Anton Chigurh Kills Farmer Remove the Chickens - No Country for Old Men (2007) - Movie Clip HD Scene
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- Опубликовано: 26 ноя 2019
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A bit of context for this scene:
Anton Chigurh is the type of guy that asks you to help him clear out after yourself before he kills you.
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weeds be legals
Nice of him to ask if the older gentleman was capable in lifting those heavy crates. He obviously helped him and then offered to clean his truck. I really wish more people were as generous and helpful as this kind man.
And he just helped all those people by killing them sooner 🤔
Since the movie doesn't show anything, this is a totally valid interpretation
@@loulouloulou2519 This is how I basically interpret movies. We can conclude, from his violent nature, that he did killed that guy then again, since nothing is show and theres no concrete evidence, theres almost an infinite amount of scenarios where the guy is not dead and he just "borrowed" that vehicle.
@@LastSider hahaha exactly. "Hey buddy thanks for helping me with the car engine. Let me help you to unload the truck and I'll clean the mess once we are done."
"Sure, it's nice to find such helpful people nowadays. I've been driving this old truck the whole day and I could use a helping hand right now."
It really says a lot when THAT is the funniest scene in your movie.
Always felt bad for that guy, goes out of his way to help a stranger and this happens.
Yep that’s why they say nice guys finish last
Im the 60th liker
@@datboi7160 69th
Can't help everyone some have awful intention that's the bleakness of life my friend
this happens in the real world too
Anton is a shadow in this world. He ensures that no witnesses survive. This means he killed those chickens.
Yummy
Boc boc boc boc.....
Damn Mickey
OK, the ONE good thing about having video recorders and nosy people with cellphone cameras everywhere - it forced Anton Chigurh to make a career change
If this movie was that Black Mirror Episode, He should have killed all of them. One by one.
I love how Anton smiles when the stranger asks him where he is going, cuz in his mind that justifies him killing the man, something Anton loves to do clearly...
I don't know if i agree. During the coin toss scene, he seems pleased that he did not have to kill the man saying "well done" and changing his tone to that of a more pleasant one.
Edit: after watching the film again last night, he definitely does seem to take some sort of pleasure in killing. Or maybe he just enjoys being the deliverer of fate, whether their fate be life or death at the time they meet him. There are multiple times he seems to enjoy killing such as the officer at the beginning of the film, or watching the man bleed out in the office after he gave the Mexicans the receiver. But there are other times he seems pleased that he can let people go, specifically the coin toss scene.
:Guy asks question:
Anton "You just made my list"
He just asked that question to recommend him a better airport tho
He was laughing because of the guy's naivety, he and Anton came from very different world's.
you're overanalyzing. he's just trying to act normal. thats what i like about his character. he's not just some cool edgy villain.
Just want to put in a word about the guy playing the chicken farmer. That was some fine acting for a bit part.
the guy in the gasoline station, the lady in the rental office...they're all wonderful actors
That's what make the difference
Thinking the same mate
Coen brother's specialty- making tiny cameos into the best parts
Dude is so good that I feel like he wasn't acting lol
And that’s why you don’t stop for strangers thanks Hollywood.
No good deed goes unpunished
Just avoid big guys with bowlcuts.
Most like the "the house that jack built" first incident
@The Beast Back then there was more serial killers in the 70s etc because an entire generation was traumatised in WW2, they say the next wave is 2030
Well if you driving in the middle of nowhere and live in the 70/80s, I’d assume it be wise to carry a Full auto AK or Uzi in that pickup
did the chickens have separate coin flips or was it a wholesale type deal
Ja ja ja Bravo man!!!!
Incredible inventiveness!!
Those chickens been traveling all their lives on the back of that truck to get to this moment and now their time has come.
i laughed so hard man
hahahahaha
Lmao
This scene is why I stayed stranded on the side of the road for 16 hours while 800 cars passed by ....
I seriously lol
As a large male, I agree with this. Automatically anyone thinking about helping me, who then sizes me up as a potential threat, is off the table. I'm practically a puppy dog!
