Skip to navigation | Skip to content

Share your knowledge. Make a difference.

No Country For Old Men Full Movie Download

1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic (by 0 people)   Your rating: 1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic

Ranked #795 in Movies & TV, #17011 overall

Donates to Squidoo Charity Fund

Rated G. (Control what you see)

No Country For Old Men Full Movie Download

 

Fantastic news! No Country For Old Men is now available for free download at the Unlimited Download Center. To find out more about why this will be nominated as best movie of the year read on. First though some more on how to download No Country For Old men.

When you become a member, for the once off payment of about 1 DVD you can then download the entire No Country For Old Men movie for free, as well as an unlimited amount of other great new and old movies, songs, games, TV shows and more. 

  
To Download No Country For Old men  what you would do is this. You would type in 'No Country For Old Men' into the database. Within a minute, you will see the available downloads with that term. So after you have searched the file you want, you will need to download it to your pc. This is very easy, and should only take a few minutes. This will depend on your internet connection. Anyway, after it has been downloaded to your PC, you can transfer it to a dvd and keep it forever. Otherwise, you will be able to transfer it to your Ipod, Zune or any other hand held system. So if you want to download No country for old men make sure you visit it today.

Read on for a full synopsis of No Country for Old men (warning: may contain spoilers):

The film opens with a shot of desolate, wide-open country in West Texas in June 1980. In a voice over, the local sheriff, Ed Tom Bell (Tommy Lee Jones), tells of the changing times: in the old days, some sheriffs never wore guns, as did his late father, who was the sheriff before him; in the modern day and age, however, Bell once sent an unrepentant teenage boy to the electric chair who had killed a girl simply because he wanted to kill someone, had been "fixin'" to do it for some time, and would do it again if he had the chance.

A man named Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) is being arrested by a deputy (Zach Hopkins). Back at the otherwise empty police station, the deputy describes on the phone Chigurh's strange possession, a compressed air cattle-gun. The deputy is on the phone with bell, but has his back to Chigurh, who sneaks up behind him and garrotes him with his handcuffs. He falls back on the floor, a strange grin washing across his face, as his wriggling victim finally expires. After cleaning himself up in the station bathroom, Chigurh pulls over a man in a Ford with the deputy police car. Politely asking the man to step out the car, Chigurh puts his hand on the man's head like a faith-healer and shots the cattle gun through the man's skull. Chigurh then drives off in the man's car.

Elsewhere, Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin) is hunting pronghorns. Setting his sniper-rifle sights on one, he fires and misses, scattering the animals. Shifting his sights, to his surprise, he sees a pitbull. Walking over after the dog has ran off, he sees that the pitbull has left a trail of blood. Following this trail, Moss eventually comes upon several trucks parked out in the middle of the wilderness. Coming closer, he finds several bodies shot to death, most appearing to be Mexican, and even a dead pitbull. Under a tarp in a pick-up, Moss sees what appears to be a great deal of heroin. Opening one of the trucks, he finds a man whose still alive, but badly injured. The panting stranger begs Moss for "aqua", but Moss walks away saying he doesn't have any water. Moss follows another blood trail, this time it leds to a grove of trees where he sees someone is sitting. Eventually, he makes his way to the grove to see that the man under the trees is dead. The dead man has a semi-automatic rifle and a satchel, which Moss finds to hold $2 million dollars.

Moss returns to his trailer home with the semi-automatic, which he hids underneath the home, and the satchel. Moss's wife, Carla Jean (Kelly Macdonald), asks Moss what's in the satchel, but doesn't believe him when he off-handedly tells her. That night, Moss can't sleep, guilty that he left the man in the truck to die. He gets up and grabs a jug of water and the semi-automatic, explaining to Carla Jean that he's "fixin' to do something dumber than hell".

