No Country for Old Gods
CHRISTOPHER MCCLURE
Abstract: This essay is an interpretation of the film No
Country for Old Men. Each of the three main characters, it
argues, represents a different response to the modern world.
It proceeds by examining each character and the final scene.
Keywords: No Country for Old Men, Coen brothers, Cor-
mac McCarthy
W
illiam Butler Yeats’s poem “Sailing to
Byzantium” tells of an old man who
yearns to be part of something eter-
nal in the face of his own approaching
death. A perennial theme of artists and
poets, at least until the advent of post-
modernism, the narrator seeks immortality through art, and
asks of the sages on a mosaic wall who stand in “God’s holy
fire,”
Consume my heart away; sick with desire
And fastened to a dying animal
It knows not what it is; and gather me
Into the artifice of eternity.
1
He’s coming from a country whose inhabitants do not
contemplate eternal monuments, caught up as they are in
the cycle of coming into being and passing away. This, the
narrator says, “is no country for old men.”
2
The old man in the film No Country for Old Men is sheriff
Ed Tom Bell, but unlike the narrator of Yeats’s poem, he
cannot find a way out of this world. We hear Bell’s opening
monologue over scenes of the desolate landscape of West
Texas, as hard and beautiful a country as the United States
has to offer. It is not the desolation of Texas that defeats Bell,
but its harshness does offer a clue about his inability to find
Christopher McClure is a PhD candidate at Georgetowm
University. He is currently completing his dissertation, “The
Politics of Mortality,” at Georgetown’s School of Foreign
Service in Qatar.
Copyright © 2010 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
a home here. The novel by Cormac McCarthy almost seems
written for the Coen brothers, and its prologue echoes the
first scenes of the Coens’s first movie, Blood Simple, which
also opens with images of the Texas desert and a narrator
who explains that in Texas, “you’re on your own.”
3
West
Texas is large and sparsely populated, with the long Mexican
border opening onto a savage wilderness from which almost
anything might emerge. Even by 1980 (when the movie is set)
it was a hard place to police, and Ed Tom is the embodiment
of law and order in the land. A new form of disorder, in
the form of vicious Mexican drug gangs, has appeared and
shaken the foundations of this old order.
This new world is the country Bell finds unbearable, and
the challenge of living in it is a persistent theme for McCarthy
(as well as the Coen brothers), which is why so many of his
books are set on a frontier. Bell’s family had been in Texas
for several generations and he “always liked to hear about
the old timers,” who seemed to live in simpler times. We
find out later, though, that this nostalgia may be misplaced:
the frontier had always been a wild and savage place that re-
quired enormous fortitude from its inhabitants. This country,
his uncle Ellis tells him, “is hard on people.” It is not Texas,
but the modern world, which nothing seems to be holding
together and in which “you’re on your own,” that breaks Ed
Tom Bell.
The young man in the film, Llewellyn Moss, who finds
the money, is able to adapt to this world and, despite his
premature death, is not broken under its weight. Where Bell
sees only uncontrollable chaos around him, Moss does what
he can to take hold of his situation and shows great resource-
fulness in the process. Despite his imperfections, Moss faces
the challenge of the modern world head on and although he
dies while Bell lives, he is the closest thing in the movie to
a hero.
The villain, Anton Chigurh, conveniently dressed in black
throughout the movie and undoubtedly its strangest character,
believes himself to be in complete control of events and
exempt from the chance that determines the fate of those
around him. Early in the film, he sits on Moss’s sofa after
breaking into his trailer home and stares oddly at his reflection
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