I was one of those 800 cars 😂
Lmao
Smart, very smart
Imagine a whole 2 hour movie where anton is just luring people for their vehicles and ditching them with each car getting funnier as the movie progresses
I would pay to see that. Final car would be one of those Clown head trucks
It’s like Captain America (1990) but he does NOT fight fo truth justice and th American way
Can't help picturing Anton in a Mr Whipee ice cream van, on some nefarious errand.
😂🤣
It would be hilarious, but sad if he ended up getting the puppy car from Dumb & Dumber
He flipped the coin before the guy pulled over, to save some time
Haha
😂😂😂😂😂
The farmer flipped the coin for him when he decided to pull over. Anton only flips coins for people who arent directly in his way: convenience store guy and llewelyn's wife
@@Dlarek: Exactly. And that's what makes the ending scary in my opinion. When he doesn't flip for Moss's wife, he says, "I got here the same way the coin did."
This means he can now justify killing anyone without the coin because now in his mind they wouldn't have crossed his path if it weren't for fate.
Anton Maclean he cant call it moron. He said it himself.
When Anton said "I don't know" and smiled, I knew the farmer was done
@G E T R E K T 905 What business is it of yours, Friendo?
@@asiagov6996 "I did not mean it"
@@iskasa0000 "You didn't mean nothing?"
Wats ur business is that friendooo
His smile is so creepy. I can never look at this actor the same after this film. . this was the first film I ever saw him in and I can't see him as sexy or kind or anything other than this horrific sociopath unfortunately. I guess he did too good of a job in this movie.
Either Anton asked him to lift the chicken grates so he could clean the bed of his truck or the man just gave him the truck for free. Either way, some real generosity shown here. Faith in humanity restored.
=)
Thats just Anton, hes known for his philanthropy and helping to end the overpopulation crisis here in the US. And known for ending the homelessness crisis back in the 90s.
by ending the homeless.
systematically.
using a gas chamber.
and lethal torture.
@@smoothbrained4channer976 :0
Fuck humanity .
Yes Anton was really nice to take that mans truck and clean it for him for free.
The way Anton smiles and says "I dont know" when the guy asks where he's going, gives me chills for some reason.
Soup
This was a dumb ass argument
@Jordan Simeone No, I genuinely just think the guy was slow. Hence why he removed his comments after seeing that no one appeared to agree with him.
and the fact that there's no one around except these two is what makes it even creepier!
@@ImSlipped Love the conversation you're having with yourself there lmao
I feel like Anton would’ve spared him had he simply answered the question and not asked him where he was going
Yeah. Veered off the convo a little, but went straight back to the point. I like to think the chicken man is alive.
Gummy Maybe. I doubt it though
I wish people would stop pretending he had these extreme codes of when to kill people, he killed at random. The first guy he stole a car from didn't do anything at all.
@The Beast ok boomer
Werewolf O. London, Esq. guy is dead. Anton kills just for inconveniencing him.
Best case scenario would be this guy dropping the keys to the truck and running away.
What makes Anton terrifying is his single-mindedness. There’s no convoluted motive, no monologuing his evil plan, no deeper contemplation of his own character…
Just a killer. A stone cold killer with no higher pursuit than the next kill.
Children old people animals... I just love killin'!
I recommend watching the movie again, Anton very clearly does have a higher pursuit, albeit very arbitrary.
@@alarminglyfastmovingskelet7289 what is it?
@@labradaus He was one of the people trying to retrieve the money, he was working for/with those two guys at the drug dealing scene. By the end of the movie, he really was just tracking Moss and his wife because Moss inconvenienced him and Moss "picked the money over his own wife", so he had to kill her on "principle"
He killed the guy for his vehicle not because he was a witness just because it's easier. They aren't going to fight you for it if they're dead.
Anton: Are you from around here?
The farmer: What business is it of yours where I'm from? FRIENDO!