Driving up near the site of the drug massacre, Moss goes to find the man and give him water. Before he is able to, a car pulls right next to his truck. Moss hids behind one of the trucks, but the two men who get out the car detect his presence and start shooting at him. One of the men manages to shot Moss in the arm as he runs off. As Moss runs towards the nearby river, the two men sic a pitbull on him. Moss swims to the other side, but the pitbull swims after him with startling speed. Hauling out on the river bank, Moss frantically dries out his handgun and manages to shoot the pitbull dead just as it attacks him. Returning to his trailer, Moss tends to his wounds and then wakes Carla Jean, putting her on a bus to go stay with her mother. The two men who shot at Moss drive back to the drug massacre site later that night, this time with Chigurh as their passenger. Chigurh tears the identification plate out of Moss's truck and proceeds to survey the massacre with the two men. The two men give him a transponder on which they said they aren't getting a "bleep". Chigurh asks to borrow one of the men's handguns and coolly shoots them both dead with it.

The following morning, Sheriff Bell is called into check out a roadside car-fire, which draws attention to the nearby drug massacre site. Meeting his inexperienced deputy, Wendell (Garret Dillahunt), Sheriff Bell tells him they'll ride horseback to the drug massacre. The car on fire is the Ford belonging to the man Chigurh killed the day before. While going over the massacre, Sheriff Bell recognizes the truck parked nearby as belonging to Moss. Meanwhile, after filing up at a gas station in the two men's car, Chigurh goes to pay for some candy from the gas station proprietor (Gene Jones). When the proprietor tries to make conversation, Chigurh asks him the man what is it the most he's lost in a coin toss. It becomes increasingly clear that Chigurh will harm the proprietor if he calls the wrong side of the coin. Much to his relief, the proprietor calls the right side of the coin, which Chigurh insists he must always hang onto, and keep separate from his other coins, becuase this is now "lucky" coin.

Going to the Mosses' trailer, Chigurh uses his cattle gun to smash open the lock on the door. Recognizing that they've left in a hurry, Chigurh briefly sits on their couch and drinks some of the Mosses' milk. He then goes over to the trailer park manager's office and questions her about Llewelyn's whereabouts. When the manager refuses to tell Chigurh where Moss works, he seems to contemplate killing her, but changes his mind when he hears there's someone in the bathroom. Sheriff Bell and Deputy Wendell go into the Moss trailer a bit later and see that someone has shot open Moss's lock. Moss has driven off to stay in a motel. He purchases some camping equipment, out of which he fashions a pole with a hook (made of cut clothes hangers) duct taped on the end. Moss uses the pole to hid the sachel of money in the motel room's venilation ducts. He also saws off the end of his rifle.

That night, Chigurh is driving around when the transponder that the two men had given starts to go off. The transponder starts to go wild as he pulls up to the motel and deduces which room the signal is coming from. Chigurh checks into the motel. He takes off his boots so he can quietly walk up to the room where the signal is coming from. Again using the cattle gun to break open the door. Inside are two Mexican men, one with a semi-automatic rifle, but he quickly and bloodily dispatches both with his cattle gun. Going into the bathroom, he finds a third man cowering behind the shower curtain. He closes the curtain and kills the third man with the cattle gun. Hearing the commotion, Moss uses the hooked pole to quietly pull out the satchel of money and calls a cab. When he hears the sound of the satchel dragging in the venilation duct, Chigurh uses a dime to unscrew the grate and look inside. Moss gets away from the motel in the cab before Chigurh is able to find him.

Sheriff Bell tracks down Carla Jean to see if she knows where Moss is running. When she truthifully tells him she has no idea where Moss is, Bell warns her to let him know if she hears anything from him. Later, Deputy Wendell tells Sheriff Bell that the D.E.A. wants to go over the drug massacre site with him, but Bell tiredly declines. Bell rambles about a newspaper article on a couple who rent rooms to elderly people and kill them so they can collect their social security checks. They remained unsuspected despite the number dead bodies on their property, until a nude victim managed to escape and run into town.

