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RT interview: Roger Deakins on No Country for Old Men
The man behind the lens
by Joanna Cohen | April 27, 2008
Blog Article | Discuss Article
No Country for Old Men

If you are a fan of that great film fraternity, Joel and Ethan Coen, you are a fan of Roger Deakins. Deakins is an English cinematographer and long-time collaborator of the dynamic duo. He has also been nominated for seven Academy Awards so chances are you have heard of him. He spoke to RT about No Country for Old Men and not talking to the Coen brothers.  

Did you read the Cormac McCarthy novel before you read the script?

Roger Deakins: Yes. I think my agent sent me a galley proof. I read the book and I heard that Scott Rudin wanted to start work on a script. I talked to Joel and Ethan about it then. They weren't necessarily going to direct it but thought they might if they liked the script. I said 'but you've got to' because I loved the piece so much. It is just so interesting and unusual. I love everything that Cormac McCarthy has written. It is a very visual book, McCarthy really visualises this world, it jumps straight off the page, so I already had some sort of feel for it. Obviously Joel and Ethan have very specific ideas and viewpoints about how they want their films to be so in the end how it looks very much comes from them.

Having had such an ongoing collaboration with the Coen Brothers do you find that every time you work with them it is a different experience or have you developed a routine?

RD: We are so much in sync now that we were actually joking the other day that the set gets quieter and quieter the more we work together. Professionally we don't have that much to talk to each other about. Personally it is different but in the day to day workings on set it can be really quiet. Of course, by the time we are actually shooting we have already gone through the locations and talked about what we want to do so they can concentrate on talking to the actors. We really don't have to talk that much.

At what point do you get involved in a production?

RD: It varies. It depends on what my commitments are. For example, I think it was the The Big Lebowski when I really didn't have much prep time because I had just come back from doing Kundun in Morocco. Usually they bring me in fairly early on to do some initial location scouts. Working with them is such a gradual process of scouting and discussion. The prep is very important.

Some of the No Country for Old Men locations were incredibly striking; were they shot in West Texas?

RD: Some of it was West Texas but we shot most of it in New Mexico because it has better tax breaks. We really wanted the feeling of the Texas borderland though so we shot main unit in Marfa in West Texas for seven or eight days. I was down there during the prep period with my assistant to do the opening sequence; the still frames of the landscape.

No Country for Old Men

There is a very different look between the unforgiving rural landscapes and the urban areas. How do you use your camera to capture those differences?   

RD: I don't know really. People ask me that question a lot but I don't know how I do it. I instinctively react to things. The films are always very worked out with Joel and Ethan. Everything is well storyboarded so we walked through the locations and worked out the angles we wanted well in advance. We have a very clear idea of where we want to go by the time we start shooting.  I don't know. It is just a very instinctual thing.

There is enormous brutality and physicality in the film, how did that impact on your approach to filming it.

RD: The direction came from Joel and Ethan; they wanted it to look a certain way. In terms of lighting and filming they wanted it to be very matter of fact. We didn't want to sensationalise the violence  but we didn't want to play it down either. It is just there and you have to accept it. Without the violence in the film and setting up this kind of world, you wouldn't have the strength of the latter part of the film. It was brutal and we wanted to show it for what it was.

On the set of No Country for Old Men

In regards to your ongoing collaborations with the Coen Brothers, do you have a favourite film?

RD: I have enjoyed working on some films more than others because of the situation or the crew but I think my favourite of all their films is The Man Who Wasn't There.

What is a Coen brother's set like? What is the mood?

RD: It is very open and friendly but very quiet and focused. It is matter of fact and there are not a lot of dramas. I have never heard any shouting ever. We all know what we want to do and we all get on with it. We have a good time but it is very workman-like. It is more ordered and much calmer than any other set I have ever been on.

No County for Old Men is now available on DVD.


Related Items
Movie: The Big Lebowski
Kundun
The Man Who Wasn't There
Celeb: Joel Coen
Roger Deakins
Scott Rudin
Ethan Coen
Cormac McCarthy
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Comments (1-16 of 16 posts) | Reply
470087
jokerboy1991 writes:
on Apr 27 2008 08:58 PM

Best movie in years. Great everything, acting, direction, cimentography, editing, sound mixing,one of the best shoot outs ever, and one of the best endings ever.

(Reply to this)
61795
ruloaas writes:
on Apr 27 2008 10:44 PM

This movie is nothing but overrated

(Reply to this)
470452
Jaffer writes:
on Apr 28 2008 01:49 AM

lol hahha one of the best endings ever? oh dear i mst be out of touch

(Reply to this)
470452
Jaffer writes:
on Apr 28 2008 01:51 AM

lol hahha one of the best endings ever? oh dear i mst be out of touch

(Reply to this)
randal1013 writes:
on Apr 28 2008 02:08 AM

NCFOM is good but way overrated

(Reply to this)
9224
Sadistik writes:
on Apr 28 2008 05:20 AM

The Deak is a true legend. One of my heroes. He and Chris Doyle are my top 2 cinematographers in the world. Good little interview.

(Reply to this)
458520
dreamworks21 writes:
on Apr 28 2008 05:34 AM

this movie is great, by far the better film than There Will Be Blood. And the ending with Tommy Lee Jones talking about the dream he had about his father...great monologue.

(Reply to this)
456323
tootall666 writes:
on Apr 28 2008 07:35 AM

In reply to this comment (#1708195)
yes you are

(Reply to this)
470087
jokerboy1991 writes:
on Apr 28 2008 09:09 AM

In reply to this comment (#1708195)
No you just might need a bran.. sorry for being harsh but to many people complain about the ending.

(Reply to this)
470087
jokerboy1991 writes:
on Apr 28 2008 09:11 AM

I want someone here who doesnt like the ending tell me what the problem is, I just dont get why. Jesus.. All you have to do is take a few minutes to think about what Tommy Lee Jones was saying. Its pretty ovious and dark and sad.

(Reply to this)
470087
jokerboy1991 writes:
on Apr 28 2008 09:12 AM

In reply to this comment (#1708436)
brain!

(Reply to this)
223631
abcdefz1 writes:
on Apr 28 2008 09:58 AM

No shouting on the sets? Not even from angry fat men?

"I'll show you the life of the mind!"

"This is what happens when you **** a stranger in the ***!"

Etc.


(Reply to this)
309213
arendr writes:
on Apr 28 2008 11:02 AM

I'm going to ignore all of the ridiculous comments above and just say this was a great read. Deakins is a great.

(Reply to this)
483840
tgibfo writes:
on May 01 2008 05:28 PM

On topic: Roger Deakins is amazing.

Off-topic: NCFOM was supremely over-rated. It's a love it or hate it film. And as genius as Tommy Lee Jones was (for the, what?, third of the movie he was in), he was playing the pre-retirement version of the character in his far-superior movie "The Valley of Elah." Great acting, but the movie is about character, not plot, and because of that (SPOILER WARNING) the ending just hangs there. I'm okay with movies that leave you wondering, but this one left me not caring and wondering why I was SUPPOSED to care.


(Reply to this)
375906
martinscorsese25 writes:
on May 01 2008 11:23 PM

There will be blood still tops this film.... PTA really knows what he was doing..

(Reply to this)
375906
martinscorsese25 writes:
on May 01 2008 11:25 PM

also roger deakins isnt the best cinematographer....

Robert Richardson is still the best among them all!!!


(Reply to this)
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