did a wonderful job. ❤

  • @celinavarchausky5333
    @celinavarchausky5333 Год назад +5

    Felt so tense the entire video, you explained the feeling so well

  • @matthewgumabon7498
    @matthewgumabon7498 2 года назад +1192

    The line about the coin having travelled 22 years to get there was always so thought provoking to me.
    If coins and dollars could talk, I’m sure they would all have some crazy stories to tell.

    • @markh9675
      @markh9675 2 года назад +31

      I totally agree...if you pause and think about that you realize that could apply to everything in your life. And I too think about the coins that have passed through my hands, where they've been, etc. I'll never look at a quarter the same again.

    • @bigchungus8287
      @bigchungus8287 2 года назад +23

      I think that coin was used in several “bets” made by Anton on innocent people

    • @jhayandrada5569
      @jhayandrada5569 2 года назад +3

      Interesting stories indeed

    • @darthsilversith667
      @darthsilversith667 2 года назад +11

      That’s one of the biggest reasons coin collectors like myself collect coins. For the stories they could potentially tell.

    • @CN86443
      @CN86443 2 года назад +16

      “I’ve been used for cocaine for the past 12 years.” “I was eaten and shitted out by a toddler.”

  • @t.damianboyle622
    @t.damianboyle622 2 года назад +1661

    Javier Bardem is so believable as this character that it is truly spooky to observe. He is way too close for comfort. Genius acting and directing.

    • @carljohan9265
      @carljohan9265 2 года назад +25

      He is also excellent as Silva in Skyfall. Holy shit his introduction scene gives me chills.

    • @hlcepeda
      @hlcepeda 2 года назад +24

      Maybe too spooky for some people. In the theater there was an older couple sitting directly in front of us. Early on in the film when Chigurh used his cattle gun to kill the guy on the highway, the woman angrily yelled, "They always do that!" Then she and her husband immediately left the theater. Walking out on a film is one thing, But such a bizarre and baffling thing to say.

    • @patricksibiya7861
      @patricksibiya7861 2 года назад +8

      Must be the haircut.

    • @1jazzyphae
      @1jazzyphae 2 года назад +8

      I always say if they are natural at this type of acting it's because they aren't acting anymore 🤣🤣🤣

    • @carljohan9265
      @carljohan9265 2 года назад +16

      @@1jazzyphae For some people it's actually easier to be someone they're not than it is to be themselves.

  • @andrewcattini1151
    @andrewcattini1151 Год назад +10

    The reason this scene is so terrifying is that it’s so believable. I can recall an incident when one innocent comment I made almost resulted in a fight, due to the other party (who was drunk, and in hindsight one of those guys who goes a bit Joe Pesci for the smallest of reasons). It’s so real. A conversation can turn immediately when one of those involved has those type of tendencies.
    You can make films as gruesome and sick as you want but films such as The Vanishing (and this) are far more terrifying for that reason, because they are believable.

  • @natet5959
    @natet5959 11 месяцев назад +5

    This is a masterful scene. The acting, direction, the dialogue, the lack of a musical score, the enormous tension. Only the Coen Brothers could pull this off.

  • @harlonmccargar6092
    @harlonmccargar6092 2 года назад +632

    I love how chigurh never looks at him until the question about the weather, then never takes his eyes off of him, you never really think about it but it adds so much tension to the scene

    • @IIISWILIII
      @IIISWILIII 2 года назад +30

      Yup. Exactly how apex predators behave in the wild

    • @erikdayne5429
      @erikdayne5429 2 года назад +40

      He didn’t see the guy as a threat until then. Once he did, he wasn’t going to ignore the threat until it had been dealt with.

    • @BigBri550
      @BigBri550 2 года назад +9

      @@erikdayne5429 I don't know if he considered him as much of a threat as a nuisance. Then as Anton talked with the man more, he actually began to pity him and felt morally obligated to take him out of his nebbish existence

    • @jakebrowning2373
      @jakebrowning2373 2 года назад +28

      @@IIISWILIII yeah I remember hearing on Animal Planet that apex predators avert their gaze until the prey asks them about the weather

    • @djantouahmed7319
      @djantouahmed7319 2 года назад

      @@jakebrowning2373 what are you talking about?

  • @brendanbrunette5613
    @brendanbrunette5613 2 года назад +1383

    The beauty of this movie is that it isn’t about Lewellyn Moss or Chigurh; it’s actually about Sheriff Ed Tom Bell and his journey to discovering that he is an old man.