Moss has gone to an old hotel near the Mexico border. While checking into the room, heasks the desk clerk when he will be working until. The desk clerk tells him 10 A.M. Moss gives him some money and asks him to give him a call in the room to let him know if anyone drops into find him. Moss is unable to sleep that night while pondering how Chigurh was able to track him down to the previous motel. Digging through the sachel with the money, he finds a signal transmitter that he realizes Chigurh was able to track his signal with. Hearing creaking footsteps coming down the hallway, Moss sits on the bed with his sawed-off gun pointing at the door. The sound of the transponder Chigurh uses is heard from the hallway and the footsteps go down the hall to unscrew the light. Suddenly, Chigurh's gun smashes through the door. Moss returns fire, rendering the hallway momentarily silent. Moss turns to jump down the hotel fire-escape with the satchel and his rifle, but Chigurh burst in and shoots Moss in the side with a sawed-off shotgun. Moss falls down to the street and drags himself around the nearest corner to avoid Chigurh's continual shotgun blasts at him. Moss goes into the hotel lobby to check on the desk clerk and finds that Chigurh has already killed him.

Moss then runs out into the street to wave down a man in a small truck. The man seems startled by Moss's bloody appearance and large rifle, but within seconds the man is killed by shots to the throat and face from Chigurh's shotgun. The unseen Chigurh continues to blast away at the truck as Moss tries to speed off in it from the passenger side with the dead driver still in the driver's seat. Turning a corner, Moss crashes into a parked car. Moss goes to hid behind a parked car on the other side of the street. Using the reflection in a store window, he sees Chigurh walk up to the crash. Just as Chigurh begins to see where Moss's blood trail leads, Moss fires a series of shots at Chigurh. Chigurh dives beneath the car Moss had crashed into as Moss continues to shoot at him. Crossing the street, Moss sees that Chigurh has left behind his sawed-off shotgun and has escaped through the nearby darkened alley.

Walking to the bridge from Texas to Mexico, Moss encounters a group of frat boys. He has lost so much blood, he can barely stand. He gives a couple hundred dollars to one of the startled college kids in exchange for his shirt and a bottle of beer. After the frat boys leave, Moss throws the sachel into the reeds besides the bridge and places the beer bottle on the point of the bridge nearest to that. Moss then crosses over to Mexico.

Passed out next to a fountain, Moss is awoken by a mariachi band who at first play happily for him but are then stopped when they see his bullet wound. That same morning, Chigurh limps up to a pharmacy, one of Moss's shots having hit him in the leg. Removing the gas tank cap from a nearby car, he dips cloth in the gasoline and lights the tip of the cloth with a lighter. As he walks into the pharmacy the car explodes, creating panic among all those inside. As the whole pharmacy is distracted by the explosion, Chigurh nonchalantly walks off with a bunch of medical supplies. Back at his hotel room, Chigurh lays plastic down on the floor, and pulls the bullet out of his leg. He methodically treats his wound after taking a bath.

Elsewhere, in a high-rise business building, a bounty hunter named Carson Wells (Woody Harrelson) comes into the big office of a businessman (Stephen Root). Wells tells the stern businessman that he has had past dealings with Chigurh and would know him by sight. Wells also compares Chigurh to the bubonic plague and calls him a psychopathic killer. The businessman hires Wells to control the "situation" with Chigurh. When Moss awakes in a Mexican hospital, Wells is at his bedside with flowers, having apparently been able to track down Moss within 3 hours. Wells explains that he would able to help Moss if he gave him a cut of the money, but Chigurh would not be making any deals. It is revealed that both Moss and Wells are Vietnam veterans. When Moss asks if "sugar" is the "ultimate badass", Wells says Chigurh has no sense of humor but does have his own code of honor. Wells gives Moss the number to his hotel room to give Moss time to consider the deal. Walking back over the U.S.-Mexico bridge, Wells is able to see where Moss has thrown the satchel.