*Farmer takes out a coin and flips it* "CALL IT"
@@PantsofVance "Can't find my checkbook, hope ya don't mind I payya in change..."
Anton; perplexed: Oh, I didn't mean anything by it!
The farmer; mockingly: DIDN'T MEAN ANYTHING BY IT?! He tosses a coin: CALL IT!
[LATER] As he stares in silence at Anton's corpse stretched on the coroner's table, sheriff Bell is contemplating life & death.
@G E T R E K T 905 Just call it. You should admit your situation. There would be more dignity in it!
😂
If those chickens led you to this, of what use were the chickens?
This ain't underrated bro this is life
What business is it of yours, if this comment is underrated,..friendo
I didn't mean nuthin'......
Best comment thread I've ever seen lmao.
🤣🤣🤣🤣
The off-screen deaths are way more uneasy in my opinion. They force the viewer to use their imagination about how the victim died, or even if they died. It plays on the common fear of “the unknown”. Very simple yet effective.
Bundy Joan the whole movie is built from the unknown : how did Anton finds Carson in Mexico and the one who hired Carson ? ....
@@Mehib98 since it's implied that Carson already knew him, it's possible that they had some history between them. And Anton prolly realises at some point that Carson is a hitman who may just have him on his hitlist.
My guess, is he electrocuted him with the cables he was holding.
Did he strangle him? Bash his head against rocks? Or was it a quick and clean kill?
Anton explains that he won’t get a painless death, but his family and friends will if we he unloads the chickens first and wins a coin toss. The farmer decides to do what he is told, while he tries to come up with a better plan. Anton uses the compressor to blow out the farmers knees caps while he is working. Then he tells the farmer to call the coin toss, but he loses. Then he shoves the pipe down his throat, says “I’ve no time for amateur detectives”, presses the lever, and the farmers insides comes flying out of....”Its a matter of honour” says Anton as the eyes pop out on stalks....”they will all get the same deal”.
THE END
The whole crazy part of this scene is that Anton did nothing to have the guy stop. He just stood there and if that farmer would have just kept driving he would be alive
@@OliverInternationalted bundy did the same thing if I'm correct
Psychopaths prey on the compassionate.
The hood was up so it was “car trouble”.
@@bungbananamanBundy would feign an injury to lure women in from what I remember.
When he says: "Just lightin' out for the territories, huh? Brother, I been there..." all these possibilities of what that man's life was like started to go through my mind. Perhaps a love lost. A criminal lifestyle that finally caught up with him. A bleak economic situation he had to escape from. The way he says it evokes so much emotion. It's a short film within a film.
Or it's just small talk. People do that.
@@marcelosdbzmusic8072 and Anton hates smalltalk
100 percent. Yes it’s small talk but, where the fuck do you think small talk comes from? Man some people are so small minded.
The scene provides some comedy when he is shown cleaning the truck and he prob killed the guy. Then it cuts to the airplane to show the pace is picking up
in the movie I love the scene
@@calebray4168 and some people read way too fucking much out of simple shit
0:07 If I pulled up and saw that, I would speed off
No shit!
Lmaoo right
Canh Najixi hey, watch your mouth BOAH
@@siddown5520 ??? Sorry, that flew over my head😅
Canh Najixi nah I was just kidding dude 😂
I just now realized something.I think every-time Anton is about to kill someone or finds his next victim he smiles. In 0:32 he gets a grin after his face when the man asks him where he is going and we all know Anton doesn’t like it when people question him so I feel at this moment Anton knew he found his next victim.
agreed.
Nah I think it’s after that when he gets annoyed about the farmer asking for specifics. Since he hadn’t told him about where to go yet Anton was still deciding whether the farmer was inconveniencing or helping him
In the gas stop scene, when the cash clerk says that he saw Chigurh came from Dallas, you can see Chigurh glance up at the cables hanging behind the counter.
As soon as the driver got close enough to see that hair style, he should have floored it.
In 1980, a lot of people had hair like that.
