Thursday, December 20, 2007

Songs 2007



Here are some songs released in 2007 that I played to death.

Spring and Summer By Fall - Blonde Redhead. I couldn't have been happier that Blonde Redhead hired Alan Moulder to produce their new record 23. As a producer Moulder, more than any band, soundtracked the '90s for me with his work with groups like My Bloody Valentine and Swervedriver. With Moulder's help Blonde Redhead's unholy transmogrification into a one-band shoegaze revival is now complete and I think it's the best work they've ever done.

Why Should I Be Sad - Britney Spears
. More Prince than Prince. With Pharell Williams behind the curtain.

Indoor Swimming At The Space Station - Eluvium. 10 minutes of piano, synth and seagulls stirred up into an ambient build without resolution. Completely gorgeous.

Irene - Caribou
. Starts out as Sesame Street slow jam, but reveals a sublime pop tune buried under all the '70s PBS warble. Like Boards of Canada producing the Beach Boys.

The Ghost of You Lingers - Spoon. In all the best Spoon tracks, the band arrangements are kept to their most spare, so that when a disembodied effect like a crackle or a shower of reverb gusts by for a few bars, it actually means something. "The Ghost of You Lingers" leaves the band out entirely and makes its point with just a piano, SFX and Brit Daniels' cocky croon.

On Large Amusements - Zoos of Berlin. The EP that this showed up on was a long time coming. (Zoos of Berlin played their first show in 2005, if that gives you any idea of the depths of their perfectionism.) And yet... the EP almost justifies the wait, it's that marvelous. And even more incredible, a really well-realized demo version of this beautiful song has been floating around for over a year, long enough for me to build a severe attachment to it. For the official version, they gutted the thing and changed it all around. It's a much different animal and if you loved the demo like me, odds were against loving the changes. And yet... [insert Italian expression of enthuisasm here]!

My Swag - T.I. "Swag" is short for "swagger" here, but who needs two syllables when one will do? Not T.I. "This is impeccable pimping."

Scream - Timbaland (featuring Keri Hilson). I spent a lot of wasted energy trying to convince friends that some of the tracks on Timbaland's new album Shock Value were the next level. It seemed all the songs I was hot for were the ones written and including guest vocals by Keri Hilson. But my friends couldn't look past the record's atrocities. And there is much to hate on Shock Value, most of which has to do with the really inane lyrics and pseudo-thuggery. Still, Timbaland managed to cram a lot of goodness in between the pandering reaches for crossover success while adding a layer of epic to his already classic sound. He's left Pharell and his protoge, Danja, the post-apocalyptic, empty crunch if his previous productions and moved on to a kind of Phil Spector-goes-third-world smear. I feel that.

Through My Sails - Soulsavers. This track consists of Mark Lanegan (he of indescribable voice) and Will Oldham duetting on a cover of a classic Neil Young tune. I will stop writing now.

Reckoner - Radiohead. Radiohead finally made a song in the shape of my skin. Or at least it feels that way, that's how much I identify with this track. I devoted a rambling blog to it and how much it reminded me of Talk Talk's "New Grass."

Into the Hollow - Queens of the Stone Age. QOTSA are the perpetual heavy. They make a mean brand of metrosexual metal. But walking the metrosexual tightrope is to hover between douchebaggery and emasculation. And, like the over-groomed asshole with too much product in his hair, their records have in the past tended to sound a little too sculpted. Era Vulgaris fixed all that. It sounds pummeled rather than mixed, with all the shades smearing into the color of death by sexy.

Stronger - Kanye West. He didn't sample Daft Punk as much as he appropriated their track, making it seem almost obsolete in the process, like the original had been pre-production for Kanye all along. The balls! Then he made a ridiculous-good video for the thing that was an homage to Akira, the post-nuclear Japanese manga masterpiece and '80s milestone, with Kanye as the psycho-kinetic title character. Clearly, the world is Kanye's for the taking. I'm glad to see him get away from that '70s retro soul sprinkle, even if it means coming to the electro revival a few years late. Dig the way he stutters the chorus lyric: "Nah-nah that-that which don't kill me, can only make me stronger." It's totally next-level in a really effortless and natural way.