When Wells walks back into his hotel, Chigurh follows him in. Chigurh greets Wells warmly, but keeps him at cattle gun-point. Back in the room, Wells desperately tries to cut a deal with Chigurh. He offers to retrieve the money for Chigurh, but Chigurh remains uninterested in any deal. When he realizes that there's no way Chigurh will let him live, Wells lets him know how crazy he is. When the room phone rings, Chigurh kills Wells. Chigurh picks up and it's Moss. Chigurh lets Moss know that he knows exactly where he is and, instead of coming to kill him in the hospital, he going to go to Carla Jean's mother's house and kill her. He offers that Moss give him the money and his own life, in exchange for allowing Carla Jean to live. Moss tells Chigurh he won't have to come after him, because he will come to Chigurh. Walking back from Mexico into Texas still in his hospital gown, Moss goes into a store to buy some new clothes. He then recovers the satchel. Moss then calls Carla Jean and tells her to fly down with her mother to join him at a motel where he's gotten a room. Carla Jean tells Sheriff Bell where Moss has asked her to come for him.

Meanwhile, Chigurh feigns being broken down on a roadside. When a chicken farmer pulls over to assist, Chigurh asks where the nearest airport is. The man tells him El Paso. Chigurh then asks the man to remove the chicken crates from the back of the truck.The next thing we see, Chigurh is washing out the back of the farmer's truck at a car wash, no doubt having killed the farmer. Back at the high-rise building of the businessman who hired Wells, Chigurh burst into find the businessman conversing with someone from "accounting". Chigurh admonishes the businessman for bringing the "Mexicans" in on the case and shots him in the face. When the accounting man asks Chigurh if he's going to shoot him too, Chigurh says "It depends. Have you seen me?"

Moss is by the pool at his motel and flirts with a sun-bathing girl. She tells Moss that she has beer back in her room. He says that he knows what beer leads to, and declines her offer. After they've arrived at the airport, Carla Jean and her ailing mother, Loretta (Tess Harper), are assisted with their luggage by a Mexican man in a suit who gets out of a car containing 3 other shady-looking Mexican guys. Loretta lets the Mexican in the suit know exactly where their going, after which he and his associates speed off. A bit later, Sheriff Bell is driving up as he sees, to his creeping dismay, a violent commotion at Moss's motel. An injuring Mexican man runs out of a room. Going inside the room, Sheriff Bell sees that both the girl by the pool and Llewelyn Moss have been shot and killed.

After dealing with local law enforcement associates and comforting Carla Jean, Sheriff Bell goes back alone to the hotel room where Moss was killed. Seeing that the motel room door has been smashed open in Chigurh's favored style, Bell draws his gun. We see Chigurh leaning against a wall in the dark (seemingly awaiting Bell) with his cattle gun and apparent fear or sadness in his teary eyes. Bell opens the room door and looks around the room and the bathroom, not finding anyone. Sitting on the bed, Sheriff Bell notices that the venilation duct has been opened with a dime, just as Chigurh had opened the vent earlier. Apparently weeks later, Bell drives to a farm to visit his Uncle Ellis (Barry Corbin). Bell has retired, news which is frustrating for Ellis. When Bell explains that he felt "outmatched", Ellis tells him that we have to continue with our lives no matter how evil life gets.