    • @rhetiq9989
      @rhetiq9989 2 года назад +108

      When I saw the movie for the first time the Lewellyn and Chigurh cat and mouse chase was the one I was hooked on while Ed Tom’s plot I thought was a side plot serving that conflict. Suffice to say I was cleverly misled, wasn’t even aware of what the film title actually meant

    • @UraharaShoten
      @UraharaShoten 2 года назад +105

      Almost. It’s not necessarily him discovering that he’s old - it’s him discovering that crime and violence have become increasingly more depraved and even evil as time went on; to a point that he almost couldn’t understand it anymore and was relieved, in a sense to be retiring. In the final scene, he fears that even retirement won’t be enough to escape how sick it’s become, though.

    • @thunderbird3304
      @thunderbird3304 2 года назад +113

      @@UraharaShoten No, in the ending he heard from his already retired friend about how violent the so-called "good old days" were. He _thought_ that crime became more violent and less understandable, when the truth is that such crimes have always happened in history

    • @cross5025
      @cross5025 2 года назад +91

      @@thunderbird3304 this is what i understood as well. The crime and violence was always there. The only difference is that the sheriff is now old. And he's come to the realisation that this is no country for old men.

    • @IzraelGraves
      @IzraelGraves 2 года назад +3

      @@UraharaShoten I think you all sort of missed the joke.

  • @tommybutler2454
    @tommybutler2454 6 месяцев назад

    Anton Chirguh scared me to death, in that movie, and in that scene especially, he was fantastic.He always plays mysterious and dark characters. He was one of the greats for sure. Beloved actor for sure. Great video !

  • @Trixiefirecrackerrrrrrrrrr86
    @Trixiefirecrackerrrrrrrrrr86 Год назад

    I just binged your whole channel! It’s so good! Love your content

  • @TheLukeMonster
    @TheLukeMonster 2 года назад +271

    Anton Chigurh scares me more than most allegedly scary villains because he feels like a killer that could actually exist. Yes, he's highly intelligent and skilled, but he never does anything supernatural. He doesn't practically teleport from place to place (Michael Myers), withstand an impossible amount of damage (Myers again, Jason Voorhees), or meticulously plan ahead for details he had no earthly way of anticipating (Joker in The Dark Knight). He does make mistakes and sustain injuries throughout the film, but his actions always remain on the right side of plausible, and that makes his presence so much more unsettling.

    • @chriswhite2151
      @chriswhite2151 2 года назад +11

      Definitely. I am far more afraid of a psychpathic human than a guy with pins in his face or someone from dreamland

    • @charleebrown7188
      @charleebrown7188 2 года назад +4

      He does have an extremely serious motivation, like John Doe from "Se7en".

    • @mikemcgee5950
      @mikemcgee5950 2 года назад +3

      He exists
      He is everywhere

    • @johnskerlec9663
      @johnskerlec9663 2 года назад +6

      He looks normal. And, As I now realise, the craziest killers are on the surface quite average looking. The crazy looking ones are probably the nicest most sincere people you could know.

    • @gardenofeels6872
      @gardenofeels6872 2 года назад +10

      @@johnskerlec9663 Ted Bundy was as normal looking as you can get. Women found him very attractive, and yet he had no problem murdering any of those women without a shred of remorse.

  • @Reykh24
    @Reykh24 2 года назад +654

    Undoubtedly the most terrifying character in cinema, who tenses up a room with two words.

    • @Nerdstalgic
      @Nerdstalgic  2 года назад +136

      Call it

    • @Reykh24
      @Reykh24 2 года назад +33

      @@Nerdstalgic sir?

    • @workingpeon9316
      @workingpeon9316 2 года назад +4

      Yeah this guy freaked me about so much when I watched this movie as a kid.

    • @cothinker680
      @cothinker680 2 года назад +3

      @@workingpeon9316 so how old are you now?

    • @MrMurder0321
      @MrMurder0321 2 года назад +18

      @@cothinker680
      Is this where Chris Hanson asks you to have a seat?!

  • @gloriaf6971
    @gloriaf6971 7 месяцев назад +5

    This scene was quite scary. I held my breath until it was over. I didn't want that guy to be killed.

  • @thorfox3562
    @thorfox3562 2 года назад

    Absolutely brilliant commentary. Thank you.