I Am Always Waiting - Mobius Band. When I drooled over this song in a blog, I wrote, "Emotionally, it's breakup-song big, the kind of cut you want to listen to when your life feels like plates of massive, tectonic shift. But even in breakups, the tearing is sometimes balanced with adrenaline, and "I Am Always Waiting" strikes that kind of balance."

Pioneer To The Falls - Interpol. I'm not going to lie, I've lost the love for this band. Maybe it was never true love in the first place, only a lusty haze of nostalgia and well-appropriated new wave goth influences. But I swear, if they made more tracks like this, where Ennio Morricone is conjured rather than Joy Division, I could love them for reals. And the bridge is just a goddamn amazing wonder of structural engineering.

Work It Out - RJD2. This is how the learning process went for me: "Hey, that video is pretty cool, the way that guy's making a new dance form using crutches and skater moves... hey, I like that song, too. Is that a Beatles cover? Say what? That's RJD2? But I thought he produced destroyed-sounding hip hop. Where'd he learn to write like that, and who's the guest vocalist then? Say double what?? RJD2 himself?! Man, where was I when this record dropped. For shame. Ima have to check this out.... let's see here.... MOTHERFUCKERS! What is all this tepid internet buzz. Haters! Oh, well, maybe the rest of it doesn't live up to the single.... oh, shit, but oh, how it does. Oh, shit, this record is totally soothing my summer soul." Then I tried to do something about it.


Nature Springs - The Good, The Bad and The Queen. Few songs on this uneven record managed to live up the promise of the band's premise: namebrand britpop frontman (Damon Alburn) turned creator of things next-level (side project Gorillaz's Demon Days is probably producer Danger Mouse's finest hour) hires bass player (Paul Simonon) from The Clash (one of only two white bands to ever play reggae rhythms and still keep their self respect) to anchor the jerky drum brilliance of afrobeat revolutionary (Tony Allen). But "Nature Springs" was actually better than even the idea of all that. It's its own genre; a wistful disembodied sound that reminds you how seasons always seem to be changing in the right direction. When Simonon drops in with his sub rumble, he makes you think the word "bass" was created by smashing "bad" and "ass" together. And Allen? ALLEN! I once lost a whole weekend trying to put his seasick sound into words.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Movies 2007


It's nuts how many great movies were made this year. I'm going back over it to write about my favorites now and my mind is blown all over the walls. (It's very lasagna-y. I want to take a picture of it but I can't summon the motor skills to make it happen. Since my BRAIN IS SPLATTERED ON THE WALL.)

The two closest to my heart were the ones that were brutally philosophical – Sunshine and No Country For Old Men. Each of these seemed to mirror one of my two favorite films in 2006: Sunshine, like The Fountain, was metaphysical, extreme and Eastern; poetry about transcendence hiding out in a mainstream science fiction piece. No Country For Old Men was Eastern too, only instead of using the vacuum of outer space to talk about emptiness, they used the wide, desert vistas of a western. In this way, it was a lot like Australian film The Proposition, based on a genius first script by musician Nick Cave. Between the two, I'm not sure which was more ruthless, but they both had a lot of soul.

I never wrote about The Proposition, though I should have. But here are three posts about the other three, probably the most fun I had writing this year:

Cowboy Taoism: No Country For Old Men

The New Holy: The Fountain

Poetry of Disintegration: Sunshine

So those are the movies that sent me into philospho-geek overdrive. But when I'm not being such an egg head (and when I say egg, think dinosaur egg. My head is... large-ish), I also like to laugh, and I lost my ass in the process of watching Knocked Up and Superbad. I have a pretty filthy sense of humor and so these movies made me feel validated. That is, I am, as a result of their high box office scores and the cultural acceptance this implies, more at peace with my filthy self. Also The Simpsons movie was like a 2-hour episode from one of their more inspired seasons. So, awesome.