Later still, Loretta has died and, when returning from her funeral, Carla Jean finds Chigurh sitting in her mother's house. Chigurh explains that he made a "promise" to Moss that he was going to kill her. Chigurh offers that if she calls correctly in a coin-toss, he'll spare her life. Carla Jean dismisses Chigurh's game, saying that he's the one who decides on whether or not to kill her, not the coin. During this exchange, we see two boys ride past the house on bicycles. We next see Chigurh walking out of the house, stopping to check his boots, apparently, for blood. Driving off, he is looking at the same two boys in the rear view mirror when he is suddenly hit broadside by car speeding through the intersection that he just entered.. The other driver appears dead, but Chigurh gets out of his car, his eye nearly popped out of his skull and his bone protruding out of his elbow in a compound fracture. Two neighborhood boys come up to him to see if he's alright. Chigurh has one of the boys pull his bone back into place. He then pays the kids for one of their shirts, which he uses to wrap his arm, and to have them not tell the police that they saw him. Chigurh limps away into suburbia. At Sheriff Bell's house, he ponders what to do for the day at breakfast with his wife. He recounts to his wife a dream he had about his sheriff father. Bell dreamt that he and his father were riding across the prairie in the night. Bell's father then rode ahead into the darkness to build a fire for him. Though he couldn't see anything in the dark prairie night, Bell dreamt that he kept riding forward since his father and a warm fire were awaiting him.

 


To find out more about how to download this and countless other new and old movies link here now.

Best Youtube trailers for No Country For Old men 


No Country for Old Men - AWESOME Trailer!!!!

Runtime: 2:25
1103243 views
10 Comments:


No Country-Now Playing

Runtime: 1:00
654207 views
10 Comments:


Miramax Films: No Country For Old Men Trailer

Runtime: 2:31
233012 views
10 Comments:

Great review for No Country For Old men. 

When it comes to movies, great books rarely end up in the right hands. Barring the occasional happy accident (such as, say, a New Zealand low-budget gore maven somehow managing to capture and refine the essence of a legendarily long-winded epic fantasy), the majority of bestseller-to-screen translations come off as ungainly, godforsaken beasts unable to connect with either newcomers or faithful fans.

No Country for Old Men, Joel and Ethan Coen's adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's 2005 atypically lean and mean neo-western novel (and the duo's first feature in nearly four years) is, quite simply, the most perfect fusion of literary and filmmaking sensibilities since Polanski's hallowed Rosemary's Baby-and might even be a finer, rarer breed. Five minutes in, the damn thing already feels like a classic.

McCarthy's story eschews his mighty gift for extended biblical metaphor in favor of sheer pedal-to-the-metal storytelling: In early-'80s West Texas, a hard-luck Vietnam vet (Josh Brolin) discovers a briefcase full of cash from a drug deal gone wrong. He takes it and flees-a decision that places him at odds with a remorseless, implacable killer (Javier Bardem) set on clearing all accounts. Meanwhile, several steps behind, a small-town sheriff (Tommy Lee Jones) surveys the rising body count and forms his own dark theories about the violent devolution of the species.

It's hard to think of a better cast for the job. Brolin, capping off one hell of a year (which included scene grand theft in both Grindhouse and American Gangster), here delivers a laconic marvel of largely nonverbal performance, with an aura of tragic inevitability that becomes more and more devastating with every scene. Jones, meanwhile, does service to what may be the novel's least flashy and most complex character: a decent but fundamentally weak man fully aware of his own inability to weather the coming storm. The big story, though, is Bardem, who creates one of the most inexplicably frightening figures in cinematic history. Sporting both a Prince Valiant haircut and a pneumatic cattle gun, he embodies a being that is utterly and completely Other. Note-perfect supporting work by Woody Harrelson, Kelly Macdonald, and Coen regular Stephen Root enhances the movie's infernal hum.

It's astounding, really, how the Coens manage to imprint their signatures on McCarthy's unmistakable universe-the flyblown wide-open spaces from Blood Simple here (cinematographer Roger Deakins has never been better, which is saying quite a bit), the affectionate ribbing of yokels and small-town nobility from Fargo and Raising Arizona there-without ever letting the seams show. (The most notable deviation from the book, a monumentally scary cat-and-mouse sequence set in a distinctly Barton Fink-ish hotel, won't be topped anytime soon for sheer bravura or atomic-clock timing.)