  • @rodneymolidorjr.6095
    @rodneymolidorjr.6095 2 года назад +583

    I envy the character for having won that coin toss. Not only did he just win everything, but he now owns a genuinely tested lucky coin to use on his scratch tickets for the rest of his life.

    • @kavijackson868
      @kavijackson868 2 года назад +10

      Nice!!!

    • @conanbardwell6760
      @conanbardwell6760 2 года назад +7

      He would flip a coin for one like you.

    • @CarlosDiaz-hf3qv
      @CarlosDiaz-hf3qv 2 года назад +6

      LMAO!!!

    • @khabanh6928
      @khabanh6928 2 года назад +5

      but he doesnt seem to realize it tho. we all know cuz we witness the murderer since the beginning of the film, this poor old man doesnt.

  • @joebikeguy6669
    @joebikeguy6669 2 года назад +144

    This scene was so good because Gene Jones portrays a man who is trying not to show how afraid he is. He knows something is really wrong, but he is not sure what.

  • @firedog1116
    @firedog1116 2 года назад

    Brilliant deconstruction of an absolutely amazing scene. Keep 'em coming.

  • @cinemma5834
    @cinemma5834 2 года назад

    Mastery of the basics. Brilliant video man.

  • @HotStrange
    @HotStrange 2 года назад +638

    I rewatched this movie recently and it really is a masterpiece. Tense in a way few other films are. The street chase/hotel scene, with its lack of score music, is incredible.

    • @youtubegm3227
      @youtubegm3227 2 года назад

      Do you watch Force Thirteen?

    • @barnacleboi2595
      @barnacleboi2595 2 года назад +9

      I thought the same. That hotel scene was just rawer than anything else Ive watched.

    • @LuisSierra42
      @LuisSierra42 2 года назад

      I saw Joel in front of Anton at 8:27 and i instinctively thought that Joel should run away fast

    • @alexf0723
      @alexf0723 2 года назад +3

      This movie having barely any music makes it much more tense than it has to be

    • @HotStrange
      @HotStrange 2 года назад +1

      @@alexf0723 agreed. Feels like you’re watching it happen in real time.

  • @kierankennedy6971
    @kierankennedy6971 2 года назад +493

    I don’t believe chigurh cared about the secrecy. He saw a man who was innocent, saying meaningless things to pass a meaningless day in a meaningless life. He became annoyed with the man simply because he seemed inferior and a waste of space.

    • @jessdatip4152
      @jessdatip4152 2 года назад +19

      That's a good take on it.

    • @iainowsiany7424
      @iainowsiany7424 2 года назад +58

      I’d say he saw a man who was weak more than innocent and weak again more than inferior. I don’t think he was looking down on the guy, just making his weakness apparent without actually bullying him, which is what made it so powerful. He exposed the guy to himself, essentially, not by being aggressive but simply replacing meaningless chit-chat with words that meant something

    • @victorylane2377
      @victorylane2377 2 года назад +24

      I agree 100%. That's why he tells him not to put the coin in with the others in his pocket. Don't be ordinary in a meaningless ordinary world.

    • @Shari1565
      @Shari1565 2 года назад +3

      @@iainowsiany7424
      Wow🤯

    • @mommy2libras
      @mommy2libras 2 года назад +14

      It definitely wasn't about secrecy, especially considering that it wasn't his car anyway so the plates have nothing to do with where Chigurh is actually from. And if it was about secrecy he would have killed him, not even giving him a chance to "win" his life.

  • @K-OnTheCase
    @K-OnTheCase 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this. This is a movie I haven’t yet seen, but intended to. This scene in itself illustrates just how powerful a Cohen Brothers movie can be. It will be on my list of movies I must see as soon as I can! Thanks much for the reminder! 👍🏼

  • @pp312
    @pp312 2 года назад +527

    For me the scariest scene in that movie was when Barden had Woody Harrelson at gunpoint in the hotel room. You know he's going to shoot, Harrelson knows he's going to shoot but there's nothing he can do but express his contempt for the guy: "Do you even know how crazy you are?" Chilling scene.

    • @berniebernstein
      @berniebernstein 2 года назад +13

      The fear is that this type of evil does exist. So always be prepared like a "boy scout."
      The old man in real life would have a .44 snub nose in his coveralls. The ex-con's cranium and cerebrum would suddenly separate.
      See...no fear. Be always prepared.