The Bourne Ultimatum was, as expected, a great ride. Although it was probably my least favorite of the trilogy. The editing was a little too ADD, which doesn't make for a good view and can blur the effect of the action, a lot of which is hand-to-hand combat. But, as the story tied up the three-film arc of the franchise, it did so while making a really strong, resonant statement about the war, dealing with the folly of loyalty as blind faith. I didn't go in expecting a political message and was surprised at how much I didn't mind, and even admired, it.

Speaking of hyperactive editing, The Departed is one of the most entertaining things ever and owes much of its energy to the way it's cut, high-speed and without fat. I highly recommend listening to this interview with Scorses's long-time, oscar-winning film editor Thelma Shoonmaker.

Tony Gilroy is the writer of the Bourne movies. And this year he also found time to write and direct the somewhat overlooked but unassumingly brilliant George Clooney vehicle Michael Clayton. The opening monologue is delivered in a frantic voice-over by Tom Wilkinson and is such a phenomenal synergy of writing and acting that it was basically worth the price of admission alone. I think Clooney is a serviceable actor and does a fine job, but what sells Michael Clayton is its brainpower. It's two hours of smart. I can't remember a single character on either side of a black and white morality divide in this movie. It's all nuance and ensemble power, rounded out by Wilkinson and Tilda Swinton. If anything, Clooney does a disservice to the material if only by the fact that his immaculately groomed face on the posters suggests a layer of slick that really doesn't exist.

In the world of cartoons, there was Ratatouille and 300. I took my daughter to see Ratatouille, a movie about a rat with fancy airs who rises to the top of the Parisian culinary elite. And, though she claimed to enjoy it, I don't exactly see how. It was pretty talk-y. The Pixar flicks have been going this direction for years but, whereas they used to be movies for kids that can also entertain adults, this was the first one that felt more like a movie for adults that can also entertain kids. It was the most refined thing Pixar has done. Just really immaculate and well-conceived, if a little slow in the pacing department. I think what I liked most, and why I would like to buy it for my daughter, is the way the resolution handles the villain. Without giving anything away, it's with a lot of empathy. To me, the further our children's entertainment material gets away from "us vs. them" ethics and closer to the acceptance of ambiguity that you see in the Japanese animations by Hayao Miyazaki, the better.

300 is basically mythology for professional wrestling fans. I called it a cartoon not because it's soaking in CGI but because of its over-the-top gestures and Rambo-in-a-loincloth aesthetic. And yet... I'm a sucker for Frank Miller's graphic novels and like to think that, in my own way, I live a fairly spartan existence (subsisting only on tortilla chips and V8, NUMEROUS push-ups and stomach crunches, the occasional vanquishing of foes...). So I cheered.

There were movies I liked maybe more for personal reasons. The Darjeeling Limited was probably Wes Anderson's most affecting movie yet. I've always felt that I liked Anderson movies in spite of Anderson and his overly twee art direction. Because of the soul and truly out humor underneath his little hipster dollhouses. But though I couldn't have loved Rushmore or The Royal Tenenbaums more, I had to jump ship with The Life Aquatic. So I was glad to see him put out something so funny and searching again. Although it's hard to tell if I liked it for its own sake, or because I grew up one of three brothers who regularly pounded the shit out of each other and grew slightly estranged over time.

Same goes for The Pursuit of Happyness. It's possible that this movie was overly sentimental or at least, for other reasons, not as good as I thought it was. But the whole single dad thing was too much for my critical faculties to bear and I had no problem loving this movie unconditionally.

And last, but not least, the Latino Invasion. Or, "The Three Amigos," as the press has been calling them. Alfonso Cuarón, Alejandro González Iñárritu and Guillermo del Toro. Of this spicy trilogy, Iñárritu's Babel was the black sheep; the one with imperfections. I spent the first half of it hating its creator and squirming in my seat. And then an odd thing happened and the film blossomed for me into a colorful, vast thing that I didn't want to end. A lot of that appeal was visual. Iñárritu's pictures have the humidity of Michael Mann but with twice the amount of color. I've seen Iñárritu's last two films, Amores Perros and 21 Grams, which had a lot going for them in the way of guts and energy but, particularly in the case of 21 Grams, were weakened by one-note melodrama. I think that Babel took a lot of steps to avoid that and Iñárritu's by-now cliche technique of colliding disparate storylines into a giant narrative about connectivity survived the transplant to a global scale just fine. Basically, the film talked me into loving it. I'm anxious to see it again.