@G E T R E K T 905 Hahaha! :-D
Back then, a lot of youngish men had hair like that.
That haircut was common in the 70s, heading into the 80s
I don't help people because I don't expect gratitude in return. Anton takes that feeling to another level.
I want to say that the farmer was perfectly cast. They did a great job finding that guy, and putting together the wardrobe.
Either that boy just got dressed in yesterday's work clothes and showed up on set, or the wardrobe guy needs a helluva raise.
Go on then.
I never thought they had to look far for ugly trailer trash actors
Anton taking advantage of his kindness.
DoogieBowser Fuck...
Joseph The wildcard her right in the pussy
That's kind of the idea of the whole story. Everybody's nice to him. He kills most of them.
I know the most innocent nicest motherfucker ever.
@DoogieBowser guess I found my favorite quote
If you look closely... Anton believes in fate and when he kills anyone he justifies it with fate, as if the man had been living his whole life for that moment and it was anton who delivers it. He never asks for any help of any kind when his car breaks down. He just stands there, and when someone does help him, he kills him and again justifies that it was the person who chose to stop.
My god, you are terrific analyst 🔥🔥🙌🙌🙌
I get what you implied but something like fate doesn't make sense to me, How can he justify someone whether they should die in that way, just by stop driving to help people out? He has no right to do that. It's a weird logic.
@@Larsaw66its like you're saying it's weird that there are people who hurt other people without empathy. psychopaths detach emotion from their actions, a regular person should he accidentally kill someone would feel remorse, they wouldn't. Anton is someone who doesn't feel anything when he kills somebody else. It's just business. So in a way, he Justifies his lack of empathy with the reasoning that it was fate.
@@hellomate2405 Anton is one of the most confusing villains for me personally
Because I wanna hate him, he's a terrible man who kills with no resource and no care
Yet I feel like i can't hate him. Like trying to say he's a horrible person is just a waste of time and breath.
This is all due to anton himself, he's more of a husk than a man. He has no emotions, he's just this ghost that kills when he feels he has tp and doesn't care.
Could you even label someone like anton as evil?
The reason we call evil people evil, is because they enjoy the suffering they cause.
Anton doesnt seem to enjoy it, he just does it when he needs too and he's so unempthetic and emotionless that I find it silly to call him evil.
He's so dead inside, like an alien, that hating on him is pointless and meaningless.
He's a pure psycopath, and trying to hate on a psycopath is pointless
It's why I never get emotional or angry like most do when I hear storys and see real psycopaths detail their horrific crime, cause trying to argue with a psycopath is utter pointless.
To the point that I roll my eyes when I see some viewer act so sad and angry when reacting to a psycopaths crime, because getting emotional over psycopaths does nothing but waste time. They feel nothing, so I feel nothing to them. Which i think is the best mindset when dealing with psycopaths
Even devil stopped,anton would kill hım .
"Well... where ya goin?"
Chigurh: "So you've chosen... death."
It's annoying because the airport he gives directions to would depend on where he's going. You know, the more I learn about this Anton guy, the less I care for him.
0:08 If I pulled over for someone on the road and the dude looks back at me like that, I'd drive off in a heartbeat.
Anton hates conversing in small talk
Miss reign in his perspective, yes
too bad texas is the fucking capital of small talk
bepsi yes it is too bad. For the small talk Texans
Miss reign yes absolutely small talk is the worst
Neo IR i guess they should change their habits
Is it me or is that guy playing the farmer a great actor? That was some of the best acting I've seen. Damn, how did he do that in such a short time? Anyone notice?
He had a good director. When every bit player in this film played their role to the hilt, that reflects well on the Coen Bros
Everyone in this film was outstanding
Look at Fargo. Brilliant acting in small parts.
Plot twist: Anton asked each individual chicken to do the Coin Toss…
Can you guys imagine if there was a deleted scene where Anton paid the guy like $5000 cash for his old truck. You see that chicken farmer counting all his cash talking himself saying, boy what a nice guy , he gave me all that money for my old truck.