    • @uncroppedsoop
      @uncroppedsoop 2 года назад +87

      @@berniebernstein what the fuck did I just read

    • @SKarthikeyan75
      @SKarthikeyan75 2 года назад +9

      Excellent choice. Coen brothers do such a good job of saying so much by saying little. Like the scene outside Carla Jean's house when Chigurh checks his boots.

    • @Sahuagin
      @Sahuagin 2 года назад +6

      woody does a really good job acting that scene and you can feel the anxiety and dread in the pit of your stomach just as if you were sitting there yourself.

    • @bneshel1514
      @bneshel1514 2 года назад +5

      @@uncroppedsoop america

  • @Theonu
    @Theonu 2 года назад +339

    I remember seeing that movie and being so terrified yet so confused and surprised over how this character is so well done.

  • @clickorclack
    @clickorclack 2 года назад

    Literally, the most perfect editing that is even beyond our comprehension. This shows how edidting makes the film.

  • @klaus_vans
    @klaus_vans 2 года назад +3

    No country for old men is one of my favourite movies of all times and the performance of Javier Bardem is one of his finest in his extremely high level career ! Never get tired to watch it from time to time 😎

  • @ihaveaplan.ijustneedmoney.9777
    @ihaveaplan.ijustneedmoney.9777 2 года назад +384

    Its terrifying in the most simple ways, too. Even without the subtext and context, this scene is still stressful because its a social nightmare. It taps into everyone's fear of a conversation turning sour. When the owner realized that his banter did something wrong, he started desperately asking questions to just get any kind of answer in hopes that it would end the uncertain and hostile situation.

    • @PinataOblongata
      @PinataOblongata 2 года назад +20

      That's a great insight that could be lost to the more obvious potential for violence. On top of that potential, there is the /uncomfortableness/ of this customer transgressing norms of conversation and the audience can empathise with how they might also flail around verbally not knowing what to say in such a situation. The area the storeman is situated in is small, he can't just laugh and walk away. It's also remote and just these two people, he can't turn to someone else and start a new conversation, he is forced to navigate this one, even if he doesn't know he could be violently forced if it came to that.

    • @dingfeldersmurfalot4560
      @dingfeldersmurfalot4560 2 года назад +5

      Yup. And to survive commercially and even emotionally as a person doing a meaningless and unrewarding job, you are compelled to engage in meaningless banter with your customers whenever the opportunity presents itself and even when it barely qualifies as an opportunity. The older fellow is forced through the gauntlet of his life to face a guillotine at the end of it, like a sausage being fed through a slicer.

    • @billpetersen298
      @billpetersen298 2 года назад +1

      Like, being married to a narcissist.

    • @Dajokerboy101
      @Dajokerboy101 2 года назад +1

      Lol sorry that's not everyone's fear

    • @chatteyj
      @chatteyj 2 года назад +2

      I'm pretty sure the gas station owner would from that point on would keep a handgun under the counter loaded ready just in case.

  • @Locadel2003
    @Locadel2003 2 года назад +104

    Javier Bardem was just absolutely phenomenal

  • @mike76rob
    @mike76rob 2 года назад +1

    Fantastic way of explaining this scene. It has always resonated with me as being one of the best scenes of the movie but I could never say why exactly, it just hit that button. At first I simply thought it was that he was ruthless but there was something different about that scene. He didn't have to kill that guy but I see where you are coming from with the breakdown of it.

  • @1-7-0-1
    @1-7-0-1 2 года назад

    Yes This Was Epic!
    Thanks So Very Much For Making This Video...

  • @akelagold
    @akelagold 2 года назад +198

    When I first watched this scene I got the sense that there was no "right" call. It didn't matter if heads came up or tails, Anton was in complete control of this man's life, to be decided in a moment on a whim.

    • @INDRIDCOLD83
      @INDRIDCOLD83 Год назад +7

      True, Anton could have just said tails was the correct answer and killed him then and there.

    • @lolicongang.4974
      @lolicongang.4974 Год назад +4

      Nah he like two face ahh i think your innocent.
      But let's see what the coin thinks.

    • @AtZero138
      @AtZero138 Год назад +5

      Ok.. since we are Fans of this film... I always liked the idea.. that he didn't Kill the Motel Lady.. due to her being assertive with him.. although he might have.. I prefer thinking his smile.. is his mind laughing at her being so close to Death.. peace folks

  • @brucetrueasblue
    @brucetrueasblue 2 года назад +433

    I'd never been able to "put my finger" on why this is my favorite scene from this movie, but you nailed it. Good work. Anton Chigurh is about the most horrifying creature on film, and No Country for old Men is an instant Classic.