Cuarón's Children of Men was dystopian perfection. It's set in our near-future, but all of the essential elements of modern life haven't changed. He's saying, the way things are is a recipe for disaster. That the ingredients already exist for a total meltdown; all that remains is for someone to add a little heat and stir the pot. So Cuarón shows us one way that might happen and it's too believable. It's gloomy science fiction based more on plausibility than wishful thinking. Completely unnerving.

And then Del Toro's Pan's Labyrinth. A genre unto itself. Half horror, half wistful fairy tale. This is Del Toro's second film to be set during the Spanish Civil War and the resistance to Francisco Franco. It's brutal and vivid and sees the world as both lit with enchantment and caked in a sad mud. A strange half-light emotion that, thinking back on it now a year later, I can't decide if it was more grisly or magical. I think neither.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Cowboy Taoism: No Country For Old Men

[Warning: pretty much non-stop spoilers]


I was telling a friend recently that I'm in this phase where everything seems to be by the same author. By everything, I mean the usual diet of books, music and movies that I stuff my head with (and then meditate to purge). I’ve been a glutton for inspiration my whole life. But whereas I used to dive in blind to the stimulation pool and see what sticks, lately I’ve settled down a bit with it. Gotten more selective. Now more often than not it feels like the art I need comes to me, or like I find what I was meant to find. So maybe I'm just getting better at picking what to spend my time with and the overlap effect I’ve been noticing is just true works confirming other true works. For instance, I'll catch ideas from the Tibetan Book of the Dead in a Bjork song; or a Christmas card I get might resemble a Murakami story I read last year. This has never been more the case than when I watched No Country For Old Men. A spare, violent western, it seemed brimming not with the expected Americana, but the ancient Chinese wisdom of the Tao and the Mexican mysticism of Don Miguel Ruiz, both of which have not left my nightstand this year.



I loved No Country For Old Men, which was directed and adapted for the screen by the Cohen brothers. It’s a ponderous, haunted little movie that chooses what it says carefully, like the drawling Texans that people its story. It has one of the weirdest shapes of any movie I've seen. It's like an hourglass – the beginning and end are meditative, abstract and still, photographed in gorgeous width; but they bookend a violent middle shot in a gruffer, uglier style and told in the familiar film vocabulary of a suspense thriller.


In the exterior sections, we're in the head of Sheriff Ed Tom Bell (Tommy Lee Jones). He’s been a small-town West Texas lawman for most of his life. Now approaching retirement age he finds himself stuck on the idea of violence. How not all crimes are created equal. He remembers the man he sent to the chair for killing a fourteen-year-old-girl and how that man had said there was no passion or reason behind the murder. He had just done it to do it. As Bell looks closer at the horrors he's seen, violence begins to look like a separate entity. More like a force in nature than the actions of free-willed men. He wonders, is the world going to hell like it feels, or is it all a matter of his perception changing? In an opening voiceover:

I always knew you had to be willing to die to even do this job. But I don’t want to push my chips forward and go out and meet something I don’t understand. You can say it's my job to fight it but I don't know what it is anymore. More than that, I don't want to know. Why, a man would have to put his soul at hazard. He would have to say, okay, I'll be part of this world.


Sheriff Bell is facing the classic Problem of Evil. His own Garden of Eden. He’s tempted with the kind of knowledge that changes you. As in, sometimes there are things you can learn that you'll wish you could unlearn. This is the precipice he hovers over. He’s experienced enough life to understand what’s happening to his views and that, if he chooses to see evil, evil will then exist for him. He spends most of the movie choosing not to see – when he’s invited to revisit crime scenes in his county that have become the focus of federal investigations, he declines. But No Country For Old Men is the story of Bell’s wearing down in the face of brutality and by the end of the film, when El Paso’s Sheriff Roscoe tries to describe the acts of the killer they’ve been tracking in psychological terms, Bell has given up trying to think of it as a knowable thing.