Would completely fly in the face of the character of Anton Chigurh
@@downfromthereeefters Would it? He has rules, rules he will enforce even on himself. If the chicken farmer had won the coin toss, Chigurh would NOT kill him. And that's part of why he's so interesting as a deadly killer--he's not merely some vicious child in an adult body, doing whatever he feels like whenever. He instead operates on a strange, "blue and orange" morality system that he consistently follows, however inscrutable and nonsensical it seems to a normal person.
@@spamhere1123 Coin toss is the best he can do for someone, most of the time like the sheriffs deputy or Carson he'll just kill you. If he's in a great mood and likes you the absolute best deal he can give you is a coin toss.
@@coitip2920 To be fair, Carson wanted Chigurh dead
@@coitip2920
I do think he has a rule but I don't think it's "if he's in a great mood and likes you" then he'll give you the coin toss.
Think about the gas store owner. The conversation spiraled down in which you can see Chigurh progressively getting more irritated with the conversation. He wasn't in a good mood and didn't like the guy. He gave him the coin toss because he wanted the chance to kill him.
So, there is a system but its different to whether he's in a good mood or not.
An excellent performance by Richard Jackson as the chicken farmer.
What I found interesting about this scene is that it's realistic too along with Javier Bardem's performance as a psychopathic killer. Many victims of serial killers in real life tried to help them without knowing the danger they were in and ended up dying in their hands (something Ted Bundy did to those girls, pretending to be an invalid with a crutch hitchhiking on the highways). They take advantage of people's kindness.
One of the scariest characters I have ever seen.
Aw, C'mon. You're exaggerating. The chicken farmer seemed pretty friendly to me.
The Michael Myers of hitmen
Michael Myers worse a mask and didn't speak, why do you say that?
@@fuckamericanidiot his mannerisms really remind me of Myers and his presence gives out that Boogeyman vibe to it
@@Dukesparrow1999 Very true, take the talking out and put a mask on and he really acts and moves like Michael Myers.
He was hitman?! I thought he serial killer
@@riittastina6373 im sorry if I confused you, nah Michael Myers is a serial killer and Anton is a Hitman, the reasoning I posted my comment was that Anton gave me that sort of Michael Myer's like presence whenever you seen him and his behaviorism
"What's the most you've ever lost in a game of duck duck goose."
"....but these are chickens"
"Well done."
It’s amazing how this movie is so great that it completely skips a huge event, and you still know what happened.
I like to think he didn’t kill him but rather knocked him out and stole the truck, it’s better then the tragic alternative. I really liked that farmer.
He probably blew his brains out
@@mob4556 I wouldn’t put it past him but i hope not lol
@@isaiah2536 maybe he paid for the chickens
And Anton gave him a pwetty pink unicorn to ride home on.
This was a brilliant scene, everyone feels sorry for that poor farmer and uneasy wondering what Anton did.
@@kefkahkefkah that would be in character. But I assume he initiated the coin toss immediately after and the farmer lost. If he won, I would think Anton would take his own vehicle. The reason for this is because when people ask where he's going, he smirks and gives them a chance to live or die. I think he feels as though whatever action he would take is only dependent on chance, with keeping your current state (life and keeping your stuff intact) as a "reward". I say reward because I feel as though either way is losing in Anton's perverted mind. The farmers life was put on the line when he unwittingly challenged the notion of no real purpose by prefacing his question with an assumption that he was purposefully going somewhere to purposefully do something.
Edit: I just realized that my last sentence was convoluted but I'm keeping it
Me: Act casually when your crush talks to you
Mt Crush: Hi what's your name
Me: 0:32
No way I'm gonna stop if I saw a man with a haircut like that on the side of the road.