    • @pricklypear7516
      @pricklypear7516 2 года назад +5

      Dramatic irony is when the audience knows something that the characters don't. The Coens totally capitalize on it here. That poor old sot is expecting the usual: a normal transaction between equals. The kind all of us have a dozen times a day. It's the speed with which his illusion of equal power is entirely stripped from him, and the actor's skill at portraying the recognition that this guy would kill him as soon as look at him, that unnerves us. Yet he's STILL reluctant to admit it; he's STILL clinging to the idea that perhaps HE'S made some kind of mistake.
      It could be any one of us, and we realize that all our comfortable assumptions about life in a civil society are in fact very, very precarious.

    • @paytonwirtjes523
      @paytonwirtjes523 2 года назад +1

      Christophe waltz playing hans landa is the most intimidating character of all time, but this guy is def top 10

  • @celinavarchausky5333
    @celinavarchausky5333 Год назад

    This was amazing. I'm enjoying your videos so much

  • @dwaynejohnson1397
    @dwaynejohnson1397 2 года назад

    Thank you. This channel is amazing

  • @benjaminb6678
    @benjaminb6678 2 года назад +114

    The shot of the candy wrapper sends chills down my spine.

  • @mreboric8406
    @mreboric8406 2 года назад +63

    When someone calls you friendo they are most likely NOT your friendo

  • @thecosmicapple1962
    @thecosmicapple1962 2 года назад

    THANK YOU FOR THE SUBTITLES THEY ARE REALLY APPRECIATED :DDDD

  • @volkerw.
    @volkerw. Год назад +1

    I absolutely adore this scene - must have watched it a thousand times by now. And it never gets old.

  • @tesserthelost
    @tesserthelost 2 года назад +156

    I don't know if the store clerk didn't understand the gravity of the situation. Watching the scene, I always felt that the owner knew in his bones that something life-altering was going to happen. A warning light blinking in the back of his brain, forged in the trial and error of a million years of evolution. If this had been the opening scene of the movie, and had we not witnessed the monster that he is, the terror would have been just as palpable, and the tension just as thick.

    • @x3ph34r
      @x3ph34r 2 года назад +18

      I've never seen this movie and in fact have only seen this particular moment. Admittedly, I did see trailers so I knew he was a killer, but you're right. With THAT as the only part I've seen, I can firmly say that the sheer, oppressive gravity can be felt even without setup.
      In my opinion, it's one of those rare circumstances of a perfect scene where the intent from the filmmaker is truly and fully felt by the audience.

    • @hafirenggayuda
      @hafirenggayuda 2 года назад +23

      I interpreted that he realize but kinda dismiss it. Like "Okay, this guy is scary and angry, but he's probably calm down if I'm being polite, he's not going to kill me, I'm just overthinking"

    • @TrueThanny
      @TrueThanny 2 года назад +10

      It's clear he knew. He asked what was at stake in the coin toss because he didn't want to believe his life was actually on the line, but the answer clinched it.

    • @michelleaime3300
      @michelleaime3300 2 года назад +4

      What is really scary is that anyone believes that we "evolved" over millions of years

    • @desmonides
      @desmonides 2 года назад +5

      @@michelleaime3300 🤫 you correct but unfortunately the Truth isn’t for everyone

  • @safespacebear
    @safespacebear 2 года назад +62

    Anton is very scary in this scene...no doubt but the gas station attendant, err, the man who plays him, does an amazing job selling the fear.

  • @jramsey9690
    @jramsey9690 5 месяцев назад

    The Coen Bros are among my all-time favorites. Good review.

  • @juankramer960
    @juankramer960 2 года назад

    I haven't watched this movie yet, but after hearing you break down that scene in detail, makes me want to watch it.

  • @savigg174
    @savigg174 2 года назад +221

    This movie is a masterpiece.

    • @taroman7100
      @taroman7100 2 года назад

      Just another work of violent crap allowed in cinema for sometime now. Goes right along with the rise of violent crime in our country. I recall when people couldnt watch these scenes now they watch these and worse with laughter.