Roscoe: He is just a goddamn homicidal lunatic, Ed Tom.
Bell: I’m not sure he’s a lunatic.
Roscoe: Well what would you call him?
Bell: I don’t know. Sometimes I think he’s pretty much a ghost.


This brought to mind things I’ve been reading by Don Miguel Ruiz, the strange Mexican mystic whose brilliant esoteric writings on everything from self esteem to human domestication have poured acid on the world view I spent 31 years constructing. Ruiz was an ambitious and successful surgeon born into a long lineage of faith healers and shamans. A combination of a near-death experience and years of reflection led him to abandon his medical career and begin exploring the spiritual teachings of his family. Of all Ruiz’s insights, the one that spoke to me the most was his view of knowledge. I was raised to believe that integrity was an adherence to your beliefs. But Ruiz comes from a completely different perspective: that your beliefs are the problem. Ruiz thinks that we’re all dreaming little personal dreams that combine into one big “dream of the planet.” He says that most of what we believe – our complex bags of concepts and judgment – is wrong. Is a lie. As a way back to truth he suggests, “don’t believe yourself.” And then adds, “and don’t believe me either.” (That last part especially endears him to me.) He compares knowledge to a parasite, sucking on our power and manipulating us to do things that will produce fear in our minds.

The belief system is a Parasite in our mind. The Parasite is a living being made from ethereal energy. To survive, the Parasite feeds on emotions that are created by the human brain. These are emotions that come from fear, anger, sadness, depression, jealousy and victimhood. The Parasite controls the dream. It creates a dream of fear, a nightmare, in order to control the brain which is the factory of emotions. The Parasite controls the production of those human emotions which are necessary for its survival. At the same time, the brain stops producing the emotions it needs for the growth of the soul, which are the emotions that come from love.

When I picture the parasite, I picture Chigurh.


It's impossible to think about No Country For Old Men without conjuring its psychopathic, walking bloodbath Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem). The grim image of the pale face and raw-red eyes beneath his sissy pegboy haircut will always be the soul and symbol of the film’s bleak story. Chigurh is a professional hunter of men who is sicked on the trail of a wayward bag of cash and the unlucky hayseed who found it, Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin). Though technically Chigurh is a professional because gets paid for his dirty work, professional concerns are beside the point. Chigurh is murder. His assignment provides a kind of excuse and opportunity for his rage as it pours unchecked over the practical concerns of the mission. When Chigurh kills, as he does frequently and unstoppably, he does it in an unblinking, steely manner. Like a flesh-and-blood Terminator. But what’s most unsettling is that Chigurh’s machine-like efficiency is offset by watery eyes, which allude to some kind of human frailty. He doesn’t seem heartless as much as unwell.


The Cohen Brothers never bother to explain Anton Chigurh. He is a terrible thing without context. He enters the story from out of nowhere and departs the same way he came in, leaving a trail of carnage along the way. Because the storytellers frame this against Bell’s crisis of perception, it has the effect of making Chigurh seem conjured. A figment of Bell’s fear, a shadow self. (It’s interesting that Bell is called Ed Tom by his friends, which, when spoken in a Texas accent sounds nearly identical to Anton.) Many reviewers of the film described Chigurh as a kind of Angel of Death, a fatal incarnation that is beyond good and evil. But the film goes to great lengths to show Chigurh's humanity – we see him sewing himself up after a gun fight, or picking a petty argument with a gas station attendant. I see Chigurh as being closer to Ruiz's parasite of knowledge. Chigurh is not amoral. He has his reasons for what he does, a code. Only, he can't see that his logic is infected. And like all sick logic, his has a measure of self awareness that never goes anywhere. Sartre said that we actually hate our free will because it's an enormous burden. And Chigurh hates his. He's always trying to get around it, using coin tosses to decide the fate of his victims or making speeches about the nature of chance. Just before he executes Carson Wells (Woody Harrelson), they have this exchange:

Chigurh: Let me ask you something. If the rule you followed brought you to this, of what use was the rule?
Wells: Do you have any idea how goddamn crazy you are?
Chigurh: You mean the nature of this conversation?
Wells: I mean the nature of you.

