What Makes This Movie Great -- Episode 4, "True Grit"

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 7. 11. 2019
  • SPOILERS WITHIN. In the third episode of my series "What Makes This Movie Great?", I ask why the Coens Brothers make their heroine look like an image of death in the final shots. The answer is in their other work and in the classic movie, "The Night of the Hunter."
    See joshmatthews.org for more great movie criticism.
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 73

  • @deer105
    @deer105 Před 3 lety +58

    Hands down one of favorite movies ever. The Coen Brothers took a late 60s cartoonish American western and produced a masterpiece with layers of nuance and superb dialogue.

    • @LearningaboutMovies
      @LearningaboutMovies  Před 3 lety

      excellent, thank you.

    • @frankgrimes2991
      @frankgrimes2991 Před 3 lety

      I agree.

    • @c5quared626
      @c5quared626 Před 2 lety +1

      watched as it opened and was blown away by the fleshed out characters and nuance, the reviews had it completely wrong. there is a political aspect to it, rooster was a born and raised confederate, republican trumpster scum in today spectrum. yet he is human, and cared for others and animals with compassion, as humans do, and should.

    • @deer105
      @deer105 Před 2 lety +4

      @@c5quared626 I must have missed the bad reviews. I am shocked someone would judge Rooster Cogburn's character. That's crazy. This was the 19th century. The vast majority of people today can't even manage to camp in the wilderness, but they're going to judge people who lived their whole lives without indoor plumbing, or more than a 3rd grade education? The Coen brothers had the most well-rounded, nuanced and realistic interpretation of him.

    • @wingman5985
      @wingman5985 Před 2 lety

      @@c5quared626 I love being thrown into the camp of Rooster Cogburn for my conservative views. Thank bruh!

  • @GreenArrowNetwork
    @GreenArrowNetwork Před 5 měsíci +4

    That late scene where he rescues her, as they pass all the dead bodies that were the result of her vengeance, and where they eventually kill the horse they are riding on is one of the most powerful in all of film. That scene alone makes this a landmark film IMO. Unforgettable.

  • @beaushaver9305
    @beaushaver9305 Před 2 lety +34

    "We must pay for everything in this world one way or another. There is nothing free, except the Grace of God." This is re-enforced by the fact that she losses an arm to acquire her revenge.

    • @LearningaboutMovies
      @LearningaboutMovies  Před 2 lety +3

      yes, and she loses it at the point she thinks she gets justice (but doesn't because Chaney doesn't die by her gunshot).

    • @tenslein8977
      @tenslein8977 Před rokem

      @@LearningaboutMovies How does Chaney die?

    • @b.chuchlucious5471
      @b.chuchlucious5471 Před 3 měsíci +1

      She also lost her noble horse and her Dad's saddle she fought so hard to re-obtain. A sad tale of how vengeance belongs to God, not us.

  • @flushfries5633
    @flushfries5633 Před 2 lety +6

    I’d say the “black figure on the horizon” thing started with No Country for Old Men
    The shot where you see Moss’s truck and the Mexican gang’s truck on the ridge right before the chase.

  • @bOmBAsTiK
    @bOmBAsTiK Před rokem +5

    This is my favorite Coens' Brothers' film, and maybe my favorite Jeff Bridges performance out of many. I think there is some Norse mythology subtext in the book/film also that could explain some of the symbolism. Another great review.

  • @wingman5985
    @wingman5985 Před 2 lety +13

    I think this version of the movie was infinitely better than the original. Your delving into the meanings of the various scenes was excellent!

    • @LearningaboutMovies
      @LearningaboutMovies  Před 2 lety +1

      thank you. I won't respond to all of your comments across the channel, but just fyi that I appreciate all of them!

    • @wingman5985
      @wingman5985 Před 2 lety

      @@LearningaboutMovies Thank you. I really enjoy watching your videos. Have done one on "The Grapes of Wrath"?

  • @TheVCRTimeMachine
    @TheVCRTimeMachine Před rokem +9

    It's light years ahead of the John Wayne version. It's not even close.