    • @supersaiyanzero386
      @supersaiyanzero386 2 года назад +6

      @@taroman7100 ok boomer

    • @macescoolchannel
      @macescoolchannel 2 года назад +1

      @@taroman7100 You don't know the first thing about the movie, or the novel.

  • @Dre9Mega
    @Dre9Mega 2 года назад +91

    I remember years ago while working in a Caribbean restaurant a customer appeared, he started ordering some fried chicken and rice&peas and I immediately followed with "would you like curry goat or oxtail gravy on that?" I asked this question because most customers actually preferred one or the other. However, this customer was different, he immediately started getting irate, at first I thought he was joking but he was actually pissed, to the point of actually wanting to fight me. I was so confused and so a female coworker tended to him instead, funny thing is she asked the same question and he simply gave a polite answer. That scenario may have not been as suspenseful as this scene but its a good example of what can happen when you encounter someone with a few screws loose.

    • @tominieminen66
      @tominieminen66 Год назад +12

      Maybe he was her stalker/admirer and was irritated that he got you

    • @gooddaysahead
      @gooddaysahead Год назад +3

      God bless you

  • @zanderxymox
    @zanderxymox Год назад +2

    I just watched this movie a few nights ago, I don't think I've ever been so impressed by a film keeping me on the edge of my seat for most of the time. 11/10 definitely one of my favorites now, Javier's performance alone is worth watching this movie for.

  • @monkeyman8265
    @monkeyman8265 2 года назад

    This is one scene that stuck with me out of all the movies I’ve seen. The way the wrapper expands on the counter after he squeezed it built this tension that something very bad was going to happen.

  • @HipsterGro
    @HipsterGro 2 года назад +164

    What really sells this scene is his haircut.

    • @OrdinaryLatvian
      @OrdinaryLatvian 2 года назад +24

      The hallmark of a true fucking psychopath.

    • @DavyDredd14
      @DavyDredd14 2 года назад +11

      The most terrifying haircut in film history.

    • @LukmanHakim-gn3uk
      @LukmanHakim-gn3uk 2 года назад +4

      Well, funny thing is that kind of haircut is worn by one of the most famous child psychologists in Indonesia, named kak seto. We are so familiar to kak seto's characteristics as humble, kind, gentle and full of enthusiasm, yet when i watched anton i was like "wait this is like kak seto's evil version"

    • @casanovafrankenstein8538
      @casanovafrankenstein8538 2 года назад

      Sic doo

    • @lex3729
      @lex3729 2 года назад +1

      I don't know, seems like an unremarkable, West Texas storekeeper haircut.

  • @cryogoblinTV
    @cryogoblinTV 2 года назад +91

    This scene also plays into the title of the movie (No Country for Old Men), a theme that the Sherriff explores: being that while he initially assumes the world to be growing more violent and chaotic, he realizes it's always been that way and that his old age has more or less sensitized himself to the ruthlessness of the world. This is primarily displayed through the Sherriff, however this scene with the shopkeeper helps convey that message as well. Whether or not the shopkeeper comes to this realization isn't explored, but you definitely understand after Chigurh leaves that the shopkeeper is in his world, and was simply allowed to live only because he let him.

  • @djnikx1
    @djnikx1 2 года назад

    Nicely explained!

  • @XavierKatzone
    @XavierKatzone 7 месяцев назад

    Nicely done! 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @zachwolfrom4522
    @zachwolfrom4522 2 года назад +94

    I love the fact that even though I was blessed with a strong back but soft mind, there are people like you that are able shed some light on how deep and heavy art can be. I wish I could lift the weight of art, but cannot. Cheers

    • @eamonnb2
      @eamonnb2 2 года назад +24

      Expressing yourself so beautifully shows that your mind is anything but soft. Good words!

    • @KidFresh71
      @KidFresh71 2 года назад +7

      A soft back & strong mind ain’t better- just a variation on our imperfect human condition. You expressed yourself beautifully.

    • @lindahandley5267
      @lindahandley5267 2 года назад +1

      SO well said!

  • @bleedingfingers7457
    @bleedingfingers7457 2 года назад +65

    This gas station scene is one of the best ever dialogues in a movie.

  • @mullinsa.m8438
    @mullinsa.m8438 2 года назад +9

    Javier Bardem is a truly amazing actor. Playing great spooky believable characters.

  • @donaldpate1863
    @donaldpate1863 2 года назад

    I find Anton, to be very nice, comforting to be around , the kind of person I can relate to and enjoy spending time with.

