Na. It was very boring. You had a hit man who did nothing but talk, horror movie "let's make convenient stupid decisions" logic and incoherent motivations. Essentially a movie for people who love to smell their own farts.
Don't put it in your pocket...it's your lucky quarter - it'll get mixed in with change and become just a normal quarter....which it is and then he pulls that classic face this emoji is as close as i can find to it! 😳
It's a good scene, I'll admit that, but the rest of the movie doesn't really rise up to it. A good three or four minutes does not uplift two hours of droll. I think a lot of people praise this one because they're expected to because of the source material, which I didn't like either.
The creepiest thing is, we barely see Anton for most of this sequence. The most we get is his silhouette or muzzle flashes, but Anton is always some abstract presence to run away from. Only when Llewellyn gains the upper hand does Anton go from some invisible force of death to a human being who has to dive for cover.
It's so smart that we don't even get a glimpse of Chigurh in this scene until the very end. Makes him seem more like a force of nature or a ghost than human being. Yet another clever trick used by Coen brothers to dehumanize him.
Mate, its an old school method showing less and leaving more to the imagination. Take Alien (1979) for example. It's not smart or a Clever trick, it's just normal for a movie like this. Good movies never give you everything on a plate.
Anton is hunting Llewelyn like Llewelyn was hunting the deer in the beginning, but when Anton saw the blood track from the truck for a second I think he knew Llewelyn had the upper hand for the first time
I just noticed that when Lewellyn crashed the truck and left it, he deliberately closed the door behind him to make Anton unsure whether he had been shot and was still in the truck.
I had assumed he crashed the truck on accident and then came up with that plan on the spot for the longest time. But most recent time I watched it I realized the entire crash was orchestrated to trap him from the start.
Llewelyn wasn't always the best when he had time to sit around and think (like bringing water back to the drug deal or fooling around with the hotel lady). But in situations requiring quick thinking, strong nerve, and a steady hand (like this one or clearing a waterlogged pistol before shooting a lunging dog), he proved to be as good as it gets. Evenly matched with Chigur.
The sound design in this scene is incredible. The silenced shotgun and distant thud at 0:22, the empty ringing of the phone downstairs, the beeping of Shigurh's tracker as it gets closer, the click of the shotgun hammer, every floorboard creaked heavy breath. No soundtrack either. This is a brilliant cinematic sequence.
That's one choice that I think makes the entire movie tense. I think there's only like 15 minutes of actual music in the movie. The rest is just ambient sound.
shogundickin. I know this ain't a Horror movie, but Horror movie creators should take notes from this. Some of the most intense moments I've experienced In horror games, is random moments when the music suddenly goes off. You don't see that very often in movies anymore. However, I'm not saying that music is always a bad thing tho.
I think the lack of music in this movie actually helps make these scenes even more terrifying. The characters simply being alone in the dark, practically holding their breath listening for the slightest sound, it brings back memories of being a kid, thinking you heard something in the middle of the night and you sit up in bed and listen, it's that exact same tension.
I've been through almost the same scenario in this scene as a cartel wanted me out the house with random shotgun blasts and in the silent moments you can hear and feel your heart beating through your chest. I wish a lot more movies are silent like this real scene.
I like how even though Anton is portrayed as this badass inescapable psychopathic grim-reaper of death, he still leaps and scurries out of there like a cockroach when Llewellyn gains the upper hand. Really reminds everyone that no matter how badass a guy like Chigurh can be, bullets aren't just gonna bounce off of them.
Correct. And, whole point of the end of the movie. The awful car wreck and grievous injury Chigurh endured at random. Showed he wasn't a force of nature, he just played the part of one.
First time I saw this movie I must have accidently hit the pause button on my dvd player at 2:29 and I was sat there for two minutes on the edge of my seat staring at that crack under the door before I realised it was paused, honest to God.
You can hear lots of things. The suppressed shotgun blast and the clerks body hitting the ground. The phone ringing. Antons approaching footsteps. The beeping of the tracking device increasing in intensity as he gets closer. The sound of the lightbulb being unscrewed
@@wll1500 and he walks aside from the door when he hears the clicking sound of the gun’s trigger. So quite place that’ll punish making any unnecessary noise or misinterpretating or ignoring any subtle sound
True, I did not want to watch a horror movie because I had to sleep alone so I watched this but this shit scared me even more than a horror movie and anton chigurh still haunts me in my dreams
Yeah horror films these days lack the necessary buildup of tension. Nowadays it's just cheap jump scares and over the top cgi. Less is more with these type of scenes.
I was just thinking how Llewelyn is out of water vs Anton. He had all the information to piece together the conclusion that it is infact the hunter who is behind his door and he didn't take the first move. Only after the lock getting busted. Also if his nerves were ice cold, he wouldn't have crashed the car, I feel like. He was shot in the shoulder area with a busted window, which makes sense as to the reason he crashed. Would Anton have crashed? I doubt it. I feel it was a bit lucky that he survived. Not that he is clueless, but just not on the level with Anton.
@@Dragoneer Competent does not mean perfect. They're humans in a stressful situation and to portray them as perfect would make this scene unbelievable.
@@Dragoneer If I'm understanding you then you're saying that because they both made a mistake then their actions are incompetent/unacceptable. If that's the case then I would still argue that they are human and will make mistakes. I wouldn't call anyone incompetent because they made an error. Every human, ever, has made a mistake, even for things that they are professionals. Am I misunderstanding what you're saying? I'm sure it's possible because I, too, am human.
@@Dragoneer crashing while driving a car from the passenger seat with a dead body (presumably with their dead weight foot on the gas) while being shot at isn't incompetence lol. Neither is diving out of the way of a shot that would've otherwise killed you, Anton showed a really impressive reaction time + reflexes
No words, no music, nothing..... But the tension is soo high you can imagine hearing his heart beating when he comes to the realization. Modern classic in my opinion.
This movie is a prime example of taking source material and utilizing a new medium to improve it in every way. The filmmaking in this movie is just perfection
Yeah I've got the novel in my lap right now. Cormac's work is so tight and snappy I thought the movie could never live up to the source material, but the Coen's somehow made something its artistic equal. It probably helps that the novel was originally going to be a screenplay, too.
There are hitman and assassins that people acquire on the deep web and associates and reading some of their stories on how people just pay them to kill people is horrifying in a sense that we dont know how they kill. For all we know many hitman are like anton
BadigolBoy deep web is edgy garbage and most of them are crypto scams. The ones you really have to worry about are the words of mouth. They don’t need internet clients, they get hired by organized crime syndicates.
@@bosco964 Because he encountered the mexicans and they got his car so he knew they will be coming and packed his wife and left but if he didn't go there they would just show up with the tracker sooner or later and kill him without him expecting it.
One of those legendary movies, that dont require billions of budget and CGI, to make you 100% focused on this intense Cinematography, literally was heavy breathing in the theater from just not knowing whats going to happen next. I remember later that day recommending all of my friends at the bar to watch this movie, because it was so good.
The tension in this movie hits different than any other. A recently heard that at first Javier Bardem wanted nothing to do with the role. And despite having a bunch of other options of great actors that were willing to take it the Cohen Brothers decided to pursue him further and convinced him to do it. Thank the cinema gods for that...
I think this is a fair statement. I wouldn't consider the scene incredibly intense, but the movie itself; you are sitting on the edge of your seat everytime Chigurh is on the screen. The guy essentially represents death.
@@raycusto623 it's called "no country for old men" and it is an actual masterpiece and if you are a film buff of any kind you owe it to yourself to watch it. Is genuinely fantastic. For me I would feel comfortable saying it's somewhere in to too ten movies of all time but that's just my opinion.
No Country for Old Men is one of the greatest movies of all time. Javier Bardem as Anton Chigurh was a match made in heaven. No other actor could have played the role like he did.
I always imagined A. Sugár turning off the lights with a light switch at the end of the hall. It is 1980 in the film's setting. Today you cannot turn off lights in many/old buildings without switch-keys or special access.
Anton has a high pain tolerance according to the book. The man was shot in the leg and spent several hours without impeding demeanor except for the limp.
@@alexvazquez2871 In movie examples, him strangling the officer with the cuffs, the cuffs dug into his hands bad enough to cut them open. Him treating his own wounds after this confrontation
One of my favorite small details about this movie is that as far as I can remember Llewelyn and Anton never once see each other's faces. Really helps sell both that Anton represents death itself, and the lack of control Llewelyn has in evading it.
My favorite detail was that Anton never got Llewelyn. Despite his ruthless, brutal pursuit, it was still the others that got him in the end. Then Anton gets in a wreck. Just shows how random life can be, I love it
That’s not entirely true, Llewelyn sees Anton’s reflection at 5:54 when he’s covering behind the car waiting to shoot. I’m pretty sure that’s why he tells Wells that he’s “seen him” in the Mexican hospital. I do agree that the lack of any real face to face confrontation throughout the film definitely points towards the motif you’re describing though.
I feel so bad for the dude driving the truck, homie had absolutely nothing to do with this and was still the only dude that died (brutally, I might add) just in the wrong place at the wrong time
It really goes to show that the main character here is a veteran, he does so many things while his adrenaline is pumping that ordinary people would've jumped over in sheer panic. My favorite example is him closing the door on the truck instead of slamming it, most people would've left it open or slammed it and run away, but him knowing Anton was just around the corner, thought to slowly close it so it wouldn't sound like he got out of the truck, and having the chance to ambush him.
