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In Reply to: RE: Duncan Shepherd, on the problem of books, in "No Country". posted by clarkjohnsen on December 19, 2007 at 11:54:57
with its adherence to the structure of the book out of the way and then once more to appreciate it for what it is.
I'll be seeing it again and am curious to see if I get more out of it."You can safely assume you have created God in your own image when he hates all the same people you do."
Follow Ups:
Things are looking great
And they're only getting better
You are quite right. Perhaps some people would be better served by knowing the ending in order to better grasp the story.
;)
I'm not sure about that critic's critique. Did he not know that Llewelyn's fate was cast the moment he left with the bag? Llewelyn's character is a good example of a plot line that demonstrates tragic inevitability. It was never a question of "if," it was a question of "when."
If the critic wants to whine about losing a character midstream, I wonder how he felt about Pulp Fiction?
Is he still wondering what the Hell happened to Ophelia in Hamlet?
As I posted waaaaaaay down below and a long time ago, I never thought the Coens were setting us up for a showdown.
And the movie ain't about Llewelyn. :-)
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