Monday, May 16, 2011

Does Nadia Bjorlin Wear Contact Lenses

Cormac McCarthy, the Coens and the rough finish of No Country for Old


In the construction of characters there is always a particular hierarchy that must be respected. If a character has not been presented with a primary role may not assume in the course of the plot and main characters should carry out its mission throughout the movie plot. Breaking this rule is possible, but for this we must develop a structure that justifies the change of roles or characters. It happens in movies such divided into chapters or formed by many independent accounts.

The literature is much more common to find such resources. Written language features give greater freedom the author to change the view so you can play with the characters moving narrative weight from side to side. However, in the movies half the limitations of the story make it less flexible to use these resources.

The "abandonment" of the hero by McCarthy and the Coen

Warning! Spoilers!

In the book of Cormac McCarthy No Country for Old the author relates in the third person, but also giving space to the inner world of some characters (the old sheriff who begins as a child). In his film adaptation, the Coen brothers do not get away from the history as account for much of the conflict between Moss, starring the best built and most caring, and Chirgurh, the indestructible villain played by Bardem. After

focus on that conflict to the western style, the Coen just confuse the audience when they kill the main character before the end of the film. In the book McCarthy backs covered through other characters, also relying on a registry change in language giving more insight to the story. But when the Coen resort to these other characters, everything seems more hollow because the secondaries have just imposed (especially the sheriff who is in book a more defined). Perhaps another approach, a little less sharp and more closely in parallel plots, the end may contain a greater force.

Moss's death in an off, right after seeing him survive a brutal persecution for an hour and a half, with only 20 minutes to complete. Is this what is expected of a hero?

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