Another thing if u noticed is that he runs back to the hotel instead of going to the street like normal ppl will(which is very smart) as an attempt to fool Anton into going down but Chigurh being smart knows not to go down the stairs,Llewelyn realises that and decides to take a chance at the back door It’s small details like this that kept both Llewelyn and Anton alive in the end
Only thing I think I would have done that might be better (if I made it that far to begin with, which probably not. Also this is rhetorical and hindsight) would be something I picked up from video games. Id have been prone on the ground to the side of the door avoiding it swinging open and avoiding a direct forward shot. Pointing up center still just from a diff angle.
At 3:49, I thought it was odd how Anton missed for a reasonably close shot. You then see Llewelyn hold his gunshot wound which I originally thought he got from Anton's first shot when he jumped out the window. But what actually happened was that Anton didn't miss at ALL, the bullet just went straight through Llewelyn without him even realizing it because of the adrenaline. Very cool details.
@@gabepopp1169 I probably didn't write it in a very good way. I wasn't referring to the door knob part, I meant the part he leaps out the window. But yeah you're right, the door knob thing was a thing they use to kill farm animals with, not a gun.
@@justinvoegtline6196 No it isn't lol, nowhere near enough force. He notices seconds after the shot that goes through him and hits the ground in front of him.
@@tonmoymukherjee6951 No, you can definitely hear it if you listen close enough. The noise the suppressed shotgun makes is very distinct. You can also see Llewelyn’s head turn meaning he heard something. Then he calls the front desk right after to see if he would pick up
When Lewelyn fired the first shot at the door I’m pretty sure Anton knew he was going to have to take him more seriously considering the fact that Lewelyn was armed too
@@kevinfreitas6832 I don't think that Chighurh heard him readying the shotgun though. It's clear from the following scenes that he didn't expect to be shot. I think that's what made him rethink Moss - not that Moss was armed, but that Moss was resourceful and prepared- that they were roughly equal opponents. This wasn't going to be an easy kill.
@YouMake MeReal You're like Captain America now. Going up against Thanos and his army, all alone, with a broken shield. Only, this time noone else is with you lol
What makes this scene chilling is the beginning gunshots from Anton. We know it’s Anton shooting but you don’t see him physically shooting. Almost like a ghost is hunting Llewelyn.
Saw the movie recently. I dreamed that I was on my bed and suddently the lock went flying, then the door slammed opened and I got shot by the ghost himself
The fact that this is set in 1980 makes it so much better. The lack of technology makes for a much more interesting plot. The main character also served 2 tours in Nam which makes him pretty badass.
@@mdec76 I did some research and the Killer ( Chigurh ) was in special force Along with Carson ( Woody Harrelson) in Vietnam Too. They were both working in the same Sqaud and that's how they both knew each other.
I have always wondered since seeing the movie on release whether a transponder of that size and technical sophistication would have been feasible in 1979.
Man, I still remember watching this scene in theaters. When Llewelyn turns the lamp off, everyone else in the theater became another shadow in the hotel room. It felt like I was just sitting there alone in my seat with Llewelyn, quietly waiting for Anton to blast through the door...though neither of us knew exactly when or how it would happen. No one even *coughed* once during that moment…and that’s saying something. Great movie. Seeing this reminds me that I should go see a movie in theaters again sometime.
In the book, Llewelyn runs the shower in the bathroom and closes the bathroom door and then hides under the bed. He gets the drop on Chigurh (who thought he was in the shower) and actually makes him drop his weapon. He takes it and leaves, sparing Chigurh hoping that was enough to scare him off but Chigurh had a second gun and goes after him and then the rest of the scene shown here takes place.
Why in the F didn't he kill him?! But good to know he beat him in the book...so chigurh was actually a bitch instead of showing gratitude that Llewelyn let him live...
Anton Chigurh is a force of nature. He is like an enigma of chaos and destruction. The fact that he's barely seen in this scene adds to the ethereal quality of him as an adversary. He doesn't need to be seen, but the sense of danger he brings is more visible than he himself.
This scene is one of the scariest scenes in film history. In a hotel room. Utter silence. You see a tracker in the case that tells you're about to die and you have to do something about it.
I remember really getting on the edge of my seat, when Anton was driving around looking for the tracker. And it started to beep faster when Lewelyn was in the motel. Then this scene happened. And I realized. I really, love this movie. The ending threw such a curveball. My ex and I were like "..That's it?" And she decided she wasn't a big fan of it. However. For awhile. I was stuck on that ending. How it just cut. And that was it. Started to do research. Found out why I love this movie more. So much symbolism. So much detail. An amazing film.
Yeah I feel like this is the type of film you need to watch twice to fully understand, if only to analyse what Tommy Lee Jones says at the very beginning and very end of the film.
This scene is so amazing because it shows how tactical and lethal both guys are. However we know of Moss and his Vietnam background, but Anton’s proficiency with very little explanation is what makes him alien like. We know he’s a hitman, but having no knowledge of a military background makes it so interesting as to why he’s so good with weaponry and decision making.
Apparently there is a book about this movie, and it explains that Anton was in the military as well (special forces if I remember correctly) which is how Anton knew Woody Harrelsons character Carson because they both served in the same platoon
@@bubcyART just like Tommy Lee tells in the beginning of the film, there was a time where sheriffs wouldn't even carry a gun, the purpose was to help people, but the world got scarier and out of control with the coming of characters like Anton, he just felt outmatched cause it was something he wouldn't just understand about what the world of his had come to, so hence "no country for old men"
I was 11 when I saw this scene. My parents switched to it on accident and forgot it was on. I remember seeing the truck driver gets hit in the neck and thinking, "his blood looks like a waterfall." and being horrified by how brutal it was. My parents turned the tv off shortly after. Only today have I finally found this movie.
Love how you can hear the front desk phone ringing in the background while also ringing on the old landline in Llewellyn's ear, really increases the tension of the scene and shows just how alone and vulnerable he is.
I know it's a fictional movie but the fact that he was still able to run after being shot in the liver isn't realistic. They should have made it so he got shot on the left side
@@Bee-tj8gcconsidering how tense up he was throughout the entire scene, I’d assume he’d had a lot of adrenaline flowing to he didn’t feel much pain at first
There's a difference between anxiety/stress and fear I think you meant " anxious " since this movie does a perfect job at making the viewers sweat their ass off
I fully agree that this is a movie that must be watched in COMPLETE SILENCE. No talking, no distractions, not a sound. Or else so much will be missed in the experience!
Anton had the advantage because he knew he was hunting one man and he knew his location. Llewelyn did not know how many people were hunting him and where they might be. As the hotel battle progressed, Llewelyn figured out that he was being hunted by one man. Upon realizing this, he decided to take a stand against Anton at the crash site and he almost got him.
@@苏宜静 Really? That's interesting. I never read the book, I'm sure it's very good. I think this film was done very well by the Coen brothers though. I think its good when filmmakers adjust the novel so that it works in the cinema in terms of pacing and continuity.
This was done so perfectly, i love how Moss adapts quickly. You'd think it would be very one sided with him getting demolished but he holds on his all the way through. Moss is incredibly smart and cunning
At 0:23 you hear the exact moment Anton killed the guy at the front. The subtle noises and things like that are another factor of making this movie phenomenal.
That's a detail i had never heard about before. I wondered what made Moss look up! I replayed it with sound up high, and sure enough, you can hear antons gun go off.
Pretty fantastic, but I feel like so much of the credit for this movie is misplaced, and it's really unfortunate. Obviously the directors and actors deserve an enormous amount of credit for their decisions and performances, but the author of the book Cormac McCarthy get almost no recognition. The dialogue and the story of this film are fantastic, and almost all of it is pulled 100% from the novel. The coin flip scene being a great example of this. Really unfortunate that one of the greatest authors of our generation gets very little mainstream recognition.
@@platinumjazz_ would’ve been too predictable to just drop out of the window and run across the street like a dummy, plus the fact it would’ve been a smart flank if Anton was stupid and decided to go downstairs to catch him on the street, this didnt happen so the protag now knows anton is still probably on the second floor watching outside and he doesnt want to approach so he exits on the opposite side hoping anton is looking at the wrong way outside the window, anton noticed no activity after protag dropped out tho so he realizes this and catches him when he comes out the other side
6:40 Always hate when characters in movies jump out of cover and start blasting the bad guy out in the open completely exposed, however in this specific instance it's a brilliant tactical move. He sees that Anton DROPS HIS GUN and makes a split second decision to lay down suppressive fire and close the gap to make damn sure Anton cannot reach for the gun without getting his hand blown off. I just love how something so simple as a gun being dropped changes this action from a dumb ass movie thing to an intelligent and believable decision. A lesser movie would not have had Anton drop the gun.
Hate to burst your bubble, but Anton only droped the gun cause he heard him and knew he had the drop on him and jumped wildly to save his ass. Doesn’t matter regardless, this isn’t a stupid move from Llewelyn. He saw he had a drop on him and took his shot. He nearly had him.
How about stand to the side of the door a la Bruno Kirby as Clemenza in Godfather II and level you gun head high from the side when he enters. End of the cartoon that is Chigruh.
One of my favorite things has always been that this movie makes the audience feel more engaged with actual audio and sounds instead of background music. It’s so much more immersive.
Rukkkis the gun fight is like 4 minutes long with a silenced gun. It isn't until the end when he shoots with the shotgun thwart noise is made. Small town, not much chance of the one or two cops on duty to be rolling through there at that exact time.