Wells can see through the holes in Chigurh's system, which is belief posing as anti-belief. He calls Chigurh crazy, but he doesn't mean that Chigurh is acting without reason. He means that Chigurh's knowledge is so sick that it's now completely devouring Chigurh the organism and everything he touches. Something which is immediately obvious to anybody Chigurh comes across. Lewellyn's wife, Carla Jean, who gets the Chigurh "treatment" at the end of the film, says, "I knowed you was crazy when I saw you settin' there." Carla Jean stands up to Chigurh by refusing to play his coin toss game. She sees that he is only trying to avoid taking responsibility for his actions by pretending that none of us has free will. But Carla Jean thinks, what is the point of pretending that the coin toss has any power when Chigurh created the game in the first place?


I have only one spiritual friend. I think of him this way because he’s the only one who, like me, seems to believe in everything and nothing. Last year he left me his copy of the Tao Teh Ching, a very old book of spiritual Chinese poetry and madness. This friend swears by the Tao and I'm starting to come around myself. As far as I can tell it works on a couple of levels, one as a practical guide to leadership, with lots of mentions of what a Sage would and wouldn't do. But then it goes deeper, riffing on things like Emptiness and Essence in a nearly incomprehensible prose style that hovers on the edges of rationality. It says things like, “Between Heaven and Earth there seems to be a bellows.” The Tao wants us to give up striving, and to be more like nature. One of its best points is about not creating problems where they didn't exist before. You could apply this to the rot and ruin of knowledge. But the Tao comes at it from a more tangible angle.

By not exalting the talented you will cause the people to cease from rivalry and contention.
By not prizing goods hard to get, you will cause the people to cease from robbing and stealing.
By not displaying what is desirable, you will cause the people's hearts to remain undisturbed.


I think the Tao is talking about the creation of false needs. It’s saying that it is possible to create a problem out of thin air.

More Ruiz:

In the mind, we create a whole picture in this bubble of illusion. The mind thinks it has the need for food, water, shelter, clothing, sex. But the mind has no needs at all. No physical needs. The mind doesn’t need food, doesn’t need oxygen, doesn’t need water, doesn’t need sex at all. How do we know this is true? When your mind says, “I need food,” you eat and the body is completely satisfied. But your mind still thinks it needs food. You keep eating and eating and you cannot satisfy your mind with food because that need is not real. The need to cover your body is another example. Yes, your body needs to be covered because the wind is too cold or the sun is too hot. But it’s your body that has the need, and it’s so easy to satisfy the need. When your need is in the mind you can open the closet and it’s full of clothes, but your mind isn’t satisfied. What does it say? “I have nothing to wear.”


No Country For Old Men is saying something about the problems of knowledge, both in the abstract, as Bell wrestles with perception, and in the physical temptations of the senses. I can think of at least three instances in the film where characters are presented with the sudden possibility of money and in all three situations there is instant corruption; a need is created that, seconds before, didn’t even exist:


Lewellyn is out hunting and comes across the site of a drug deal turned massacre. It leads him to a suitcase of money and he takes it, though he knows better and that whoever owns that money is certainly going to come looking for it. Still, the possibility of becoming an instant millionaire is now a “need” for him that trumps all common sense and leads him to put his life at risk. Later, he stumbles, bloody and desperate after his battle with Chigurh, into three teenagers coming back across the bridge from Mexico. He offers one of them money for their shirt, so he can sneak past the border without drawing attention to himself. It’s far more money than the shirt is worth but then, when Lewellyn also asks for one of their half-finished beers to use as a prop, the guy holding the beer tries to milk Lewellyn for more money. And finally, near the film’s finale, when Chigurh emerges in a daze from his car wreck, a bone sticking out of his arm, he mirrors Lewellyn by offering one of two boys who approach him on bikes a hundred dollar bill for his shirt so he can make a sling. Once Chigurh is out of sight, the boys instantly begin fighting about the money, though neither of them had started out on their bike ride expecting it.


