Friday, December 7, 2012

The Most Courageous in "No Country For Old Men" - First Final Draft


Janie Torres

Dr. E. Childs

English 1301.221.WE

7 December 2012

The Most Courageous In “No Country For Old Men”

The movie , “No Country for Old Men”, was an odd one.   The movie received a great deal of attention and critical praise, winning the Academy Award for Best Picture of 2008 (Beck 216). TheCoen brothers have a special talent formaking the lives of regular people appear frighteningly boring (McClure 47). The villain in the movie, Chigurh was on a hunt for a case of money that was taken by Llewellyn, but along the way he nearly killed every one he came in contact with.  Chigurh’s main focus was to catch up to Llewellyn to get the money back, but he was determined to kill Llewellyn too once he found him.  There was also a Sheriff Bell who was looking for Llewellyn.  There were a few other men trying to catch Llewellyn.  All these men had something in common, they were all tough guys.  Just about everyone was looking for Llewellyn, including his wife, Carla Jean.  Who has the most courage? Courage comes from within.  Courage is the strength to stand up for what is right no matter how hard is may be.  Carla Jean did that. Out of all the characters in the movie, “No County for Old Men”, Carla Jean shows the most courage, because in more ways than one she chose to express what she felt was the right thing to do.

Let’s begin with Chigurh.  In this movie we meet Chigurh when a young police officer is taking the film’s villain, Anton Chigurh, to the police station in handcuffs. The officer reports on the phone that he sees nothing unusual about Chigurh, other than that he is carrying something that looks like an oxygen tank, for “emphysema or something,” with “a hose that runs down his sleeve.” In fact, the officer thinks

he has everything “under control” until his prisoner brutally strangles him with the handcuffs (Nichols 208). Chigurh was the bad guy, who was going around killing everyone. He might even be the toughest of them all. What made him so tough?  That he could kill innocent people?  Anton Chigurh, has been singled out for special notice as a profoundly frightening, depressing, and inscrutable figure. (Beck 216) Some might say that’s what makes a person look weak.   At one point, a minor character, Wells, describes Chigurh as “a psychopathic killer,” but he shrugs at the description, adding, “but so what? There’s plenty of them around” (Cooper 37). It takes a stronger person to look someone in the eye and tell them how you feel. It takes an even stronger person to show them how you feel.  So no, the fact that you can go around killing people doesn’t make you courageous.

 

Then there’s Llewellyn Moss, who stole someone else’s money.  He was out hunting one sunny afternoon when he came upon a scene of carnage in the desert.  Several trucks that sprayed with bullets and several bloody bodys laying on the ground.  It was obvious this was a drug deal gone bad.  Llewellyn’s life would soon be nothing but a hit and miss of living on the run.  He was on the run from Chigurh and he put up a good fight to keep a case of money that didn’t belong to him. LLewelyn found the case lying next to a dead man who was probably trying to get away after the shoot-out occurred, but he didn’t make it.  The case that LLewelyn took contained 2 million dollars. Llewelyn, to be sure, wants a better life for his wife, Carla Jean, which he thinks the stolen money can provide, but he can imagine it in only negative terms (Nichols 208). When he got the chance to speak to Chigurh on the phone, he stood up to him.  He threatened Chigurh even though Chigurh was someone the average person would’ve been afraid of.  Still, that didn’t mean he had courage.  Llewellyn was eventually found and killed by the Mexican drug dealers who were looking for either the money or the drugs from the scene where Llewellyn found the case to begin with.

More shocking than Llewellyn’s death is Bell’s failure to avenge it and in giving up the chase, he fails in his duty to protect those who’d entrusted this responsibility to him, and allows Carla Jean to be killed as well (McClure 49). Sherriff Ed Tom Bell was dealing with his own inner battles.  He is, or at least thinks of himself as, a man from an older time, and as such he cannot adjust to the way the world has changed. The crucial change that makes this country unbearable for him is the loss of anything permanent beyond this world he can hang on to (McClure 49). Sheriff Bell was looking for Llewellyn.  He was trying to find him because he afraid that Llewellyn had gotten in deep over his head.  He knew that Llewellyn was in trouble and he wanted to save him before Chigurh got ahold of him.  Sheriff Bell was too late.  By the time he found Llewellyn he was already dead, shot by the Mexican drug dealers who also looking for that case of money.  Sheriff Bell was a good man, but there was still one other person who showed more courage than him.

 

There was one person who showed more courage than all of those men.  That person was Carla Jean.   It takes a very strong woman to worry to love a man so much that you worry about his well-being.  It takes a strong woman to stand by her man even though she knows something is wrong.  It takes a strong woman to trust.  Llewellyn didn’t tell Carla Jean what was going on, but she knew something wasn’t right.  No matter what was going, she trusted him. 

Not knowing what was going on wasn’t the hard part for Carla Jean.  The hard part was not knowing if Llewellyn was ok.  To pick up and leave town, took strength.  Carla Jean stood for something right.  Even though she knew something bad was going, she still had a genuine good heart.  She asked the sheriff to find Llewellyn and keep him safe.  She wouldn’t have wanted anyone to get hurt, but she had a feeling something bad was coming. 

Carla Jean had courage.  It takes a lot of courage to handle all this and still stay strong.  Even though she had hoped she would get to Llewellyn before something happened to him, she didn’t.  When she came face to face with Chigurh, she looked in the eyes and told him “You have reason to harm me.” Of course his psychopathic demeanor didn’t scare her and his coy response was that he made a promise to Llewellyn.  She even told him, in her own way, just how ridiculous that was.  He thought he could intimidate her with his coin of fate the way he did with everyone else, but she was not afraid of him.  She stood up to him and told him she was not going to choose head or tails.  She didn’t seem to care about making him mad. 

Even though Carla Jean knew she was probably going to be killed.  She never gave up her dignity.  One might say, she faced him like a man.  This is what makes her the most courageous person in the movie, “No Country For Old Men.”

 

 

 

 

 

Works Cited

Nichols, M. P. (2008). Revisiting Heroism and Community in Contemporary Westerns: No Country for Old Men and 3:10 to Yuma. Perspectives On Political Science, 37(4), 207-216.

Beck, B. (2008). Cold, Cold Heart: Who's Afraid of No Country for Old Men?. Multicultural Perspectives, 10(4), 214-217. doi:10.1080/15210960802526219

Cooper, L. R. (2009). He's a Psychopathic Killer, but So What?": Folklore and Morality in Cormac McCarthy's "No Country for Old Men. Papers On Language & Literature, 45(1), 37-59.

McClure, C. (2010). No Country for Old Gods. Perspectives On Political Science, 39(1), 46-51.

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