  • @thepaleprinceofruins9203

    You don't have as fancy a production, but you deliver with informative and well argued takes and your videos have helped me gain a new perspective on certain films, as well as given me the context to understand them. Thanks!

    • @LearningaboutMovies
      @LearningaboutMovies  Před rokem +2

      you're welcome. This is an older video from the early days of the channel. Hopefully the production has improved a bit since then.

    • @thepaleprinceofruins9203
      @thepaleprinceofruins9203 Před rokem

      @@LearningaboutMovies It did, I also saw your review of The Breakfast Club and liked it as well. On my first viewing the whole "school is a prison" metaphor was missed on me, but became much more clear on rewatching it. But the comment regarding your production was not meant necessarily as a criticism, more as a compliment since there are YTers with much better production that lack much needed substance, which your videos that I've seen certainly do not lack.

    • @LearningaboutMovies
      @LearningaboutMovies  Před rokem

      Thank you.

  • @warrenrosen132
    @warrenrosen132 Před 4 měsíci +1

    As shown in the trial scene, Rooster eliminates problems and the locals are not overly concerned about legal nuances. Mattie adopts the same attitude.

  • @Rob-eo5ql
    @Rob-eo5ql Před 8 měsíci +2

    True Grit (definition): passion & perseverance. One of the best movies ever made imo.

  • @AlexaBellaMuerte
    @AlexaBellaMuerte Před 3 lety +12

    Honestly this is the best analysis I've seen.

    • @LearningaboutMovies
      @LearningaboutMovies  Před 3 lety

      thank you. Probably should remake the video, as it was in the early days of my channel, but I'm glad that you got something from it.

  • @Rob-eo5ql
    @Rob-eo5ql Před 8 měsíci +1

    Excellent description of the Coen brothers fire/dream scenes. Very interesting

  • @mangoMango-ck3et
    @mangoMango-ck3et Před 2 lety +5

    It had that young Hailee Steinfeld in it,,,she helped make it,,and Mr.Bridges..

  • @JoeBesserfan
    @JoeBesserfan Před 3 lety +3

    Excellent video. I learned a lot. There is nothing more satisfying than an intelligent discussion of film. I am a big fan of the novel and both movies. As far as the movies go, I give the edge to the original. But after your video, the gap has narrowed. Thanks again.

    • @LearningaboutMovies
      @LearningaboutMovies  Před 3 lety

      thank you. I should remake this somewhat, given that it's older and I know more about both film and novel. Perhaps that will wait until a Coen Brothers series here on the channel.

    • @c5quared626
      @c5quared626 Před 2 lety

      @@LearningaboutMovies what are they working on these days? we need more of their keen insight

  • @frankgrimes2991
    @frankgrimes2991 Před 3 lety +12

    Thank you for this. This movie is a masterpiece.

  • @monumentofwonders
    @monumentofwonders Před 16 dny

    It was the last movie I saw with father, I think it's one of the greatest, if not the greatest westerns ever made, and that's saying something.

  • @haroldconner2645
    @haroldconner2645 Před 8 měsíci +1

    A true classic

  • @libeloussmith7656
    @libeloussmith7656 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Night of the Hunter, Davis Grubb, West Virginia

  • @Madvideoclips
    @Madvideoclips Před 4 lety +4

    TIL Do the Right Thing was referencing The Night of the Hunter. Great vid!

  • @flandersucks
    @flandersucks Před 6 měsíci +2

    True Great

  • @allen5455
    @allen5455 Před 2 lety +2

    Tom Cheney and Mattie are metaphysically the same. Mattie becomes Cheney in a never-ending circle. ...And God cursed the earth upon which man walked... Thorns and thistles came up from the good earth... And Christ wore a crown of thorns... You become your own curse.

  • @2steelshells
    @2steelshells Před 3 lety +2

    Justice without mercy.just death,build two coffins when you obsess over vengeance.