Extra combat experience detail in this scene. Moss crashes the car on purpose to make Anton think he's still inside and wounded so that he can ambush him. Anton notices the bloody footprint which allows him to jump out the way in time.
@@nyahjzt-7430 ? It’s quite obvious what his plan was. He intended to make Anton believe he got shot and was dying in the car. So he got out to quietly ambush him. What did Anton do? Approached the crashed vehicle assumin that his prey was inside.... How tho? How can u be so unaware? Even after watchin it yourself and someone can point it out for u step by step and yet and u still miss it? Hahaha
This is one of the top 10 movies of the 2000s & easily the Coens best work. I rewatch this at least once every year or 2. They do great work but this is on another level
I love how him finding the tracking device seemed to give the audience a sense of relief, but then you realize that death has already been following him and it won’t stop until he finished his job.
one of the best scenes that truly conveys the fear you might face with a home invader. the attempt to remain quiet is super relatable if you've ever had to investigate a bump in the night
I remember watching this film for the first time about 3 or 4 years ago, it was the film that got me into cinema. The fact that I'd never experienced a movie like it before gave me a new respect for the art of filmmaking. The fact that there's no music throughout the whole film, and the wind is the only consistent score makes you realize how effective the writing and cinematography are. I actually remember the suspense from this scene, watching it for the first time. And even though I must've watched this film upwards of 7 times by now this scene still makes me nervous. The fact is there are movies and there are movies, the difference between a Rembrandt and a Hockney, or a Paganini and a 24kGoldn. Each to their own taste but one much more skilled than the other. I would love to watch this movie for the first time again.
Everyone mentions the coin flipping scene, and that’s definitely scary and intense, but this scene had me much more scared and nervous It’s almost a relief when Chigurh pops the door open
I find them both terrifying and intense but for different reasons. In this scene you know something is going to happen...the tension comes from the build up and the terror is in the chase. It's two killers (vet and hitman) facing off. There is even a small moment of relief when the lock is blown in and the chase begins. Both are armed and we feel that both have a chance. The coin toss is more like a wolf stalking a rabbit. He is in full control and we are hanging on literally every word and movement until the moment he walks out of the door. There is never a moment in that scene when you can take a breath. You know that if he decides to go for the kill...the owner has zero chance. The stakes are higher and outcome is far more one sided. Sorry for the long reply. .I just love this movie and could talk about it all day.
@@jerm801 it is one of my all time favorite movies, maybe it is even in top 3. My favorite detail among many of those is that SPOILER ALERT: in the end, when Anton has the traffic accident, if you pay attention of the dialogues between him and the kids, he has a kind of 'sweet' attitude towards those kids. Until that moment, he is very brutal like a killing machine against everyone, despite he doesn't chase Moss till the hospital to kill which is a smart decision of course but I he plays nice during his short communication with those boys.
Llewellyn going on the offensive at 6:39 and turning the tide of the battle was so badass. For a moment there the scary hunter Anton becomes the hunted by our very competent and capable protagonist
he's "more" capable than most, but Anton is clearly a cut above, the way they treat their wounds shows this, Anton does it all himself, making himself unhuntable in the process, Moss runs to a Hospital, which is his undoing.
@@keithfilibeck2390 I’m gonna go against the grain, Josh Brolin did everything wrong in this film. He sits on the bed in front of the door (if anyone fires through the door, he would be hit. He got lucky and Anton only blew the lock off), he returns into the hotel but does not use it as an opportunity to get the drop on Anton and instead still continues to try to escape, he chooses to run for cover in a direction which Anton would most likely be covering (and in turn gets shot for it), he chooses to flee in the only vehicle on the road rather than disperse in an unknown direction on foot, and when he finally knows hes going to get the drop on Anton he hides rather than trying to get an ambush and this allows Anton to escape. Would I do better in those circumstances? No, probably not (except for the not sitting on the bed thing). But i think Josh Brolin’s character handles all of this pretty poorly all things considered.
I like the attention to detail with Moss’ stance with the shotgun as he slowly approached Anton’s last location. It shows that Moss has proper training from his time served in the Vietnam War.
He was low which makes him a smaller target but he was also looking under the car in case Chigur decided to go prone. It makes me wonder if he intentionally shot the tire at the last moment to eliminate the only other line of sight Chigur might have had. He was looking under the car as he approached and he closed off that line of sight when he finally pushed up to the sidewalk. He could have also been trying to skip a few pellets off the ground to the other side of the car.
@@tommys2928 honestly it was pretty brutal. I’d say it’s up there because of how real it looks. I’d say it’s worse than the ice pick scene in goodfellas. However it is not as bad as the scene in casino where the guys head is crushed by a vice. That’s my standards at least
Yeah, and the fact that he still lived to the end is even more terrifying. Ngl I kinda wanna see an afterlife movie of Anton, and the Sheriff. Where the Sheriff kills Anton, or Anton goes on another killing spree, and eventually dies. Even though I know it’s probably not gonna happen.
Love how Chigurh ends up breaking his arm and stuck to rely on someone else. He is easily the most cleverly written and perfect villain in my opinion. Coen brothers did this story justice and honestly makes it a greater masterpiece than it is. So anyways Chigurh is perfect. He thinks of himself as death itself and that by chance only can you escape him. He tells Carla Jean to call it. When she explains that it's only him and not some force of chance. His entire character crumbles. He is off set by this confrontation that he's too distracted to pay attention to the road. When the accident occurs, he became mortaly wounded. Then you hear him say to the boys that helped him "Take it, and you didn't see me." Whoever sees Chigurh in his dark judgement winds up dead. Now his character is relying on his screwed up morals to keep his cool. So when he requires help, he gives the boys money, he needed them to take it or his entire character would fall apart. Coens Brothers man, they are genius.
This scene shows how well both men are familiar with combat. Brolin doesn’t just run across the street after jumping out the window. He went back in and tried to run out the back because he knew Javier would just shoot him out from the window. Then Javier anticipates what brolin is doing and goes to a window at the rear of the hotel to get a vantage point ok brolin. Whoever thought this all out knew what they were doing. Not only is this a game of brutality but also a game of wit.
There's only 3 times when i literally started breathing out of intensity while watching a scene 1. 1917 almost the whole movie 2. Dunkirk bombing on the beach 3. This Scene
I think most people feel that way lmao you can see 20 people get killed in a movie and not bad a eye......see a cat or dog get killed tho? Shit hurts the soul 😂
I remember my music teacher told me that silence is the most intense sound ever. I remember asking “But doesn’t silence mean that theres no sound at all? It wouldn’t be considered a sound if there’s a lack of it.” I didn’t understand what he was saying until i saw this movie. Silence (when used right) can make or break the entire direction or feeling of a scene or song. Silence is more like a “Sound of no sound” kind of thing
This was my first Carmac McCarthy book.... When he killed off Luella I stopped reading it and didn't pick it back up till years later. After reading most of carmack McCarthy's books I now realize he may be our greatest living writer
The lack of music brings focus: you feel his story as though you're living it yourself. Imagine his fear, realizing there's a tracker in that briefcase, and then piecing it together when the hotel operator fails to answer. You know you're being tracked by an intelligent and deadly killer, and you have seconds to make a decision. Holy shit!
I've always thought one of the greatest things about this film and why its so intense is the complete lack of music and soundtrack, sometimes that can distract from real intensity, this is just pure realism which is why its so damn thrilling.
I love the shot of Brolin’s face as we hear the ‘zip’ of the suppressed gunfire and the clatter of the hotel attendant’s chair falling over. He knows something is up but he doesn’t have a full understanding of what he’s up against.
I remember watching this in the theatre and being bored out of my mind. I was so very, very wrong. It's no fault of the directors or actors, and to be fair to my past self, I was only 16 and was still really into The Matrix and anime fight sequences, and this scene by comparison seemed slow and uninteresting. Having acquired a newfound appreciation for realistic shootouts in movies, however, I have nothing but pure admiration for the suspense, fear, and excitement that oozes from this entire sequence. This is truly one of the most masterfully produced, acted, and directed shootouts to ever grace film. Every second is so intense, it's really amazing.
@ayy lmao "cognitive decline" i typed my comment fast because i was watching dexter you dumbass, bet you feel like the smartest man in the world even though your stupid enough to not realize based on the rest of the scentence that I accidently put a r after the you by accident
@ayy lmao trying to like smart by pointing out a spelling mistake even though anybody who is not a jackass can realize its an accident and not something to do with my understanding of english.
When I first saw this movie I thought it was a horror movie. I felt more afraid of this movie than most horror movies that are even out. Seeing this in theaters was a very chilling experience, almost life changing.
the character is "johnny" and no one knows who the heck tommy wiseau is....so did you think that was tljones, or do you think you are "hip", pretending everyone should know who "tommy' is? are you the guy who "loved the music BEFORE it was cool..."? pffft.
The shot at 3:21 is one of my favorites. You literally see Anton’s silhouette for one frame in the muzzle flash and then he’s gone. No noise from him whatsoever
I just love how for the first 6 minutes of this scene, any time Anton is shown, it's just his silhouette or shadow. In those six minutes it almost feels like a horror movie where Anton is a monster or ghost chasing Moss. They pulled it off so well.
@@willm678but then when lwellyn gets the upper hand, it's the first time we see anton in full, as if he goes from a terrifying unstoppable monster to a human that needs to duck for cover
When you say most intense scene in cinema history, well could be. The scene in Godfather I when Michael meets with Sollozzo and Captain McClusky in Louie’s Restaurant is very intense.