In 1980 it was a common haircut
@@rafachrzaszcz6997 Yeah if you were 6 years old
@@jackedkerouac4414
🤣🤣🤣
Bruh how he ain’t know he probably was gonna get shot by a dude just casually walking up like that?😂
@xWhisperx until 1983
When Javier says “I don’t know” I swear to god you can’t teach that level of subtlety. Great acting on both ends
0:29 You can see in Anton's face that he's made his decision at this exact moment
He looks even more terrifying when you focus on the road and look at his face in your peripheral vision.
He has the most blankest face like he’s devoid of emotion so how could u know
@@yMeNorDoFluXox he smirked. He does that when people ask things that anger him. He definitely killed him .
You know there's sick people like him in the world even through out history.
@John Jonathan no one cares where you're going.
I have a theory that when people like this come along who are complete sociopaths, lack remorse and empathy. That’s just evolution at work. Like what would be the perfect Hunter, gatherer and killer? Someone who has all of the traits .
Julia situational I think .. I mean it’s not necessary to live with other people .. in modern times we don’t fend off predators so we’re adapting to the times .. ei killing other humans .. like the story from apocalypse now when brando says that he and his platoon inoculated a bunch of children and some regime hacked off a arm of every child that was given a shot. He then remarks of how genius it was, to do that and go home and sleep and love with your family is amazing. He then goes on to say how if he had a few thousand of these troops the war would’ve been already over .. but totally get what you’re saying just adding
Btw were mammals not animals
Julia we don’t know for sure .. I’m just saying i think it’s a trait and a lot of people probably think the same .. mutation or evolving who knows not you or I
When you ask someone where they're headed and they reply "I don't know...", it's time to get the heck outta Dodge!!
Particularly if they have a weird 70's haircut.
its way to late at that point
Lol yeah i suddenly picture an alternate version of this scene, when the farmer asks him where he's going and Anton replies "i don't know".
To that, the farmer tips his cap with "ok bye" and swiftly 180's back to his truck, plowing through some cacti
"Airport or air strip?" Subtle details like that are the difference between a good movie and a great movie.
When you realize Anton’s code of dealing with people, you can tell whether or not he plans to kill someone based on the way they answer his questions. This guy always stuck out to me because he makes it about halfway/two-thirds on Anton’s good side by being straightforward, but then starts getting personal. When Anton smiles while saying “I don’t know”, you know he didn’t pass the Anton test.
I think he would've killed him regardless. His truck was fine he didn't need a boost it was all a set up to get someone to pull over because Anton needed to switch vehicles
@@codymachado That is true. This way the police would be looking for the wrong vehicle. Anton is obviously a psychopath, but his thinking is very logical. That's one of the things that make him so dangerous.
Anton's biggest skill is that nearly anyone he encounters will do whatever he says, no matter whether it makes any sense or not.
Ah what a nice fellow, he helped him drop off those chicken crates and the farmer was so grateful he gave him the truck.
Original.
I always found it interesting that there were 3 different generations of normal life men that Anton randomly came across in the film. The old man at the gas station, this middle age man, and the young teen at the end who gave up his shirt. This poor guy was the only one who didn’t survive his encounter with Anton. I’m not sure if the film intended to signify something with the age separation of these men, but it always intrigued me regardless.
No country for middle aged men. Lol
That sets. Anton really after all is a personified DEATH
Actually, he met 4 kinds of generation in the movie. The other one u forgot to mention is the guy who anton killed at the beginning of the movie.
I always got the feeling Chigurh had nothing but contempt and no patience for southern folk.
I mean, the man makes no bones about his money. I can understand that💁🏻♂️
Does he ever meet anyone he likes?
The accountant in the office. Also the convenience store owner for winning the coin flip.
He gave a kid $100 for letting him have his shirt.
@@astillia6073 I disagree , the man in the convenience store ? He was disgusted by him for amounting to so little and for him being inherited into a farm.
@@RichardsWorld business transaction to keep quiet.
@@robertsaladino No, luck decided that the convenience store owner deserved to live, which gave Chigurh respect for him. Remember he said that if he put the coin in the till it would become a normal coin, before saying that it is a normal coin. What I infer is that the coin toss is meant as a learning experience to the old man to value his words and what he has more, especially since fate decided the man deserved to live. If you study Anton he seems to like people who don't waste time or words, as well as people who know what their place is, like the accountant.