    • @LearningaboutMovies
      @LearningaboutMovies  Před 3 lety +1

      the movie two-ups that, Rooster redeems her, and then she never sees him again. Death -- Resurrection -- Death.

    • @roybaty4785
      @roybaty4785 Před 3 lety

      Mattie was seeking Justice like any of us would under similar circumstances, not Revenge. She would gladly see him hanged rather than killing Cheney herself.

    • @jornkirkengard8238
      @jornkirkengard8238 Před 3 lety

      Right. She killed Cheney. But she forgot about the recoil/karma. It nearly killed her too.

  • @StormBringer1966
    @StormBringer1966 Před 2 lety +1

    06:26 It's almost the same image as the ending from The Unforgiven

  • @PleiadesMan
    @PleiadesMan Před rokem +1

    I think the analysis is going a bit too deep… The Cohen Brothers work closely with Roger Deakins in visualizing how these scenes could look on film, and it’s no mistake that they used the black silhouettes in several places in the film. A silhouette on the horizon is a powerful and moving visual. The black silhouette that Roger Deakins uses often is a method of simplification and graphic power to help tell the story… Deakins is a master of simplicity, and so are the Cohen’s, they’re just trying to tell captivating stories, which they do masterfully.

  • @ChessmanY
    @ChessmanY Před 2 lety +1

    Why does rooster avoid Mattie

  • @DEATH_ROW_DC
    @DEATH_ROW_DC Před 3 lety +4

    Great video!

  • @jamalnasir930
    @jamalnasir930 Před měsícem

    Its really great.....

  • @mhuval
    @mhuval Před měsícem

    Masterpiece

  • @KevinShaughnessy-mt9jt
    @KevinShaughnessy-mt9jt Před 9 měsíci

    Kim Darby ( Maddy Ross) won a best supporting Oscar.
    Wayne, was just an over the hill cowboy
    Still its a great original
    The Coen Bros. will admit that cimema changes.
    Alfred Hitchcock, is replaced by Staney Kuubrick , then replaced by Martin Scoreses then replaced by Quinton Tarantino
    Cinama is itself a genre

  • @colinwilson4609
    @colinwilson4609 Před rokem

    It's a shame that Masters of Atlantis has a plot that's basically unfilmable. Part of me hopes that Joel and Ethan will at least give it a try.

  • @VictorLepanto
    @VictorLepanto Před 3 lety +6

    No.
    Mattie is a tragic figure whose life is ruined by her adventure, she is traumatized by the events of her adventure & having been maimed lives alone. Rooster basically lives & dies alone as does Mattie.
    Also it is about the lonesomeness of the Western hero,
    Did you even think about Shane? All these characters are disconnected from their world by the violence they experience.

    • @LearningaboutMovies
      @LearningaboutMovies  Před 3 lety +6

      all fine, but you are ignoring the rescue of Mattie. that is a heroic act. if it's just about what you say, Rooster acted unethically and the climax is false to the core. your interpretation ought to account for the glory the movie seems to give to the rescue.
      life is violent inescapably. this is the Coens. we all have to account for what its existence does to us. these characters are no different than you. this is why the Coens keep bringing up the escape into nihilism, which is your final view flirts with. the climax to True Grit denies it.
      to return your unwelcome favor, did you even think about the entire Old Testament?

    • @VictorLepanto
      @VictorLepanto Před 3 lety +1

      @@LearningaboutMovies I was addressing your interpretation of the last scene. You connect it to this other movie where one of the hymns used in True Grit is included. I have not seen that movie so I can not judge any connection to it, but on the face of it that seems rather obscure. Riding or walking along a hillcrest is a common visual devise used in many movies. Mattie is not simply walking along a hillcrest, she is walking towards the horizon in the final scene, a general & classic Western devise. The most significant Western where this devise is used is Shane, starring Alan Ladd. In that movie there is a specific discussion of violence & killing. How it isolates the killer from the community he wishes to be a part of. He kills for the society & yet what he does out of love for his community separates him from them.
      "Shane, come back Shane!"
      "People sleep gently in their beds at night only b/c rough men stand read to do violence on their behalf." George Orwell.
      The violence of the climactic scene is portrayed as a part of a preceding cycle of violence. Rooster & Ned Pepper have some kind of history. There confrontation is unrelated to Mattie's quest.
      Both Rooster & Mattie are all part of a farago of violent events which they participate in b/c of their tacit acceptance of certain cultural expectations. She feels duty bound to "avenge her father's blood." All the events of Rooster's life a mediated by his own sense of duty; Civil War service, now service as a federal marshal.
      As a classic Western hero, Rooster must "ride off into the sunset," Mattie by her admiration of him & his values suffers a similar tragic fate.

