Jesse James/No Country/There Will Be Blood?


Which of these three 2007 released movies did you like the best? All three were phenomenal for me, watched The Assassination of Jesse James for the 3rd time in the summer, first time in a few years, and it was the first time I fully appreciated the film. I now rate it as my favourite movie of all time. (The first two viewings were when I was about 15/16). I also watched There Will Be Blood in the summer, the 2nd time I have seen it, and was blown away.

The Assassination of Jesse James
There Will Be Blood
No Country For Old Men

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All are great movies, 2007 was a great year for films, Zodiac came out the same year too.


THE GREATEST ENEMY OF ART IS CENSORSHIP.

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[deleted]

We all have different tastes. My list for that year starts with Atonement, by far. Second would be Michael Clayton, and down the list would be the 3 the OP loved much more than I did. Jesse James, which I found to take much too long to tell me very little, however lyrically and nicely, might be followed by No Country, which had a few good lines and much silliness and plot absurdities (no Coens hater, I loved Fargo), and Blood, which I found myself wondering about, "that's it?"

I have seen enough to know I have seen too much. -- ALOTO

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That is true, but I personally don't think it was as good as the three I listed. I really, really liked the film, don't get me wrong, but I thought these other three were a step above.

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Agreed. Zodiac is quite good but nowhere near as brilliant.

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I was gonna say the same thing. Zodiac was by far my favorite film of that year.


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I agree with all of that - No Country is definitely overrated and I enjoyed the least out of the three, but I think it deserves recognition here as it is still a very good film that can be classed as a western, like Jesse James and There Will Be Blood.

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[deleted]

No Country is one of my least favorite Coen Brother's movies. It's common sense plot lapses (which I have posted about ad nauseam on the NCFOM board) leave me completely unimpressed.

James and Blood are two truly wonderful films. There is no need to choose a superior film. They both stand as masterpieces.

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The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford isn't a western in a strictly traditonal sense either. It's far too lyrical and poetic to be considered a traditional western. The only relationship it has with westerns is that it's a period piece.

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[deleted]

If The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford is a western then No Country for Old Men and There Will Be Blood are westerns too because they are just as atypical as TAOJJBTCRF.

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[deleted]

What's more modern? No Country for Old Men? I'll give you that one. It's still a western though. Call it a modern western if it makes you feel better.

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[deleted]

It has a very clear western aesthetic to it. And it's set in West Texas near the border. It's definitely in western territory. And it's even cited on Wikipedia as being an example of the sub-genre "Contemporary Westerns/Neo-Westerns".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_(genre)

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[deleted]

I thought we already established that it wasn't a "traditional western"? It's still in one the of sub-genres of Western though, so whether you like it or not it actually is a "true" western.

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[deleted]

What were you expecting? Stagecoach? If that's the sort of Western we're talking about then even Jesse James and Blood doesn't qualify.

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[deleted]

Western typically refers to old west America, and There Will Be Blood takes place in the early 20th century. It and No Country do take place in the west but they're hardly "westerns" based on the classical sense of the term.


Ehhh, yeah we already established that, I would think. In fact one of the first things I said was that all three films were different from one another and took the classical Western genre and morphed it to some degree. Say what you want about No Country but even though it's set in modern times that doesn't make it any less of a western, in my opinion. It has many classical western themes, but it doesn't even matter because westerns are ultimately palettes not strict guidelines.

I've already cited a Wikipedia article that describes it as a sub-genre of western. It's not hard to see why it would qualify because in terms of the other sub-genres it's much closer in spirit to classical westerns than, say, acid westerns like El Topo.

Blood shares far too many similarities with westerns to not be classified as one. Even the Wikipedia article for the sub-genre Revisionist Western cites Blood as an example of the sub-genre (along with Jesse James, I might add).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revisionist_Western#2000s

Let me ask you a question. Would you consider any film from Sergio Leone's Dollars Trology a classical western? And if so, why?

Jesse James may not have the typical big western techniquess but it still qualifies because it's still set in that time period. The other two do not.


Even Jesse James is atypical in this respect in that it take an art film approach to the subject matter. It has more in common with Bergman or Tarkovsky than it does with Ford. Jesse James is like poetry unfolding whereas older westerns take a completely different thematic approach and aesthetic sensibility. Jesse James is far too sophisticated and artistic to be considered a classical western. It adheres to the classical template closer than No Country and Blood but that doesn't make much difference, and as I cited above Jesse James is considered to be in the western sub-genre Revisionist Western.

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[deleted]

Fair enough. What I'm getting at is that Jesse James fits more into the classical western than the other two.

Okay, I can agree with that.

But the Dollars trilogy a classical western? Perhaps.... Do you consider it as such?

I don't. They're Spaghetti Westerns that have very little to do with classical Hollywood westerns. They match the archetype of the western much closer than Jesse James but Leone has a very distinctive style that is very atypical in classical western iconography. He definitely uses many western conventions though. And casting Eastwood in the starring roles places it firmly in the classical tradition just by association.

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[deleted]

Classical Westerns are movies in which the characters are decidedly unambiguous - white hats and black hats. These are nearly all made in the first decade of the sound film, remembering that Hollywood already had the silent era - in which Westerns were enormously popular - to work out what a 'Western' actually was. They also corresponds with the Classical Hollywood Style.