0:59 when I saw that at first I thought he is blasting the chickens with the pressure cleaner because of all those fethers....
Javier Bardem played his part to perfection; Anton Chigurh was exceptionally disturbed and the his life is disturbing. Thanks for posting.
Unique voice he had. Something tells me he can really sing well
Never stop for a stranger. There was a guy who stopped to help a stranded motorist a few years ago. The stranded motorist murdered the guy trying to help him.
I kill all people who help me
I think Chigurh was not thinking about kill him until he spoke too much and mentioned El Paso...poor guy was just helping somebody and had a chatty personality, who would've thought a Dora looking man is a psycho killer.
Javier Bardem's delivery, his way of speaking as Anton, is simply unbelievable.
After a polite conversation with the farmer, Anton offered to clean his truck as a sign of goodwill.
Mistakes made by The Farmer:
Stopping to help a stranger.
Making Anton repeat himself in regards to the airport.
Asking where Anton is going.
Making small talk.
(Speculation) Anton likely considered "brother, I've been there." too familiar, and not honest. The farmer says he was born and raised in the area he's in, he's likely never even been on a plane before.
He's still talking about airstrips.
He should have answered in the affirmative when asked if he could remove the chicken crates.
All this to say, these are some of the things to consider when you meet an assassin broken down on the side of the highway in the Texas panhandle. It could save your life someday.
I screenshot your post. We all should. It could save a life someday. Thank you!
Born and raised = never been on a plane? seems like a stretch
A farmer could know airstrips, for dusting.
This may be the single greatest example in film of a true as life sociopathic killer, even his mannerisms and demeanor are that of a psychopathic Marauder of the mind, his odd nature and imposing attitude, just spot on, Javier is a master....
He just got annoyed hearing him say "Well" before every answer lol
Good Guy Anton cleans truck from farmer that helped him. Friendships along the way 🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰 #Blessed #Helping
Dude has deadman’s eyes, keep on driving.
Great acting by the farmer. He played that part perfectly.
“Do you know how crazy you are?”
“you mean, the nature of my youtube comment?”
Anton Chigurh is one of the most terrifying villains from any movie ever. Just zero empathy. A total psychopath. One of Javier Bardem's best performances in my opinion.
Never stop to help anyone .
@SuperVince93Kaioken Thank you , guys an asshole
Spirg. With that haircut.😁
Call 911 and give the location, situation, and description.
Unfortunately you’re right. Even if it’s a family with children that has been used as a convincing lure to get people carjacked, robbed, and murdered. Don’t talk to strangers in strange places.
Those who say Chigurh is a kind of "principled" or "fair" person (they say, killed either worthless, weak people, or those who got into trouble themselves) - let them reconsider this episode.
This occasional farmer was a decent person. Not a money-grubber like Moss. Not a miserable vegetator of life, like the gas station manager (survived only by random whim, and not out of any principles). Here we clearly have a person in front of us, happy with life and self-esteemed. Happy to help a colleague of the road. But he didn’t allow himself to be “saddled” either - as soon as the ungrateful comrade became outraged, he reacted normally, self-confindent.
Chigurh is a butcher and a frostbitten killer of all living things. Nothing else. Of course, if we don't take into account the well-known (and quite plausible) fan theory that this is a figment of the sheriff’s imagination, but take the literal interpretation.
I'm confident that in real life, this guy Chigurh would not have gotten as far out in West Texas as the film depicts. Sooner or later he would have run into a good guy with a gun, that would have gotten the best of him.
Watching these scene without sound gives me creeps.
I noticed the exact moment Anton made the decision to off the helpful guy.
When I've seen this movie in 2008, the first thing I said to my wife after watching it is "Cherie, we are not going in US for vacation this year..."😂😂😂
No chickens for old men
"Where ya goin?" " '...🤓I don't know 😑.."