In order to feel tension you'll have to watch from the beginning because the whole movie is heart pumping
Milkman yeah I agree. U didn't feel any tension because I didn't watch it
Na. It was very boring. You had a hit man who did nothing but talk, horror movie "let's make convenient stupid decisions" logic and incoherent motivations. Essentially a movie for people who love to smell their own farts.
The Possum I agree the movie was rather boring and they're labeling this the most intense scene gimme a break
Don't put it in your pocket...it's your lucky quarter - it'll get mixed in with change and become just a normal quarter....which it is and then he pulls that classic face this emoji is as close as i can find to it! 😳
It's a good scene, I'll admit that, but the rest of the movie doesn't really rise up to it. A good three or four minutes does not uplift two hours of droll. I think a lot of people praise this one because they're expected to because of the source material, which I didn't like either.
The creepiest thing is, we barely see Anton for most of this sequence. The most we get is his silhouette or muzzle flashes, but Anton is always some abstract presence to run away from. Only when Llewellyn gains the upper hand does Anton go from some invisible force of death to a human being who has to dive for cover.
lakobause He's death itself or so he likes to think
Man, you sure do think deep about this!
Coen's Michael Myers in many ways.
lakobause It's called creating ambiguity.
BigErn_Mccraken Still don't understand! Guess I need to take a film class!
It's so smart that we don't even get a glimpse of Chigurh in this scene until the very end. Makes him seem more like a force of nature or a ghost than human being. Yet another clever trick used by Coen brothers to dehumanize him.
Mate, its an old school method showing less and leaving more to the imagination. Take Alien (1979) for example. It's not smart or a Clever trick, it's just normal for a movie like this. Good movies never give you everything on a plate.
He is more of an idea like fate or inevitability than an actual person, they even call him A ghost
Anton is hunting Llewelyn like Llewelyn was hunting the deer in the beginning, but when Anton saw the blood track from the truck for a second I think he knew Llewelyn had the upper hand for the first time
They do that to simulate how Llewelyn doesnt know what he looks like or who's after him until the last minute.
Anton’s silhouette in the distance and the muzzle flashes is what make him appear terrifying and ghostlike
I just noticed that when Lewellyn crashed the truck and left it, he deliberately closed the door behind him to make Anton unsure whether he had been shot and was still in the truck.
I had assumed he crashed the truck on accident and then came up with that plan on the spot for the longest time. But most recent time I watched it I realized the entire crash was orchestrated to trap him from the start.
@@aja3longhorn375 he did but he closed the door on purpose to make Anton think he was still in the vehicle
Quick thinking under incredible pressure. I would of screwed that up I'm sure.
I'm glad your brain cells are finally up to speed 😃
Whoever did audio engineering on this film deserves a major raise.
thanos meets Anton
weebi i meet Anton.
No oscar tho
Thinking the same. I've worked in broadcast TV and few indie films on the audio production and editing side and this work is amazing.
Skip Lievsay got two Oscar nominations for different aspects of sound work, but didn't win either. He later won for Gravity
Considering what he was up against, Lewelyn handled himself pretty well
His last charge at the end was pretty gangster
It made it all the more interesting, plausible but not over the top
He could have actually gotten him but got was shot behind his back
You preaching to the choir lol
Llewelyn wasn't always the best when he had time to sit around and think (like bringing water back to the drug deal or fooling around with the hotel lady). But in situations requiring quick thinking, strong nerve, and a steady hand (like this one or clearing a waterlogged pistol before shooting a lunging dog), he proved to be as good as it gets. Evenly matched with Chigur.
The main reason Anton feels so scary is that they do a lot to make Llewelyn seem badass as well.
@FRED SMARTSTONE yeah and might have been able to get him if the Mexicans hadn't offed him first.
Sucks that Llewellyn ended up dead anyway.
Llewelyn is bad ass.. Anton realized it in this scene..
it make me only angrier about how they ended him like we wasnt into his character
The main reason is actually the coconut bowl cut
The sound design in this scene is incredible. The silenced shotgun and distant thud at 0:22, the empty ringing of the phone downstairs, the beeping of Shigurh's tracker as it gets closer, the click of the shotgun hammer, every floorboard creaked heavy breath. No soundtrack either. This is a brilliant cinematic sequence.
It was a tec9
That was probably the receptionist.
2:52 if you listen extremely closely you can hear Chigurh unscrewing the lightbulb
Rachel damn nice
omg yes!
genius attention to the slightest details.
True GAL
Never heard this, nice one
No music in the background. Nice and quiet. Scary.
That's one choice that I think makes the entire movie tense. I think there's only like 15 minutes of actual music in the movie. The rest is just ambient sound.
shogundickin. I know this ain't a Horror movie, but Horror movie creators should take notes from this. Some of the most intense moments I've experienced In horror games, is random moments when the music suddenly goes off. You don't see that very often in movies anymore. However, I'm not saying that music is always a bad thing tho.
shogundickin goonies never die or have you guys forgotten
is there even 15 minutes of music at all? thought the only music in the movie was when the mariachi band finds him on the street
I believe I read there was 15 minutes of music on IMDB but I could be wrong.
I think the lack of music in this movie actually helps make these scenes even more terrifying. The characters simply being alone in the dark, practically holding their breath listening for the slightest sound, it brings back memories of being a kid, thinking you heard something in the middle of the night and you sit up in bed and listen, it's that exact same tension.
Crazy, didn’t realize it until I read your comment. Wow!
I've been through almost the same scenario in this scene as a cartel wanted me out the house with random shotgun blasts and in the silent moments you can hear and feel your heart beating through your chest. I wish a lot more movies are silent like this real scene.
That's a really good way of putting it. It feels exactly like that, just the threat is 10x more real.
very insightful, that’s exactly how i felt as well
@@nfaisnfgay Me too like the bulk of 2001 had no music. That emergency entry was powerful and not a bar of music in it.
I like how even though Anton is portrayed as this badass inescapable psychopathic grim-reaper of death, he still leaps and scurries out of there like a cockroach when Llewellyn gains the upper hand.
Really reminds everyone that no matter how badass a guy like Chigurh can be, bullets aren't just gonna bounce off of them.
Exactly.
I think it's brilliant it shows that Anton is still human
Great break down!! Definitely when the bullets were getting to close he said ✌️ I'll see you another day
Correct. And, whole point of the end of the movie. The awful car wreck and grievous injury Chigurh endured at random. Showed he wasn't a force of nature, he just played the part of one.
Its weird how the three main characters don't formally share any scenes together.
And the only one who communicated with all of them is lewelyn's wife
@@ibrahimborekci7093 they also sit in the same sofa
but in different time
because Anton Chigurh doesn't exist
@@dominic_decocco huh? How so?
First time I saw this movie I must have accidently hit the pause button on my dvd player at 2:29 and I was sat there for two minutes on the edge of my seat staring at that crack under the door before I realised it was paused, honest to God.
😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂😊
thats funny
F
👍
Lesson learned. If I ever find a bag full of money, I'll be sure to check for the transmitter
Or maybe even better, don't leave you're truck around so they can find out who you are and where you live, with or without the transmitter!
Transfer the money to a different container too, just in case they chipped it
@Gary McMichael People are stupid in real life too, doesn't ruin the movie at all. Makes it better
late as hell, gary except that everything would pretty much be the same seeing how the money had a transmitter, he would have just died in his house
Crazy just shows how in over his head he was with the cash.
I love how Llewelyn realizes that running is not a good option and that he has to strike back. Great storytelling
Acting without words is ACTING and Brolin and Bardem killed it!
True bro.
@@mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm3153 Mmmmmmmmmmmm.
@@mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm3153
Richer
MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMW MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMW MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMW MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMW
@@mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm3153 WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW
You can even hear the counter telephone ringing downstairs as he's making the call. Brilliant.
You can hear lots of things. The suppressed shotgun blast and the clerks body hitting the ground. The phone ringing. Antons approaching footsteps. The beeping of the tracking device increasing in intensity as he gets closer. The sound of the lightbulb being unscrewed
@@wll1500 and he walks aside from the door when he hears the clicking sound of the gun’s trigger. So quite place that’ll punish making any unnecessary noise or misinterpretating or ignoring any subtle sound
Haha, you find that brilliant? Wait till you wear some earphones and listen to what else Llewellyn could hear. Haha, genius level audio engineering.
@Jiro Dominic De Leon GENER you could hear the clerks body drop as well as the suppressor of the gun it’s absolutely brilliant
@@wll1500 oh snap i didnt even notice that, i had to put some headphones in to hear it
Many years later and this film is still talked about. It's classic cinema.
first time seeing and im glad i didnt see this when i was 10...this shit scary
I just saw today for the first time
But it isn't much talked about. And its power comes from what it gets from the novel. The book is well worth reading. See which you like better.
0:22 If you increase the volume, it will be possible to hear Anton killing the receptionist.
😮 will try.
😮
Such a subtle, genius detail. Makes it feel like impending doom is on its way.
That was not subtle at all. Lmao.
@@Rightwingeagle99 It is, actually. I had to max the volume on my phone just to hear it.
It's not a horror film but it's the scariest movie I've ever seen.
T R U T H yes I find properly executed tension is far scarier then cheesy jump scares
True, I did not want to watch a horror movie because I had to sleep alone so I watched this but this shit scared me even more than a horror movie and anton chigurh still haunts me in my dreams
its up there, have you seen wold creek? Holy s@$t..
