Following the murder of her father by hired hand Tom Chaney, 14-year-old farm girl Mattie Ross sets out to capture the killer. To aid her, she hires the toughest U.S. marshal she can find, a man with “true grit,” Reuben J. “Rooster” Cogburn. Mattie insists on accompanying Cogburn, whose drinking, sloth, and generally reprobate character do not augment her faith in him. Against his wishes, she joins him in his trek into the Indian Nations in search of Chaney. They are joined by Texas Ranger LaBoeuf, who wants Chaney for his own purposes. The unlikely trio find danger and surprises on the journey, and each has his or her “grit” tested. —IMDb
Born in St. Louis Park, MN, in 1957, Ethan Coen studied philosophy at Princeton University. Soon after he graduated, he and his brother began writing their first screenplays, and, in 1984, they made their debut with Blood Simple. Both of them wrote and edited the film, while Joel took the directing credit and Ethan billed himself as the producer. It earned considerable critical acclaim and established the brothers as fresh, original talent. Their next major effort (after Crimewave, a 1985 film they wrote that was directed by Sam Raimi), 1987’s Raising Arizona was a screwball comedy miles removed from the dark, violent content of their previous movie, and it won over critics and audiences alike. Their fan base growing, the Coens went on to make Miller’s Crossing (1990), a stark gangster epic with a strong performance from John Turturro, whom the brothers also used to great effect in their next film, Barton Fink (1991). Fink earned Joel a Best Director award and a Golden Palm at the 1991… read more
Combining thoughtful eccentricity, wry humor, arch irony, and often brutal violence, the films of the Coen brothers have become synonymous with a style of filmmaking that pays tribute to classic American movie genres, especially film noir, while sustaining a firmly postmodern feel. Born in St. Louis Park, MN, in 1954, Joel Coen studied at New York University before moving into filmmaking in the early ‘80s. He and his younger brother began writing screenplays while Joel worked as an assistant editor on good friend Sam Raimi’s 1983 film The Evil Dead. In 1984, they made their debut with Blood Simple. Both of them wrote and edited the film (using the name Roderick Jaynes for the latter duty), while Joel took the directing credit and Ethan billed himself as the producer. It earned considerable critical acclaim and established the brothers as fresh, original talent. Their next major effort (after Crimewave, a 1985 film they wrote that was directed by Raimi), 1987’s Raising Arizona was a… read more
What is the deal with the Coen Bros. and their lighting in dark scenes? It's like somebody's playing with a dimmer switch, flicking it up and down. See the stakeout scene, or when the girl is in the pit. I also noticed it in No Country in a couple of scenes.
Jeff Bridges makes this movie for me. Just the right mixture of cockeyed wisdom, eccentricity and loveable heroism. He's perfect.
with every viewing it gets funnier. this time I was almost left mouth open about how serious it gets in the end.
Cross-posted at RogerEbert.com... On the day the Oscar nominations were announced, I made some quick guesses and toyed with the possibility
The annual state-of-the-Berlinale assessments usually appear after the Bears have been awarded, but this year the lineup has looked so anemic
Cross-posted at RogerEbert.com... Like all film critics, I wait until the last possible moment to make my annual Academy Awards predictions
"The crippling and cruel, not to mention pretty foolish, response to Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette (2006) was perhaps inevitably going to
True Grit: four keenly-realized characters suspended in a moral vacuum. The realization of the characters is a question of the actors' inventiveness
Turned out to be quite the week for Jeff Bridges. Following Criterion's release of America Lost and Found: The BBS Story, a package that
The Coens’ adaptation of Charles Portis’s True Grit is still very much a traditional Western, but follows the novel closer and offers a much stronger role for the female lead. It is far subtler than… read review
I think the main ‘problem’ with this movie is (and I use the term problem in its loosest sense) that if you are not excited by the prospect of watching a modern western alone, this movie might not… read review
The least “Coen” of all of the Coens films is also one of their finest. It has a few Coen inflections to it (Damon’s twang of a voice, a few random mustached characters crossing paths with our heroes… read review
Title: True Grit
Year: 2010
Language: English
Country: USA
Genre: Western, Adventure
Director: Ethan Coen, Joel Coen
Writers:
Ethan Coen
Joel Coen
Charles Portis… read review