Originally conceived as a mini-series and now being released as one singular anthology film by Netflix, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs is the Coen Brothers once more cementing their reputation of being in a league of their own. Here they offer six unconnected short films, all set in the Old West. At its core, each tale is concerned with the absurdity of the human condition, the frailty of it, the inevitability of death, having to survive in a dog-eat-dog world. It’s ultraviolent, ridiculously funny, with a talented cast to die for.
Tim Blake Nelson sets the tone in the first vignette, playing the titular outlaw Buster Scruggs, who loves to sing and loves even more to shoot opponents straight in the face. He’s such a Coen-esque character; there simply needs to be more Buster Scruggs material — perhaps an origin film? Even though this first portion is very short, it’s full of outstanding (and outlandish) scenes. And that ending is just on the right side of weird.
If you think the beginning is brutal, well, it’s only the beginning. But amidst all the bullets and bloodshed, there are great actors pitching in some fantastic performances. James Franco stars as a man on the run in the tragicomic Near Algodones, having escaped a hanging only to be caught again. Tom Waits, in the segment All Gold Canyon, plays a man panning for gold in solitude. He’s electrifying on screen, holding the viewer’s attention right until the very last shot. The same goes for Zoe Kazan, the only female character of note in this ensemble. She plays The Gal Who Got Rattled, with a shock ending that completely rattles the audience.
Meal Ticket and The Mortal Remains complete the sextet. These are perhaps less violent in nature than the four aforementioned ones, but they are all the more bleak. In Meal Ticket, Liam Neeson plays the owner of a travelling theatre. When he chances upon a man without any arms or legs, he takes him under his wing. And Brendan Gleeson plays a bounty hunter in the ambiguous The Mortal Remains, with an ending that is truly haunting.
With The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, the Coen Brothers prove that they are above the entire “film vs. TV” debate. The medium becomes irrelevant with the kind of content they make. It works on any screen, no matter how big or small. One could imagine this becoming a film series with differing genres.
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