Yeah horror films these days lack the necessary buildup of tension. Nowadays it's just cheap jump scares and over the top cgi. Less is more with these type of scenes.
@@MrDaveFerrier you mean wolf creek? That's a great film
AT 0:22 you can hear Anton shoot the front desk clerk. You may need earphones.
Ruger Dern true...
The sound in this scene is incredible.
DAMN!!!!!!!........👍👍👍😂😂😂😂😂 GOOD SHIT.
Good catch
I never caught that my first few time seeing this scene
I love the movies where both protagonist and antagonist are competent as hell. This scene is the best example of it.
I was just thinking how Llewelyn is out of water vs Anton. He had all the information to piece together the conclusion that it is infact the hunter who is behind his door and he didn't take the first move. Only after the lock getting busted. Also if his nerves were ice cold, he wouldn't have crashed the car, I feel like. He was shot in the shoulder area with a busted window, which makes sense as to the reason he crashed. Would Anton have crashed? I doubt it. I feel it was a bit lucky that he survived. Not that he is clueless, but just not on the level with Anton.
@@nopixelstories3559 Doesn't Anton literally crash a car because of his injuries later?
@@Dragoneer Competent does not mean perfect. They're humans in a stressful situation and to portray them as perfect would make this scene unbelievable.
@@Dragoneer If I'm understanding you then you're saying that because they both made a mistake then their actions are incompetent/unacceptable. If that's the case then I would still argue that they are human and will make mistakes. I wouldn't call anyone incompetent because they made an error. Every human, ever, has made a mistake, even for things that they are professionals. Am I misunderstanding what you're saying? I'm sure it's possible because I, too, am human.
@@Dragoneer crashing while driving a car from the passenger seat with a dead body (presumably with their dead weight foot on the gas) while being shot at isn't incompetence lol.
Neither is diving out of the way of a shot that would've otherwise killed you, Anton showed a really impressive reaction time + reflexes
No words, no music, nothing..... But the tension is soo high you can imagine hearing his heart beating when he comes to the realization. Modern classic in my opinion.
This movie is a prime example of taking source material and utilizing a new medium to improve it in every way. The filmmaking in this movie is just perfection
Yeah I've got the novel in my lap right now. Cormac's work is so tight and snappy I thought the movie could never live up to the source material, but the Coen's somehow made something its artistic equal.
It probably helps that the novel was originally going to be a screenplay, too.
I prefer the novel personally
is it based off a book?
@@d.pedroii2940 It is. Of the same title, by Cormac McCarthy. It’s a great read, if you like the movie I highly recommend it.
@@blakebrooks157 nice, I'll check it out
The scary thing is there are people like Anton who do exist.
@@imposter-982 stfu anime pfp bitch. But i like your username so u cool 😊
There are hitman and assassins that people acquire on the deep web and associates and reading some of their stories on how people just pay them to kill people is horrifying in a sense that we dont know how they kill. For all we know many hitman are like anton
Haha yeah that's crazy man. 😁
李上尉第二排 lol literally all over the earth. Where else dumbass.
BadigolBoy deep web is edgy garbage and most of them are crypto scams.
The ones you really have to worry about are the words of mouth. They don’t need internet clients, they get hired by organized crime syndicates.
all of this just because he decided to go back and give that guy water
Never expected to see you here
Going back to give that guy water is actually what saved him.
@@fetakdusan9409 how?
@@bosco964 Because he encountered the mexicans and they got his car so he knew they will be coming and packed his wife and left but if he didn't go there they would just show up with the tracker sooner or later and kill him without him expecting it.
@@fetakdusan9409 true
One of those legendary movies, that dont require billions of budget and CGI, to make you 100% focused on this intense Cinematography, literally was heavy breathing in the theater from just not knowing whats going to happen next. I remember later that day recommending all of my friends at the bar to watch this movie, because it was so good.
The tension in this movie hits different than any other. A recently heard that at first Javier Bardem wanted nothing to do with the role. And despite having a bunch of other options of great actors that were willing to take it the Cohen Brothers decided to pursue him further and convinced him to do it. Thank the cinema gods for that...
I think this is a fair statement. I wouldn't consider the scene incredibly intense, but the movie itself; you are sitting on the edge of your seat everytime Chigurh is on the screen. The guy essentially represents death.
Fun fact, Bardem turned down the role initially because he barely spoke English. He ended up learning his lines phonetically.
What's the title of the movie?
@@raycusto623 it's called "no country for old men" and it is an actual masterpiece and if you are a film buff of any kind you owe it to yourself to watch it. Is genuinely fantastic. For me I would feel comfortable saying it's somewhere in to too ten movies of all time but that's just my opinion.
@@wetteryan absolutely, brilliant movie
The best use of sound I have ever heard in a film.
Jack Sharples I was so engaged into this film I barely realized now there is no musical cues or music in it at all.
Sometimes less is more.
Yeah, you can hear Chigurh unscrew the light bulb in the hallway.
HEAT is sill better, but this is a close second that comes to mind at the moment.
Dunkirk had the best sound design imo.
No Country for Old Men is one of the greatest movies of all time. Javier Bardem as Anton Chigurh was a match made in heaven. No other actor could have played the role like he did.
Steve Buscemi. Gary Oldman. I can think of others, too........
Charles Bronson...
@@peterpaz4877 Not even close.
Peter Paz really dude..
Jean Pierre Wehry i live in Pomona
I think Josh Brolin is a superb actor and will watch any movie that he is in. He also interviews very well and has a great sense of humor.
Just a little terrifying detail, Anton calmly unscrews a boiling hot lightbulb like it’s nothing lol, that shit would hurt
I believe he had gloves during this scene. But even if not I could totally see him doing that lol.
I always imagined A. Sugár turning off the lights with a light switch at the end of the hall. It is 1980 in the film's setting. Today you cannot turn off lights in many/old buildings without switch-keys or special access.
@@Ryanspeanuty if you turn the sound up you can hear him unscrewing it
Anton has a high pain tolerance according to the book. The man was shot in the leg and spent several hours without impeding demeanor except for the limp.
@@alexvazquez2871 In movie examples, him strangling the officer with the cuffs, the cuffs dug into his hands bad enough to cut them open. Him treating his own wounds after this confrontation
One of my favorite small details about this movie is that as far as I can remember Llewelyn and Anton never once see each other's faces. Really helps sell both that Anton represents death itself, and the lack of control Llewelyn has in evading it.
My favorite detail was that Anton never got Llewelyn. Despite his ruthless, brutal pursuit, it was still the others that got him in the end. Then Anton gets in a wreck. Just shows how random life can be, I love it
@@plaguepandemic5651 Maybe that randomness is represented by the coin Anton flips.
@@plaguepandemic5651 He likes to see himself as above the common flock, that he is death itself. Then life shows him who's really in control.
That’s not entirely true, Llewelyn sees Anton’s reflection at 5:54 when he’s covering behind the car waiting to shoot. I’m pretty sure that’s why he tells Wells that he’s “seen him” in the Mexican hospital. I do agree that the lack of any real face to face confrontation throughout the film definitely points towards the motif you’re describing though.
@@plaguepandemic5651 Those goddam mexicans
I feel so bad for the dude driving the truck, homie had absolutely nothing to do with this and was still the only dude that died (brutally, I might add) just in the wrong place at the wrong time
Nice to see someone like you enjoying this movie.
yeah, same goes to a few more people in the movie, just going about their day and unluckily run into a huge menace
That happens in life too , not just scripted movies. Scary really... driving home like any other time and someone shoots you dead.
rip to bro
Release in 2007, it is high quality
Im so glad my dad and i got to see this together before he passed away.....this movie was incredibly good 👍
May his soul rest in peace 🕊️
Mine too 🙏🏾
It's a beautiful experience that you can never get back
It really goes to show that the main character here is a veteran, he does so many things while his adrenaline is pumping that ordinary people would've jumped over in sheer panic. My favorite example is him closing the door on the truck instead of slamming it, most people would've left it open or slammed it and run away, but him knowing Anton was just around the corner, thought to slowly close it so it wouldn't sound like he got out of the truck, and having the chance to ambush him.
Another thing if u noticed is that he runs back to the hotel instead of going to the street like normal ppl will(which is very smart) as an attempt to fool Anton into going down but Chigurh being smart knows not to go down the stairs,Llewelyn realises that and decides to take a chance at the back door
It’s small details like this that kept both Llewelyn and Anton alive in the end
@Glory-Compass Why did going into the hotel help him vs going to the street
@@uggycyvhvyvyv7322 Anton has full vision of the street from the windows, if llewelyn went out there, he would be gunned down
Anton turning the light off in the hallway because he knew he was being backlit is a good example too.
Only thing I think I would have done that might be better (if I made it that far to begin with, which probably not. Also this is rhetorical and hindsight) would be something I picked up from video games. Id have been prone on the ground to the side of the door avoiding it swinging open and avoiding a direct forward shot. Pointing up center still just from a diff angle.
At 3:49, I thought it was odd how Anton missed for a reasonably close shot. You then see Llewelyn hold his gunshot wound which I originally thought he got from Anton's first shot when he jumped out the window. But what actually happened was that Anton didn't miss at ALL, the bullet just went straight through Llewelyn without him even realizing it because of the adrenaline. Very cool details.
I think that's what happened but, his first shot was at the window, the shot that pops the doorknob off is a deferent tool. Correct me if I'm wrong
@@gabepopp1169 I probably didn't write it in a very good way. I wasn't referring to the door knob part, I meant the part he leaps out the window. But yeah you're right, the door knob thing was a thing they use to kill farm animals with, not a gun.