    • @LearningaboutMovies
      @LearningaboutMovies  Před 3 lety +3

      by your standard, referring to Shane is obscure. you cannot have it both ways.
      they directly quote The Night of the Hunter visually and aurally. Leaning on the Everlasting Arms is a hymn used in many westerns.
      it's not tragic, not Greek tragedy. Old Testament stories end in similar ambivalence. Noah and Moses are not tragic figures. the Coens are dealing in those terms. see No Country.

    • @deer105
      @deer105 Před 3 lety +5

      @@LearningaboutMovies The brilliance of the film is its unabashed identification of the character trait "true grit". Rooster Cogburn and Mattie personify grit. Life doesn't resolve in rose gardens for these characters. Their dramatic life challenges, which directly extend from their bravery, are not neatly wrapped up in hero outcomes lauded by society. They aren't perfectly moral characters. They are bold, hero characters, carrying baggage. The character development in this movie was outstanding.

  • @dannytorres7291
    @dannytorres7291 Před 2 lety +2

    god is justice with mercy. justice without mercy is death. the little girl is justice without mercy . she is death.Rooster cogburn is justice with mercy . he is the symbol of god. he saves the little girl from the snakepit of hell wich is the wages of death. Rooster takes her in his everlasting arms of god and saves her live. the cohen brothers are spelling it out to us with the song. the everlasting arms of god.

  • @billybecker3850
    @billybecker3850 Před 2 měsíci

    Big fan of the Cohen's brothers and Jeff Bridges. Plus Matt Damon is a great actor. This movie doesn't even come close to the 69 version. Quite frankly I wish they would keep clear of classics. John Wayne won an Oscar and the music is fantastic. The casting is completely wrong. Jeff Bridges doesn't come close to John Wayne's version. Matt Damon is not going to beat out Robert Duvall, he would probably tell you that. The girl is completely wrong for Maddie. Sorry the whole movie is too tragic for me.

  • @EURASIAPLUS
    @EURASIAPLUS Před 2 lety +1

    Leviticus 24:20 "An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth"
    This is not a call for personal vengeance.
    This is an instruction for judges so that they can give the guilty person a fair
    sentence.
    Romans 13: 1-4
    Rooster Cogburn and Laboeuf are representatives of authority, therefore
    representatives of God
    Proverbs 28:1 "The wicked flee when no man pursueth: but the righteous are
    bold as a lion."
    In the person of Rooster Cogburn, God showed mercy to the girl, In the person of
    Rooster Cogburn, God showed mercy to the girl, but Romans 12:19 " Dearly
    beloved, avenge not yourselves, but rather give place unto wrath: for it is written,
    Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord."
    Psalms 94:1 " O Lord God, to whom vengeance belongeth; O God, to whom
    vengeance belongeth, shew thyself."
    vengeance is sin.

    • @LearningaboutMovies
      @LearningaboutMovies  Před 2 lety +1

      the book and movie make clear that the line between bounty hunter and judge is questionable, as Rooster becomes more "judge" than maybe he ought to be. This is the whole question of ambiguity about him in the trial scene, for example.

  • @markoconnor995
    @markoconnor995 Před 2 lety +1

    The original, Oscar winning, John Wayne version is so much better.

    • @bOmBAsTiK
      @bOmBAsTiK Před rokem +1

      Nah, no it's not AT ALL but just my opinion. John Wayne was awarded a "mercy" Oscar