  • @AnthonyWilliams-bs4cd
    @AnthonyWilliams-bs4cd 2 года назад +46

    One of the best sentence I heard was, "you get closer to perfection, not when there's nothing more to add, but when there's nothing more you can strip from it", this scene, without music but the few strings at the end, without prominent lighting is one of the best exemple of this. Thanks for the analysis!

  • @umachan9286
    @umachan9286 2 года назад +32

    Anton is an absolutely terrifying character because he's so human. Horror characters have this air of inhumanity about them. But this guy is just a guy who doesn't compromise. He doesn't raise his voice. He doesn't do anything but he gives off this aura of menace about him.
    He's a guy you don't want to mess with because he could just as easily blow you away without batting an eye as he could smile pleasantly and wish you a nice day.

  • @josebatxu32
    @josebatxu32 Год назад +2

    I don't know if you mentioned this but Javier's acting in this scene is IMPECCABLE, TEXTBOOK

  • @todayandtomorrow360
    @todayandtomorrow360 2 года назад +1

    Wow. I thought I was a cohesive film nut. Nice channel, man. Way to go! What an insightful and informative way to describe a picture. I will definitely be checking your videos out. Wow, just wow. You are awesome for us film nerds. Again, wow.

  • @jeffcrist2977
    @jeffcrist2977 2 года назад +64

    What startled me the most of any movie I've seen so far was the choking seen, The jailer's black shoes leaving scuff marks on the floor. That was brutal. More brutal than blood and guts. Too real. My stomach dropped and I was depressed the rest of the show. If I'm left cold and empty, that's a well crafted movie.

  • @mikegamerguy4776
    @mikegamerguy4776 Год назад +25

    Not the scariest, but it was the last film that made me legit jump. I had gone a long time un-phased by anything scare on the TV or big screen. I watched Deep Blue Sea. A thing in one scene happened so unexpectedly it actually got me good. Nothing has jump scared me since that film except for my wife losing her shit at the top of her lungs during scares and some things that aren't even supposed to be scary in movies. Yeah, her shriek gets me a lot, and I start laughing every time.

  • @scousewillo62
    @scousewillo62 2 года назад

    For me it is only as scary as it is because you dissected it for us. Show us the brilliance of the directors and the ability of amazing actors to deliver. This one for me was a little harder for me to see on its own unlike Hans Landa who exudes evil and power. Great video.

  • @ehmildabstamfransson8173
    @ehmildabstamfransson8173 2 года назад +29

    A brief additional comment on how the characters are framed: Bad guy is clad in dark clothes, with dark hair, against a dimly lit background. He -is- the darkness. The owner of the gas station resides inside a small, bright window of light in dark surroundings. His clothes are a similar colour as the backdrop - he blends in. Their framing is representative of their character.
    Brilliant scene and very interesting use of scenery.

  • @TrueThanny
    @TrueThanny 2 года назад +27

    The guy knew his life was on the line. He asked what was at stake because he wanted to believe it wasn't, but the answer ("Everything") dispelled that hope.

  • @GhostDiZ
    @GhostDiZ Год назад

    Great video. Golden moments in film

  • @billyroche1951
    @billyroche1951 2 года назад +1

    It is certainly one of the most tense scenes of all-time! Both actors are perfect...especially the unknown actor in the small part playing the Texaco station owner.

  • @SomaliCoastguard
    @SomaliCoastguard 2 года назад +33

    What stood out to me was Javier Bardem looking on as directed how to strangle the cop, 08:34, and giving a gentle nod as if to say "Well yes, of course, that's how I've always done it."

    • @TREVASLARK
      @TREVASLARK 2 года назад +1

      : DDDD (nervous laughter)

  • @scorpionwins6378
    @scorpionwins6378 2 года назад +72

    Javier Bardem is outstanding.
    This film is easily my favorite antagonist role of his acting career.
    Skyfall a close second.

  • @MrRaindog
    @MrRaindog Год назад

    You got me for 1:28. The ultra-fast over produced voice-over killed it for me.

  • @Chaos4Eva1
    @Chaos4Eva1 Год назад

    That scene gave me chills. No matter how many times I've watched the move it still does..

  • @throughdude23
    @throughdude23 2 года назад +48

    We really need to get back to movies like this. This movie is one of my all time favorites.