Was it a bullet or a pellet? I thought his weapon of choice was that shotgun of his
@@reecewithoutherspoon1324 the wound is from the door thing hitting him not a bullet
@@justinvoegtline6196 No it isn't lol, nowhere near enough force. He notices seconds after the shot that goes through him and hits the ground in front of him.
Never noticed at 0:22 you can hear the suppressed shotgun and the guy fall over.
Fantastic catch
Holy shit, nice catch. Phenomenal attention to detail.
Am I the sane one here, who cant hear shit?
@@tonmoymukherjee6951 No, you can definitely hear it if you listen close enough. The noise the suppressed shotgun makes is very distinct. You can also see Llewelyn’s head turn meaning he heard something. Then he calls the front desk right after to see if he would pick up
Wow... Great observation buddy😃
I wouldn't of been sitting directly across from that door
Yup...move to the corner of the room and wait for chigurh to come through the door...game over.
When Lewelyn fired the first shot at the door I’m pretty sure Anton knew he was going to have to take him more seriously considering the fact that Lewelyn was armed too
i think anton heard him tightening the trigger.
@@chriz9959 lol anton isn't a Lion
@@Yeshayahu. Oh he certainly is. Anton is the lion who hasn't eaten in a week and Llewelyn is the leopard fighting for a kill he's trying to guard.
@@LethalByChoice Damn good comparison.
@@kevinfreitas6832 I don't think that Chighurh heard him readying the shotgun though. It's clear from the following scenes that he didn't expect to be shot. I think that's what made him rethink Moss - not that Moss was armed, but that Moss was resourceful and prepared- that they were roughly equal opponents. This wasn't going to be an easy kill.
Always intense when it's a calm, quiet background without the scenes being disturbed with tacky ass music...
Like EVERY "horror" movie to come out in the last 8 years. Sad.
Agree 100% real life doesnt have back ground music...
Deana Robinson h
Yeen Str8 in am 1000th like
6:47 another detail i've just noticed, if you listen really closely, you can hear the footsteps of Chigurh running away
RedPugie nope that's Llewelyn scufffling his feat you can hear steps after but very lightly very
@@gmarikbraun6460 he's right, listen to the sound and look at Llewelyn's feet, it doesn't match up
@YouMake MeReal You're like Captain America now. Going up against Thanos and his army, all alone, with a broken shield. Only, this time noone else is with you lol
Nope..dont hear it...just Lleywelyn's feet boss..sorry mate
@@mikerusso703 the sound doesn't match Llewellyns feet moving at all
What makes this scene chilling is the beginning gunshots from Anton. We know it’s Anton shooting but you don’t see him physically shooting. Almost like a ghost is hunting Llewelyn.
I literally had a nightmare of chigurh after watching this. In the dream he took over the company I worked for. I woke up sweating Lol
Why, he might kill your boss and most bosses are bastards
Better be the best tool for the job.
"And I woke up." -Tommy Lee jones
Saw the movie recently. I dreamed that I was on my bed and suddently the lock went flying, then the door slammed opened and I got shot by the ghost himself
Sounds a bit like Fargo
The fact that this is set in 1980 makes it so much better. The lack of technology makes for a much more interesting plot. The main character also served 2 tours in Nam which makes him pretty badass.
who served 2 tours in NAM ? The killer or the guy who found the money ?
@@m.n.s.s2825 guy who found the money had a military background
@@mdec76
I did some research and the Killer ( Chigurh ) was in special force Along with Carson ( Woody Harrelson) in Vietnam Too. They were both working in the same Sqaud and that's how they both knew each other.
I have always wondered since seeing the movie on release whether a transponder of that size and technical sophistication would have been feasible in 1979.
Didn't he say he was in Nam to the boarder officer.
Man, I still remember watching this scene in theaters. When Llewelyn turns the lamp off, everyone else in the theater became another shadow in the hotel room. It felt like I was just sitting there alone in my seat with Llewelyn, quietly waiting for Anton to blast through the door...though neither of us knew exactly when or how it would happen. No one even *coughed* once during that moment…and that’s saying something.
Great movie. Seeing this reminds me that I should go see a movie in theaters again sometime.
They don't make movies like this anymore sadly. I used to go to the theater every week but now it's not worth it
With my movie-going luck someone would take the opportunity to start shoveling through their half-empty popcorn bag.
One of the few movies I've ever heard about where people basically shut up and watched the movie.
Super jealous you watched this movie in the cinema.
There are a few films I wish I was old enough to watch in a cinema.
This is the number 1 spot.
How many people you think shat their pants when the lock popped off?
In the book, Llewelyn runs the shower in the bathroom and closes the bathroom door and then hides under the bed. He gets the drop on Chigurh (who thought he was in the shower) and actually makes him drop his weapon. He takes it and leaves, sparing Chigurh hoping that was enough to scare him off but Chigurh had a second gun and goes after him and then the rest of the scene shown here takes place.
That makes more sense than him sitting in front of the door 🤔😅
Why in the F didn't he kill him?! But good to know he beat him in the book...so chigurh was actually a bitch instead of showing gratitude that Llewelyn let him live...
Anton Chigurh is a force of nature. He is like an enigma of chaos and destruction. The fact that he's barely seen in this scene adds to the ethereal quality of him as an adversary. He doesn't need to be seen, but the sense of danger he brings is more visible than he himself.
wood chucker hes also scarfaces uncle
He is the grim reaper (complete with a bowl cut)
Read Blood Meridian by same author as No Country. Cormac McCarthy his character the Judge... yowza.
wood chucker. So what's your point?
Alright plum star calm down
This scene is one of the scariest scenes in film history. In a hotel room. Utter silence. You see a tracker in the case that tells you're about to die and you have to do something about it.
This comment is one of the most tryhard in RUclips history
@@brunothebest690ur cringe
@@elvisvader "ur cringe" dies of cringe
I wanted him to destroy it with a hammer
I remember really getting on the edge of my seat, when Anton was driving around looking for the tracker. And it started to beep faster when Lewelyn was in the motel. Then this scene happened. And I realized. I really, love this movie. The ending threw such a curveball. My ex and I were like "..That's it?" And she decided she wasn't a big fan of it. However. For awhile. I was stuck on that ending. How it just cut. And that was it. Started to do research. Found out why I love this movie more. So much symbolism. So much detail. An amazing film.
This is in my top ten
The ending totally threw me. The climax was missing.
Yeah I feel like this is the type of film you need to watch twice to fully understand, if only to analyse what Tommy Lee Jones says at the very beginning and very end of the film.
@exe cutiee the movies over 10 years old it aint his fault you havent watched it.
@@tommydevito8235 That's not a good excuse. There's thousands of movies. It's impossible for someone to have seen them all.
This scene is so amazing because it shows how tactical and lethal both guys are. However we know of Moss and his Vietnam background, but Anton’s proficiency with very little explanation is what makes him alien like. We know he’s a hitman, but having no knowledge of a military background makes it so interesting as to why he’s so good with weaponry and decision making.
Apparently there is a book about this movie, and it explains that Anton was in the military as well (special forces if I remember correctly) which is how Anton knew Woody Harrelsons character Carson because they both served in the same platoon
"No country for old men" . This is probably the most coolest and fitting title I have seen for a movie .
in Brazil they call it "where the weak have no time"
What does the title mean?
@@bubcyART just like Tommy Lee tells in the beginning of the film, there was a time where sheriffs wouldn't even carry a gun, the purpose was to help people, but the world got scarier and out of control with the coming of characters like Anton, he just felt outmatched cause it was something he wouldn't just understand about what the world of his had come to, so hence "no country for old men"
@@pussyinasarcophagus in spanish it's called "sin lugar para los débiles", which translates "no place for the weak", pretty fitting too
@@bubcyART It is from a poem. Look it up.
I was 11 when I saw this scene. My parents switched to it on accident and forgot it was on. I remember seeing the truck driver gets hit in the neck and thinking, "his blood looks like a waterfall." and being horrified by how brutal it was. My parents turned the tv off shortly after. Only today have I finally found this movie.
Congratulations.
Yeah I would say some half ass shit about you and your parents but no, I thought I tell you to live ya life not thinking about the past
Good movie?
@@bruceli9094 amazing movie
I saw this with my older sister when I was about that same age and she made me promise to not tell my mum or she’ll go mental
Love how you can hear the front desk phone ringing in the background while also ringing on the old landline in Llewellyn's ear, really increases the tension of the scene and shows just how alone and vulnerable he is.
it also shows how dead the front desk operator is.
Coen brothers always give me chills, this is insane
I know it's a fictional movie but the fact that he was still able to run after being shot in the liver isn't realistic.
They should have made it so he got shot on the left side
@@Bee-tj8gcconsidering how tense up he was throughout the entire scene, I’d assume he’d had a lot of adrenaline flowing to he didn’t feel much pain at first
@@heisenbergII adrenaline won't take the pain a away from a liver shot. Not even in boxing.
Go watch some Ricky Haton body shot highlights
Its funny how most horror movies don't scare me, yet this thriller did.
There's a difference between anxiety/stress and fear
I think you meant " anxious " since this movie does a perfect job at making the viewers sweat their ass off
Most of psychological thrillers r scary as hell
This scene fudgin terrified me.
I was rewatching a few clips from this movie and each time I would physically jump, the tension and pacing in these scenes is unmatched
Thrillers and horror are mostly the same
I fully agree that this is a movie that must be watched in COMPLETE SILENCE. No talking, no distractions, not a sound. Or else so much will be missed in the experience!