Such devotion to the source material may actually be the film's biggest stumbling block when it comes to audiences, as the Coens faithfully retain a late development that had at least this reviewer frantically skimming back through the chapters in fear that I missed something crucial the first or second time around. However baffling and frustrating it may seem in the moment though, in hindsight it becomes clear-McCarthy and the filmmakers are after bigger game than tidy resolutions: namely, a view of civilization facing apocalypse just around the next bend. Viewed in this gloomy, prophetic light, the author's subsequent nuclear winter saga The Road feels like the only possible progression from this work's glimpse of the ultimate Big Empty.

So is it the Coens' best film, as the thunderous advance buzz indicated? Answer Hazy, Check Back Later. On a single viewing, at least, No Country for Old Men seems to just barely miss the perfect, hermetic brilliance of The Man Who Wasn't There or (especially) Miller's Crossing. On the other hand, McCarthy's rough edges might prove to be the traction the Coens needed to clamber out of their amiable Intolerable Cruelty/Ladykillers rut and finally fulfill the promise of their early work. Wherever its eventual place in the pantheon, one thing seems clear. Call it terrifying, stunningly bleak, humane, epic, intimate, darkly funny, deadly serious, or what have you: Whatever laudatory adjectives you throw its way are going to stick.

What else do I get when I download No Country For Old Men? 

1. A staggering 100 Millions files - DVD quality movies, music videos, TV Shows, Games and loads more!

2. Fast unlimited 24/7 downloads! No time limits resume anytime, no bandwith limits, no content limits at all.

3. Using the exclusive and easy CD burning software, copy any movie, music or game to CD.

Link here now to begin downloading!

Other new movie downloads and information 

Blog Posts from Google for No Country For Old Men 

No Country For Old Men - Funny John McCain Picture
A funny parody featuring John McCain in No Country For Old Men.
No Country for Old Men” (DVD)
No Country for Old Men is another story of the generic hired killer (or bounty hunter) who ends up a loose cannon that kills the messengers, kills the man who hired him, kills anyone he sees, goes out of his way to kill a few people, ...
"No Country for Old Men" by Cormac McCarthy (pub. 2005)
Let me start this review by first saying, "I never saw this movie." I think I will see it but I know I'll be let down because the books are always better than the movie. . . .
"No Country for Old Men" by Cormac McCarthy (pub. 2005)
Upon returning, he finds a truck with 2 men investigating and soon comes under fire and becomes the hunted. Moss heads toward Mexico and sends his wife of so she won't get caught in the crossfire. Meanwhile after killing a few police ...

News Posts from Google for No Country For Old Men 

17-year-old Wis. girl dies at Minn. music festival
The sheriff says no other information will be released until the investigation is complete. Last year, two men died of drug overdoses at the jam band ...
2 men fatally shot in incidents on South Side
The victim was taken to John H. Stroger Jr. Hospital of Cook County where he was pronounced dead. Separately, a 26-year-old male black was fatally shot on ...
Children of God
LeAnn Jeffs, 17 (center), and her 1-year-old daughter were removed from the Yearning for Zion Ranch after it was raided by Texas law-enforcement officers in ...
Interfaith Calendar
ROMEO (Retired Old Men Eating Out), 11 am Wednesday. Senior men get together for lunch, conversation and the company of other guys. ...

Great Stuff on Amazon 

No Country for Old Men (Vintage International)

Amazon Price: $11.20 (as of 07/26/2008)

No Country For Old Men

Amazon Price: (as of 07/26/2008)

A Reader's Guide to Blood Meridian

Amazon Price: (as of 07/26/2008)

No Country For Old Men

Amazon Price: (as of 07/26/2008)

No es pais para viejos/ No Country for Old Men

Amazon Price: $22.76 (as of 07/26/2008)

New Guestbook 

Like this lens? Want to share your feedback, or just give a thumbs up? Be the first to submit a blurb!

X
debramiller

About debramiller

Hello world. Im a movie buff. Welcome to my squidoo pages. Here you will find a collection of information about my favourite movies and how to donwload them. Please feel free to comment and get the conversation started.

debramiller's Pages

See all of debramiller's pages