After that period, typically post-war, you got the 'Revisionist' Western. The characters are far more nuanced, the heroes less pure, the villains motivated by complex psychology. For example, John Ford's post-war work, e.g. The Searchers. But for every new generation the old generation's Westerns become classical and the new generations' are revisionist. So you get a Revision of the Revision. The "theme" of such Westerns is nearly always Man and Civilisation; how some types of men become Civilised (often through the influence of Women and other Respectable Townsfolk), and others, anachronistic hangovers useful only for a brief moment of violence and then, either perish and become mythology or fade into obscurity.

In this category are those movies that try to rewrite the mythology of the western; for example, Unforgiven (one of the best westerns ever made in my opinion). Unforgiven makes this explicit (and curiously, the Women - the 'whores' - are a destabilising influence upon the town, whereas Munny's long dead wife and Ned's Indian wife woman the women who civilised the men). On the hand the civilisation - the town and its lawmaker, Little Bill - are hardly an unqualified good. The women in the town are nothing but the property of the brothelkeeper.

Spaghetti Westerns obviously include Leone's work but I tend to think of them as an attempt by the Italians to make Revisionist Westerns. The Spaghetti Western is also 'classical' in form in that its conventions are often now regarded as the highpoint - the standard definition - of the art form. After Leone you can't stage a gunfight scene without a deep-focus shot from ground level next to the boot of your protagonist; an extreme close up of one or both of the protragonist's or antagonist's eyes; reliance on sparse sound design and long periods of intercut 'silence'; etc. Even Hollywood copied this style (see High Plains Drifter).

So I think all three of these films engage with these conventions in at least some way; but I don't think of any of them as "classic". The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford is an attempt to uncover the mythology of the outlaw Jesse James. James is shown as a melancholic anachronism, no longer suited to the increasingly civilised world he finds himself in. Bob Ford an eager young man who has bought the myth and is terrified of the reality. It borrows the wide-open-landscape style of cinematography from the movies of John Ford.

The other two heavily borrow from some conventions of the Western but I'm not entirely sure; No Country For Old Men is a crime thriller set in the modern "West" and some of it's aesthetics seem to be influenced by Westerns but I'm not sure how it fits into the typical genre conventions of the anachronistically flawed hero struggling with encroaching civilisation. Maybe it's 'classical' in that it's hero is really the Sherriff, but he never really solves the crime and catches the black hat.


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Sorry for the late reply, but your comments are very much appreciated. Thanks for the detailed response.

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that's the point of the whole thread. they're all, shall we say, "quasi-westerns", all criticly acclaimed, all released the same year.

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Yeah I loved Eastern Promises as well.....out of the three you chose though I would have to say;

1) There will be blood

2) No country for old men

3) The assassination of Jesse James by the coward Robert Ford

Don't get me wrong, I think they are all great films and to me there's not much between them, but if I had to pick I think I would go for 'There will be blood', simply because I just think it's a masterpiece!

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2007 was quite simply a spectacular year for cinema! I absolutely love No Country for Old Men, There Will Be Blood, and The Assassination of Jesse James. All three are stunningly brilliant in very, very different ways. Zodiac was very good too, although I would say it's a step behind the other three in terms of overall quality. It's certainly my favourite David Fincher movie.

If I had to rate them, it would probably look like this:
1. No Country for Old Men
2. The Assassination of Jesse James
3. There Will Be Blood

No Country for Old Men's best picture win was probably the only win in that category I've truly agreed with since 1990's The Silence of the Lambs.

Hell, Leo, I ain't embarrassed to use the word. I'm talkin' about ethics.

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[deleted]

1) Assassination of Jesse James-- I think it's masterpiece.

2) No Country for Old Men--I don’t care for this movie.

3) There Will be Blood? Never seen it.

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You definitely need to check out There Will Be Blood, it's such a great film.

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Okay I will thanks.

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Just watched Jesse James for the 2nd time.

Jesse James is by far the best out of the three. It's the most interesting, has the best performances, music and cinematography and is just more entertaining than the other two.

No Country is great too but suffers from it's weak Coen Brothers script, just like their other films. The first 3/4 of the film are INCREDIBLE but then it goes to crap and finishes off the usual anticlimactic Coen ending. All in all it was still a very good film, though.

Didn't care much for There Will Be Blood. The milkshake quote is pretty much one of the only good things it has going for it lol.

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[deleted]

My ranking:

1. No Country for Old Men

Something about the poignant nihilism of this one struck home harder for me than anything in the other two. It's a subversion of dramatic expectations which has a lot to say about the nature of life, as does the unique bogeyman entity of Chigurh. It's full of performances that just don't tire on repeated viewings, such as the exchange between Chigurh and 'Friendo' in the gas station (one of my favourites in all cinema). There's very little dead air and the whole thing has this weirdly comforting texture, like a disturbing message delivered by a very sympathetic person.

2. The Assassination of Jesse James...

Beautiful cinematography, good score, great performances (by Affleck most of all). It uses a seemingly simple story - a story so ironically simple it is told in the title - to say a lot of complex things about: the nature of human relationships, the difficulty of understanding true motivations, the desire to be appreciated, the nature of men misrepresented by history, infatuation, trust... However its length and all the different, inarticulable things going on make it a bit too hard to deal with unless I'm in the mood. Not as re-watchable as NCFOM for me.

3. There Will Be Blood

Didn't like it much. For all its beauty and craft I couldn't get far past the fact that it was just the story of one damaged, unscrupulous, irredeemably repulsive man. An incredible performance by D.D.Lewis, thoroughly convincing and compelling, but Plainview makes me feel awed rather than interested. I didn't really feel like I was seeing or hearing anything I really needed to see or hear. I won't detract from it as a cinematic accomplishment, I just didn't enjoy it. And I also found the score a bit obnoxious.

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