Anton had the advantage because he knew he was hunting one man and he knew his location. Llewelyn did not know how many people were hunting him and where they might be. As the hotel battle progressed, Llewelyn figured out that he was being hunted by one man. Upon realizing this, he decided to take a stand against Anton at the crash site and he almost got him.
@@苏宜静 Really? That's interesting. I never read the book, I'm sure it's very good. I think this film was done very well by the Coen brothers though. I think its good when filmmakers adjust the novel so that it works in the cinema in terms of pacing and continuity.
This was done so perfectly, i love how Moss adapts quickly. You'd think it would be very one sided with him getting demolished but he holds on his all the way through. Moss is incredibly smart and cunning
At 0:23 you hear the exact moment Anton killed the guy at the front. The subtle noises and things like that are another factor of making this movie phenomenal.
That's a detail i had never heard about before. I wondered what made Moss look up! I replayed it with sound up high, and sure enough, you can hear antons gun go off.
@@martygreenspan-xy2joyou can also hear the stool moving because the lifeless body moving it when it falls
I thought it was a floorboard creaking
@@zacjohnson8404 you hear the air hose go off than the stool moving
@@beauxrathburn Ah ok. Guess I need a new headset lol, I had volume on max and still couldn't hear it.
Probably the most well made movie I've ever seen. Every shot is a masterpiece.
Jesse Brennan agreed
Jesse Brennan agreed
This and There Will Be Blood are pure masterpieces
Agreed
Pretty fantastic, but I feel like so much of the credit for this movie is misplaced, and it's really unfortunate. Obviously the directors and actors deserve an enormous amount of credit for their decisions and performances, but the author of the book Cormac McCarthy get almost no recognition. The dialogue and the story of this film are fantastic, and almost all of it is pulled 100% from the novel. The coin flip scene being a great example of this. Really unfortunate that one of the greatest authors of our generation gets very little mainstream recognition.
The fact he ran back into the hotel is outstanding.
Why did he run back into the hotel instead of running away?
@@platinumjazz_ tactical retreat to get into a more advantageous position to kill Anton
@@platinumjazz_ would’ve been too predictable to just drop out of the window and run across the street like a dummy, plus the fact it would’ve been a smart flank if Anton was stupid and decided to go downstairs to catch him on the street, this didnt happen so the protag now knows anton is still probably on the second floor watching outside and he doesnt want to approach so he exits on the opposite side hoping anton is looking at the wrong way outside the window, anton noticed no activity after protag dropped out tho so he realizes this and catches him when he comes out the other side
@@rascuvalentin nice
Not nearly as ballsy as going in the next day to shoot Woody harrelson in the face with a silenced shotgun.
welp, time to rewatch this whole fucking movie i guess. absolute masterpiece
One of my all time favorite movies bardem killed it both guys did
The way the movie started got me hooked in like who is this psycho
Try " Goya's Ghosts" if You like Bardem .
Meh.
Southeast Daygo619 this is a badass shootout
Southeast Daygo619 this is a badass shootout
6:40 Always hate when characters in movies jump out of cover and start blasting the bad guy out in the open completely exposed, however in this specific instance it's a brilliant tactical move. He sees that Anton DROPS HIS GUN and makes a split second decision to lay down suppressive fire and close the gap to make damn sure Anton cannot reach for the gun without getting his hand blown off. I just love how something so simple as a gun being dropped changes this action from a dumb ass movie thing to an intelligent and believable decision. A lesser movie would not have had Anton drop the gun.
Hate to burst your bubble, but Anton only droped the gun cause he heard him and knew he had the drop on him and jumped wildly to save his ass. Doesn’t matter regardless, this isn’t a stupid move from Llewelyn. He saw he had a drop on him and took his shot. He nearly had him.
@@stuffylamb3420Has nothing to do with what OP was commenting about.
@@stuffylamb3420”Hate to burst your bubble” nah it seems like ya’ll are in agreement
How about stand to the side of the door a la Bruno Kirby as Clemenza in Godfather II and level you gun head high from the side when he enters. End of the cartoon that is Chigruh.
@@stuffylamb3420"burst ur bubble"? Bro u just assisted professor over here nice job buddy
Gurney runs away from Stilgar
As written
Fear is the mind killer
One of my favorite things has always been that this movie makes the audience feel more engaged with actual audio and sounds instead of background music. It’s so much more immersive.
No cops in this town.
Rukkkis the gun fight is like 4 minutes long with a silenced gun. It isn't until the end when he shoots with the shotgun thwart noise is made. Small town, not much chance of the one or two cops on duty to be rolling through there at that exact time.
1980 you didn't have alot of people out dickin around at night and no cell phones. he probably cut the phone lines.
Peter Paz corny
No cops, no people, but plenty of cars parked everywhere. 🤔
Edward Terry its 1980 in rural Texas everyone’s asleep
Extra combat experience detail in this scene. Moss crashes the car on purpose to make Anton think he's still inside and wounded so that he can ambush him. Anton notices the bloody footprint which allows him to jump out the way in time.
And then Moss close the door slowly so Anton would not hear some one got out from the car
@@Tesalonica01 and he had to close it because otherwise Anton would have known he was out
nah that's bullshit
@@nyahjzt-7430 ? It’s quite obvious what his plan was. He intended to make Anton believe he got shot and was dying in the car. So he got out to quietly ambush him.
What did Anton do? Approached the crashed vehicle assumin that his prey was inside....
How tho? How can u be so unaware? Even after watchin it yourself and someone can point it out for u step by step and yet and u still miss it? Hahaha
I never thought this , but you're absolutely right .
This is one of the top 10 movies of the 2000s & easily the Coens best work. I rewatch this at least once every year or 2. They do great work but this is on another level
I love how him finding the tracking device seemed to give the audience a sense of relief, but then you realize that death has already been following him and it won’t stop until he finished his job.
I think Anton Chigur is based on the Greek Nemesis
one of the best scenes that truly conveys the fear you might face with a home invader. the attempt to remain quiet is super relatable if you've ever had to investigate a bump in the night
@@charlieross4674no
@@cagneybillingsley2165 me trying to get a glass of water but everything is amplified
@@TheRealJohnMadden 😂😂😂
4:56 the sound that the bullets make when they breakthrough the car's windshield is epic!
When you’re playing GTA and your rival goes off the radar
Little plant lmao this is so true😂
I've had confrontations like that . It's true lol
Best fucking comment bro 😂😂 that shit is so scary
you've got one minute
🤣🤣
I remember watching this film for the first time about 3 or 4 years ago, it was the film that got me into cinema. The fact that I'd never experienced a movie like it before gave me a new respect for the art of filmmaking. The fact that there's no music throughout the whole film, and the wind is the only consistent score makes you realize how effective the writing and cinematography are. I actually remember the suspense from this scene, watching it for the first time. And even though I must've watched this film upwards of 7 times by now this scene still makes me nervous. The fact is there are movies and there are movies, the difference between a Rembrandt and a Hockney, or a Paganini and a 24kGoldn. Each to their own taste but one much more skilled than the other.
I would love to watch this movie for the first time again.
Everyone mentions the coin flipping scene, and that’s definitely scary and intense, but this scene had me much more scared and nervous
It’s almost a relief when Chigurh pops the door open
I find them both terrifying and intense but for different reasons. In this scene you know something is going to happen...the tension comes from the build up and the terror is in the chase. It's two killers (vet and hitman) facing off. There is even a small moment of relief when the lock is blown in and the chase begins. Both are armed and we feel that both have a chance.
The coin toss is more like a wolf stalking a rabbit. He is in full control and we are hanging on literally every word and movement until the moment he walks out of the door. There is never a moment in that scene when you can take a breath. You know that if he decides to go for the kill...the owner has zero chance. The stakes are higher and outcome is far more one sided.
Sorry for the long reply. .I just love this movie and could talk about it all day.
@@jerm801 it is one of my all time favorite movies, maybe it is even in top 3. My favorite detail among many of those is that SPOILER ALERT: in the end, when Anton has the traffic accident, if you pay attention of the dialogues between him and the kids, he has a kind of 'sweet' attitude towards those kids. Until that moment, he is very brutal like a killing machine against everyone, despite he doesn't chase Moss till the hospital to kill which is a smart decision of course but I he plays nice during his short communication with those boys.
Llewellyn going on the offensive at 6:39 and turning the tide of the battle was so badass. For a moment there the scary hunter Anton becomes the hunted by our very competent and capable protagonist
He’s not the protagonist he’s the tritangonist the sheriff is the protagonist.
he's "more" capable than most, but Anton is clearly a cut above, the way they treat their wounds shows this, Anton does it all himself, making himself unhuntable in the process, Moss runs to a Hospital, which is his undoing.
@@keithfilibeck2390 I’m gonna go against the grain, Josh Brolin did everything wrong in this film. He sits on the bed in front of the door (if anyone fires through the door, he would be hit. He got lucky and Anton only blew the lock off), he returns into the hotel but does not use it as an opportunity to get the drop on Anton and instead still continues to try to escape, he chooses to run for cover in a direction which Anton would most likely be covering (and in turn gets shot for it), he chooses to flee in the only vehicle on the road rather than disperse in an unknown direction on foot, and when he finally knows hes going to get the drop on Anton he hides rather than trying to get an ambush and this allows Anton to escape.