Bardem absolutely nailed this character. One of the best of this generation
I love a great film like this. Thanks for sharing Legendary Movie Scenes.
This film is full of brilliant actors playing Small parts. "Fat lady", "Gas station owner",...
The costume and makeup department really went balls to the wall trying to make this guy and the owner/cashier of the gas station look like absolute bonafide bumpkins. 😂
"you from around here?" wow I'm impressed. Anton is also able to do some chit chat. He's perfect
Never ! Never ! Never !
Ask Aton “where ya headed” , “are you getting much rain up your parts” and never stand still whilst he puts a pressurized piston to your forehead 🤦♂️
0:32 I like the way he says, "I don't know." So casual and nonchalant 😄
Love that it ties in perfectly with the movie title. Each of Antons nameless victims were Elderly Men who were far too trusting of strangers because of the old timey values of being neighborly to everyone and this constantly comes as a shock to Tommy Lee Jones character that these murder victims were just kindly folks offering a helping hand and were killed in cold blood. Something he never imagined growing up and it solidifes the theme that times have changed and the older generation is slow to adjust to it. No Country for Old Men
0:45 It was at this point anton decided to kill him. He just said he doesn't know where he is going, now you gonna ask specific?
I can't help but think that Anton is laughing at himself as much as he's laughing at the farmer's fate.
Every time he show up, I hold my breath.
You don’t get many films like this. Where everything is in the dialogue, he asks the farmer to get rid of the chicken cages, the next shot is of him hosing down the back of the truck. You don’t need to *see* what happened because the context is there. Superb
Game of thrones was like that for a time until all the money ruined it. I hope you're having a nice day sir
But i want to see what happened
Insert africans dancing with a coffin clip right after this one
If I met someone who said "I don't know" with a toothless smile like that, I'd turn around 360 degrees and drive off. 0:31
180*
360 you'd spin and run right into them lol
180, you stupid spaghetti slurping cretin! 180! If I did a 360, I'd go completely around and end up back where I started!
@@BlackSailPass_GuitarCoversNPC shii
@@BlackSailPass_GuitarCovers😂😂😂😂
0:12 pretty eerie moment, anton just standing uprightly without any movement while looking emptily at the farmer...
You tell him Anton get those chicken crates out of the bed 😤
0:32 that response woulda told me he’s off and I should keep it pushin
I couldn't feel at ease everytime I see Anton on the screen.
Well yeah, you're not supposed to lol. Means Javier Bardem did a great job
00:05 How to die prematurely.
Bardam acting Chigur is one of the best ever. And I really mean it. Just an awesome perfomance.
Farmer: Airport or Airstrip?
Anton: Airport
Farmer: closest airport is El Paso
*Anton realizing the farmer is not an imminent threat, clamps the cords to his car and soon leaves*
I remember seeing it the first time how I loved the tracking of the camera from the farmer's POV until we face Anton. It really hit me up. The Coens are such masters!
There's a telling scene in Robert Duvall's The Apostle, where a gentleman helps out Duvall's character and lets him camp in his backyard. The gentleman is glad to help a stranger, but he also takes precautions in case he turns out to be violent. That's the approach I believe is called for, and which I've used, in some situations where a stranger, or person in trouble, needs help.
Not a bad idea, but there's no precaution that would have helped this guy other than hitting the gas when he first saw Chigurh.
I like how the weather is very sunny and just starting to darken when he's stealing the truck, and then juxtaposed with it is the cold and stormy sky as he's spraying down the truck. It's a pretty common film technique when it comes to setting tone, but still a really nice touch from the Coen's and probably Roger Deakins
This scene is chilling. Good Samaritan stopping to help another person who, unbeknownst to him, is a psychopath.
This is something all women think about, all the time. There's a cultural assumption that men don't have to.
Why say kills and give the whole thing away?
Better to say Anton has serious discussion with farmer.
Easily the most brutal transition in the whole movie. Cinematically speaking