The cat and mouse game that Lewellyn and Chigurh play, trying to blast each other to bits across the towns of West Texas, is extremely gripping. But I don't think it is so just for entertainment purposes. We are supposed to take Lewellyn’s side, watching him run for his life as he struggles to keep a bag of money that just happened to come across his path, to satisfy a false need. Lewellyn’s drama, in this sense, was conjured out of thin air. But we all do this and so we identify. The thing about false needs is that they consume our attention and, as the film builds to a violent climax we nearly forget about Sheriff Bell and his ruminations on evil. They seem beside the point. We just want to see if Lewellyn wins. And this is the setup for the most jarring and confusing aspect of the movie. The narrative is suddenly ripped out from underneath us. Lewellyn is killed in a shootout with Mexican bounty hunters. Not only does it have nothing to do with Chigurh, we don’t even get to see it. We only catch a few glimpses of the aftermath through Bell’s eyes. To the viewer, who is by now completely invested, as well as trusting in the conventions of film enough to believe a more linear resolution was coming, it’s extremely frustrating. It’s as if the Cohen brothers are saying, it was never real anyway. Lewellyn’s plight, like knowledge, had a power over us that we allowed.


And then we’re back in Bell’s head as he visits his brother-in-law Ellis, an invalid living in a desert cabin. Ellis used to be a Sheriff’s deputy and lost the use of his legs from a gunshot wound. Bell mentions that the man who shot him just died in prison and asks what he would have done if the man had gotten out.

Ellis: I don't know. Nothin'. Wouldn't be no point to it.
Bell: I'm kindly surprised to hear you say that.
Ellis: All the time you spend tryin to get back what's been took from you there's more goin’ out the door. After a while you just try and get a tourniquet on it.


What Ellis is acknowledging is that vengeance is a problem of knowledge. It won’t change what happened. It can only satisfy a mental need, not a real one. Being a lawman goes far back in Bell and Ellis’s family and, in Ellis’s mind, the violence that to Bell seems to be getting more real every day is nothing new.

Ellis: Your daddy ever tell you how Uncle Mac came to his reward?
Sheriff Bell shrugs.
Ellis: Shot down on his own porch there in Hudspeth County. There was seven or eight of 'em come to the house. Wantin’ this and wantin’ that. Mac went in and got his shotgun but they was way ahead of him. Shot him down in his own doorway. Aunt Ella run out and tried to stop the bleedin. Him tryin’ to get hold of the shotgun again. They just set there on their horses watchin’ him die. Finally one of 'em says somethin in Injun and they all turned and left out. Well Mac knew the score even if Aunt Ella didn't. Shot through the left lung and that was that. As they say.

Then Ellis drives his point home.
Ellis: What you got ain't nothin’ new. This country is hard on people. Hard and crazy. Got the devil in it yet folks never seem to hold it to account.
Bell: Most don't.
Ellis: You're discouraged.
Bell: I'm... discouraged.
Ellis: You can't stop what's comin’. Ain't all waitin’ on you. [The two men look at each other. Ellis shakes his head.] That's vanity.


Beneath the folksy style and cowboy twang of what Ellis is saying are very Eastern ideas. Bell's problems are an illusion in a way. They have more to do with him and the changes in his temperament than any objective assessment of the world. Ellis is saying that the universe is in a state of equilibrium, a great sloshing pan of yin and yang. What he calls "vanity" is a mindstate of egocentric grasping. Buddhists believe that the self is like a mist over water. We make it real by believing in it. If we don't, it evaporates back into the sea of oneness. Violence is a part of the world in flux, but it's no more real at any given moment. Existence is a question of perception. In one scene in the film, Chigurh has just shot the face off a crooked businessman who betrayed him. As the shot man twitches to death on the floor his accountant stands next to Chigurh, quivering from what he just saw, and says, "Are you going to kill me?" Chigurh replies, "That depends. Do you see me?"

The Tao:

Two gave birth to One
One gave birth to Two
Two gave birth to Three
Three gave birth to all the myriad things.

All the myriad things carry Yin on their backs and hold the Yang in their embrace,
Deriving their vital harmony from the proper blending of the two vital Breaths.
Truly, one may gain by losing;
And one may lose by gaining.

What another has taught me let me repeat:
"A man of violence will come to a violent end."
Whoever said this can be my teacher and father.