Call it

>Call it

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sorry freno i kill u now

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I remember I had an English professor go off and off about this scene and bring in Freud and Lacan and to support it and I thought he was 100%, completely full of shit.
Literature professors are a meme

>the virgin heads vs the Chad Tails Never Fails

so what was the "point" of this film? the good guy died without a proper scene for it, the bad guy wins and gets injured for no reason and the boomer sheriff just has some weird dream. I don't know if that makes me a brainlet but someone explain please

It's just a really shitty ending. Here's how to fix No Country for Old Men:

>instead of dyng off screen, Moss gets into a 15 minute bloody shoot-off with Chigurh
>It has explosions, machine guns, and a car chase
>Shoot off ends with a hand-to-hand fight scene with Moss and Chigurh at a meat packing plant
>Chigurh dies by falling in a giant meat grinder
>before Chigurh falls in, Moss says "It's time to MEAT your maker, bitch!"
>Moss runs away with his bitch and lives happier after ever
>as they walk away, a bloody hand rises from the grinder and cuts to "The End?" plastered across the screen which is written in blood of course.
>No ending scene with the sheriff with his nonsensical pretentious dream

Why did all those posts get deleted?

Check em

WITNESSED

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Futility

You should disregard what he said if he thinks those two are worth mentioning.

Most overrated scene in all of cinema. Extremely cringe.

Honestly the plot kind of sucks and the characters aren't very good. The best character in the whole movie is Uncle Ellis. He also has the best scene in the movie (his only scene)

5 then

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Heads

step out of the car sir, please

Doubles.

you forgot the marvel style post credit scene

"what you got ain't nothin' new"

The point of the film is that the protagonist (Ed Tom Bell) begins the film believing that the world is getting worse. By the end of the film, he learns that the world has always been this way and he is simply getting too old and tired to keep fighting the good fight. Hence his dream about "carrying the fire."

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Love the look of sheer ecstatic delight on his face as he chokes that cop though. Also had this haircut for a while

Dubby

>is it heads or is it tails?
>uh... neither... its a coin

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>61 in 1980
>boomer

greatest generation

Jesus christ

Since it's McCarthy it's also specifically about the inherent violence of the wilderness, of the borderland. Ed Tom's tripping if he think West Texas has suddenly gotten violent in the last couple of years. They was scalping Injuns when his granpappy was a kid.

I’ll call it if you have some agua for me.

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no country for old men is a revisionist western, but instead of being set in the time that's being revised (the 19th century foundational settler history of the west), it's set in the mind of one experiencing the revision (ed tom)

>Carson Wells picking his brain-bits off the wall