  • @rocclimbing8123
    @rocclimbing8123 2 года назад +49

    Somewhat pertinent to the discussion as to why this scene is so terrifying is that the fan belts on display behind the clerk share a pretty obvious resemblance to nooses. This man is on the gallows and Chigurh who already strangled someone on screen, may or may not be about to do it again.

  • @williamcompitello2302
    @williamcompitello2302 8 месяцев назад

    I was on my toes the whole scene. Here, I was hyper focused in trying to understand Anton with the force of a thousand suns, but all I got was what I saw. Awesome acting.

  • @thefruch7588
    @thefruch7588 2 года назад

    damn you break this stuff down so well......as a musician that last bit really hit me.......I think alot of times just like film in music we complicate things because we think we need to....but in reality sometimes simplicity gets your point across better.

  • @justinvoegtline5093
    @justinvoegtline5093 2 года назад +50

    I believe over the course of this interaction, the clerk eventually realizes his life Is in danger and its shown through his expressions, and sigh of relief and deep gulp from sheer fear. The look the way chigur is the things hes saying are all clues that lead to this realization. When anton says you stand to win everything. That means he stands to lose everything too, and what else could that mean but life or death. This is also the point where the old man's fear is at its highest point. Making you realize the old man who seems oblivious actually has chigurs number and knows what hes about and the significance of this moment.

  • @Melted_Butter
    @Melted_Butter 2 года назад +219

    You missed an overlooked element. The perfect casting of the shop attendant. He’s older, looks friendly, and basically someone you identify as a happy grandfather type figure. Someone you instinctively like and care for. Because you feel for him, the stakes are higher, the viewer is invested. His death or life is significant and that keeps and raises the tension.

    • @Faintwolf
      @Faintwolf 2 года назад +20

      Its not fair to say he missed it, because he did speak on that for a moment but you do add a good point that the stakes are higher because we care for the sweet innocent old man.

    • @ballinboxer3676
      @ballinboxer3676 2 года назад +2

      That's a very superficial and shallow element lol

    • @d.w.stratton4078
      @d.w.stratton4078 2 года назад +5

      Narrator said the actors for the scene and also the Cohen quirk and that this guy looked the part of an innocent.

    • @dingfeldersmurfalot4560
      @dingfeldersmurfalot4560 2 года назад +1

      @@ballinboxer3676 Why, because you don't like relaxed or genial people in general, or old people in particular?

    • @ballinboxer3676
      @ballinboxer3676 2 года назад

      @@dingfeldersmurfalot4560 huh?

  • @christiankirkenes5922
    @christiankirkenes5922 2 года назад

    Very well analyzed

  • @DVincentW
    @DVincentW 2 года назад

    The tension in the peanut wrapper, as it expanded from the pressure of Chigurs hand. That is excellent film making.

  • @mercyrn35
    @mercyrn35 2 года назад +76

    This movie is one of my all-time favorites. It hit every emotional touchstone. Woody Harrelson also was amazing and added a much needed lightness to this film.

  • @hunterkiller1440
    @hunterkiller1440 2 года назад +322

    I hope the DCEU Two Face will have terrifying scenes like these.

    • @goodsaint_001
      @goodsaint_001 2 года назад +1

      How about shooting and saying crap, instead?

    • @SWLY123
      @SWLY123 2 года назад +50

      I doubt DCEU have the writing skills to pull anything like this off

    • @channel45853
      @channel45853 2 года назад +17

      @@SWLY123 then hire these people like they did with James Gunn

    • @bombboy3427
      @bombboy3427 2 года назад +7

      Exactly what I thought when I heard of this scene. Never got why two face wasn't more like this. His life was ruined by chance and external factors, why shouldn't he ruin others in the same way?

    • @channel45853
      @channel45853 2 года назад +9

      @@bombboy3427 two-face could be a terrifying villain, they just gotta write him right. (So, like any villain)

  • @Lusowrath
    @Lusowrath 2 года назад

    Nice video, very tension filled scene. Btw what movie is the "heavily stylized lighting choice" from?

  • @DonWeaver-ot2is
    @DonWeaver-ot2is 2 месяца назад

    Also the empty wrapper that Chigurh places on the counter, very subtle, as it wrapper unfolds. --- just adds to the tension!

  • @mevinsmiley5210
    @mevinsmiley5210 2 года назад +25

    No Country is one of the most underrated suspense films of all time IMO.