Would I do better in those circumstances? No, probably not (except for the not sitting on the bed thing). But i think Josh Brolin’s character handles all of this pretty poorly all things considered.
@@mr.doctorcaptain1124yeah he should have been in cover behind the room
@@mr.doctorcaptain1124in the book Llewelyn was hiding under the bed and tricked Anton to believe he was in the bathroom
I like the attention to detail with Moss’ stance with the shotgun as he slowly approached Anton’s last location. It shows that Moss has proper training from his time served in the Vietnam War.
Also the supressive shot as he walks towards Anton who he saw jumping behind the car.
He was low which makes him a smaller target but he was also looking under the car in case Chigur decided to go prone. It makes me wonder if he intentionally shot the tire at the last moment to eliminate the only other line of sight Chigur might have had. He was looking under the car as he approached and he closed off that line of sight when he finally pushed up to the sidewalk. He could have also been trying to skip a few pellets off the ground to the other side of the car.
Both Josh and Javier deserve an Oscar for their roles
The neck shot was the most brutal thing I've seen in a movie
U haven’t seen many movies have you 😂😂😂
poor guy, he was probably on his way home from work or something
He takes out the guy who hired him in the same way too
I disagree the shots at the wrong room motel was much more amazing.
@@tommys2928 honestly it was pretty brutal. I’d say it’s up there because of how real it looks. I’d say it’s worse than the ice pick scene in goodfellas. However it is not as bad as the scene in casino where the guys head is crushed by a vice. That’s my standards at least
the way anton was just firing at him so rapidly and accurately barely missing him each time was just terrifying in my opinion
Yeah, and the fact that he still lived to the end is even more terrifying. Ngl I kinda wanna see an afterlife movie of Anton, and the Sheriff. Where the Sheriff kills Anton, or Anton goes on another killing spree, and eventually dies. Even though I know it’s probably not gonna happen.
Love how Chigurh ends up breaking his arm and stuck to rely on someone else. He is easily the most cleverly written and perfect villain in my opinion. Coen brothers did this story justice and honestly makes it a greater masterpiece than it is.
So anyways Chigurh is perfect. He thinks of himself as death itself and that by chance only can you escape him. He tells Carla Jean to call it. When she explains that it's only him and not some force of chance. His entire character crumbles. He is off set by this confrontation that he's too distracted to pay attention to the road. When the accident occurs, he became mortaly wounded. Then you hear him say to the boys that helped him "Take it, and you didn't see me." Whoever sees Chigurh in his dark judgement winds up dead. Now his character is relying on his screwed up morals to keep his cool. So when he requires help, he gives the boys money, he needed them to take it or his entire character would fall apart.
Coens Brothers man, they are genius.
And we learn what a psychopath Chigurh is in the first scene when we see him smiling as he stares at the ceiling while strangling that deputy.
@@elthe3rd No, not smiling... That facial expression is termed 'grimace.' And it is scary as h**l.
Cormac McCarthy is a genius* coen brothers are good but they have next to nothing to do with the character of chigurh
Whoa...careful with those hard Rs...
Movie name??
This scene shows how well both men are familiar with combat. Brolin doesn’t just run across the street after jumping out the window. He went back in and tried to run out the back because he knew Javier would just shoot him out from the window. Then Javier anticipates what brolin is doing and goes to a window at the rear of the hotel to get a vantage point ok brolin. Whoever thought this all out knew what they were doing. Not only is this a game of brutality but also a game of wit.
There's only 3 times when i literally started breathing out of intensity while watching a scene
1. 1917 almost the whole movie
2. Dunkirk bombing on the beach
3. This Scene
1917 had me white knuckle for most of the film
Interstellar ....docking scene
@AgentQQ8 Nice opinion
Colton White He’s right tho lol
AgentQQ8 facts
I'm glad the cat was ok.
@M Ciddy you must be asshole
Im Geussing he didnt kill it because it would make a horrible screeching sound before dying, alerting the victim
I think most people feel that way lmao you can see 20 people get killed in a movie and not bad a eye......see a cat or dog get killed tho? Shit hurts the soul 😂
@@ozyo810 there's absolutely no reason to kill the cat
Ok
I remember my music teacher told me that silence is the most intense sound ever.
I remember asking “But doesn’t silence mean that theres no sound at all? It wouldn’t be considered a sound if there’s a lack of it.”
I didn’t understand what he was saying until i saw this movie. Silence (when used right) can make or break the entire direction or feeling of a scene or song.
Silence is more like a “Sound of no sound” kind of thing
I've always found the best musical artists are able to utilize silence in some of their songs. Every time someone executes it well it's soo good.
This was my first Carmac McCarthy book.... When he killed off Luella I stopped reading it and didn't pick it back up till years later.
After reading most of carmack McCarthy's books I now realize he may be our greatest living writer
The most intense scene was actually in shrek when he went across that bridge.
Orion I thought it was finding out his woman was a beast.
I'm dead
Lmao
Ikr man
💀
The lack of music brings focus: you feel his story as though you're living it yourself. Imagine his fear, realizing there's a tracker in that briefcase, and then piecing it together when the hotel operator fails to answer. You know you're being tracked by an intelligent and deadly killer, and you have seconds to make a decision. Holy shit!
I don’t know what’s scarier Anton himself or his hairline
Other that his actions , His hairstyle added to his scariness
The Sheriff’s name is Ed Tom. This guy’s name is Anton. You misunderstood. The sheriff was not after the money.
I've always thought one of the greatest things about this film and why its so intense is the complete lack of music and soundtrack, sometimes that can distract from real intensity, this is just pure realism which is why its so damn thrilling.
I love the shot of Brolin’s face as we hear the ‘zip’ of the suppressed gunfire and the clatter of the hotel attendant’s chair falling over. He knows something is up but he doesn’t have a full understanding of what he’s up against.
I can't believe I didn't notice that noise until I read your comment.
Timestamp is 0:22
And then he calls and when no one answers that puts him on edge
I remember watching this in the theatre and being bored out of my mind. I was so very, very wrong. It's no fault of the directors or actors, and to be fair to my past self, I was only 16 and was still really into The Matrix and anime fight sequences, and this scene by comparison seemed slow and uninteresting.
Having acquired a newfound appreciation for realistic shootouts in movies, however, I have nothing but pure admiration for the suspense, fear, and excitement that oozes from this entire sequence.
This is truly one of the most masterfully produced, acted, and directed shootouts to ever grace film.
Every second is so intense, it's really amazing.
@ayy lmao your have an alien with the username ayy lmao i wouldnt be talking. btw i dont watch anime
@ayy lmao "cognitive decline" i typed my comment fast because i was watching dexter you dumbass, bet you feel like the smartest man in the world even though your stupid enough to not realize based on the rest of the scentence that I accidently put a r after the you by accident
@ayy lmao trying to like smart by pointing out a spelling mistake even though anybody who is not a jackass can realize its an accident and not something to do with my understanding of english.
@ayy lmao so fucking cringe 😂 now go dip your fingers in boiling water so you cant type stupid shit anymore
@ayy lmao Im done bro 😂 i'll admit I need to stop picking arguments with man child trolls, its a bad habit. I'll make sure to pass on em for now on 😂
When I first saw this movie I thought it was a horror movie. I felt more afraid of this movie than most horror movies that are even out. Seeing this in theaters was a very chilling experience, almost life changing.
Novalisk
like unpredictable war movies?
@@ir8free can you tell me a few?
You should watch "Henry: Portrait Of A Serial Killer".
THAT changed me.
Its a thriller so it pretty much is
That poor bastard at 4:56, dude was just in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Poor guy was probably on his way home from a long day at work.
The most intense scene ever is Tommy committing suicide in "The Room"
oh hi mark..^^
You thought that was intense? You're just a chicken CHEEP CHEEP
Oh Edward, you think of everything.
the character is "johnny" and no one knows who the heck tommy wiseau is....so did you think that was tljones, or do you think you are "hip", pretending everyone should know who "tommy' is? are you the guy who "loved the music BEFORE it was cool..."? pffft.
Oh hi bullet
The shot at 3:21 is one of my favorites. You literally see Anton’s silhouette for one frame in the muzzle flash and then he’s gone. No noise from him whatsoever
I just love how for the first 6 minutes of this scene, any time Anton is shown, it's just his silhouette or shadow. In those six minutes it almost feels like a horror movie where Anton is a monster or ghost chasing Moss. They pulled it off so well.
@@jamespappas8885 that’s a good observation. I never noticed that. Definitely makes the scene even more tense.
@@willm678but then when lwellyn gets the upper hand, it's the first time we see anton in full, as if he goes from a terrifying unstoppable monster to a human that needs to duck for cover
And that gun sound... It sounds like whipping,feels like fatal as hell
So much anxiety and adrenaline
Love love love this movie. It’s such a simple idea. This scene too so simple but done so well. The vibe of the whole movie - so good
Anton is the most maniacal character I’ve ever seen in a movie… terrifying… couldn’t believe it the first time I saw it
Its a quick transition from laughing at the bowl cut to primal fear.
When you say most intense scene in cinema history, well could be.
The scene in Godfather I when Michael meets with Sollozzo and Captain McClusky in Louie’s Restaurant is very intense.
Robert Granberry agreed
Robert Granberry Robert I'm going to agree with you on that one.
That's my favorite movie scene of all time. The whole first half of the movie builds up to that.
The godfather is the trashest most over rated movie ever
@@beet1508 This dude's calling out people's tastes when he has fortnite clips on his channel, get the fuck outta here lmao