Screening Log

This new site feature is a collective effort to summarize our viewing habits. Occasionally, you will find titles here that are coming to a theater near you, in addition to films viewed on television, and even films viewed in piecemeal. The screening log is archived each month; to view past entries select a month in the menu below.


January 2008 activity

Total Log Entries: 53

Total Comments: 41


Full Archive



No Country For Old Men / USA / 2007

For years I’ve been hoping Quentin Tarantino would make a film around Michael Parks’ Earl McGraw. To my delight, Cormac McCarthy and the Coen Brothers took it upon themselves to do just that. Ed Tom Bell, portrayed by Tommy Lee Jones, is the personification of an Old Lawman caught in the changing American West, where trucks and automatic weapons—or, in this case, a cattlegun—have replaced horses and gunslinger pistols, as represented by a scene in which the sheriff is regaled with his family history. Or, better yet, an earlier scene in which Bell, absorbing a drug deal gone wrong, is circled by an artless, simple-minded deputy who thoughts on the cause are far from revelatory; the young up-and-comer’s mind dances around the crime, while Bell is in its dead center, fully aware of what’s happened. Yet Bell is a relic, inadaptable to the new era of Anton Chigur-style killers, though he never seems to acknowledge this disparity until the film’s beautiful, painful close.

Chiranjit’s Review, Leo’s Thoughts, Rumsey’s Thoughts

by Adam Balz | Source: 35MM Theatrical Print
02 Jan 2008 4:32 PM | Submit Comment


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