Wear It Again Sam Fort Collins

2018 TV motion picture

The Carol of Buster Scruggs
The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (2018 poster).png

Theatrical release poster

Directed by Joel Coen
Ethan Coen
Screenplay by
  • Joel Coen
  • Ethan Coen
Based on
  • All Gold Canyon
    past Jack London
  • The Daughter Who Got Rattled
    by Stewart Edward White
Produced by
  • Joel Coen
  • Ethan Coen
  • Megan Ellison
  • Sue Naegle
  • Robert Graf
Starring
  • Tyne Daly
  • James Franco
  • Brendan Gleeson
  • Beak Heck
  • Grainger Hines
  • Zoe Kazan
  • Harry Melling
  • Liam Neeson
  • Tim Blake Nelson
  • Jonjo O'Neill
  • Chelcie Ross
  • Saul Rubinek
  • Tom Waits
Cinematography Bruno Delbonnel
Edited by Roderick Jaynes[a]
Music past Carter Burwell

Production
companies

Annapurna Pictures
Mike Zoss Productions

Distributed by Netflix

Release dates

  • August 31, 2018 (2018-08-31) (Venice)
  • Nov ix, 2018 (2018-11-09) (United states)

Running fourth dimension

133 minutes[1] [2]
Country United States
Linguistic communication English

The Ballad of Buster Scruggs is a 2018 American Western anthology picture written, directed, and produced by the Coen brothers. It had a limited theatrical release, beingness primarily intended for Netflix boob tube. Information technology stars Tim Blake Nelson, Tyne Daly, James Franco, Brendan Gleeson, Bill Heck, Grainger Hines, Zoe Kazan, Harry Melling, Liam Neeson, Jonjo O'Neill, Chelcie Ross, Saul Rubinek, and Tom Waits, and features six vignettes that accept place on the American frontier.

The pic premiered at the 75th Venice International Film Festival on August 31, 2018, where information technology won the Aureate Osella Laurels for All-time Screenplay.[3] [4] Afterward a limited theatrical run showtime on November ix, 2018, information technology was released on Netflix on November sixteen.[5] [vi] The National Board of Review named it equally one of its superlative ten all-time films of 2018. The film earned iii nominations at the 91st University Awards: Best Adjusted Screenplay, Best Costume Design and Best Original Song ("When a Cowboy Trades His Spurs for Wings").

Plot [edit]

"The Ballad of Buster Scruggs" [edit]

Buster Scruggs, a cheerful singing cowboy, arrives at an isolated cantina full of outlaws where he exchanges insults with another patron before effortlessly shooting everyone as they reach for their guns.

Buster then wanders into Frenchman's Gulch and enters a saloon, leaving his guns at the door to comply with its no firearms policy. He joins a game of poker that a histrion has suddenly left, but discovers the player vacated the seat afterward existence dealt the infamous expressionless homo's hand, which the other players insist Buster play now that he has seen the cards. When Buster refuses, a large menacing actor named Joe stands and draws a concealed pistol. After failing to persuade Joe to end the confrontation, Buster repeatedly kicks a plank in the poker table, which tips Joe'south gun hand and so that his pistol points backwards and discharges into his face. Having shot himself 3 times, Joe falls expressionless. Buster breaks the barroom tension with a boisterous song about "Bearish Joe",[b] [c] much to the patrons' please. Joe'south brother arrives in dismay and challenges Buster to a gunfight in the street. Buster gladly obliges and proceeds to shoot off each of the fingers of his right paw earlier finishing him off with the sixth shot delivered over-the-shoulder using a mirror.

A young singing cowboy clad in black then rides into town and politely challenges Buster. Buster again happily obliges, but much to his surprise, the boyfriend is an even faster draw and shoots him through his forehead. Buster examines the wound in disbelief before collapsing, admitting via voice-over that he should have foreseen that "you tin can't be top dog forever." The young man and Buster then sing a bloodshot duet chosen "When A Cowboy Trades His Spurs For Wings" as Buster's spirit rises from his torso and floats towards heaven, complete with affections wings and a lyre, and expressing promise of a place in a higher place where people are improve than they are on Earth.

"Nearly Algodones" [edit]

A young cowboy robs an isolated bank in New Mexico. Every bit he is fleeing, the jabbering bank teller shoots at him, forcing him to take cover backside a well. He returns fire, but the teller charges him while wearing a washboard and several pots and pans as armor, which deflect all the cowboy'due south bullets as the teller repeatedly cackles "Pan shot!" The teller knocks the cowboy out with the barrel of his shotgun.

When the cowboy regains consciousness, he is sitting upon his horse under a tree with his easily tied and a noose around his neck. A constable and posse ask for his final words, since they "convicted" him and sentenced him to expiry while he was semi-conscious. The execution is interrupted past ambushing Comanche warriors who quickly slaughter the lawman and posse just exit the cowboy in place upon the equus caballus.

After a time, a drover happens by and frees the cowboy, who so joins him on his drive. However, the drover is really a rustler, and they are promptly chased down by some other lawman's posse. The drover escapes, merely the posse captures the cowboy and takes him into town, where the judge summarily orders him to hang. As the cowboy stands upon the gallows with iii other men pending execution, he looks at the man to his left, who is weeping and bemoaning his fate, and quips "first fourth dimension?" Equally the cowboy's optics and so settle on a immature adult female in the crowd, the hangman abruptly hoods him and pulls the trapdoor lever to cheers and adulation.

"Meal Ticket" [edit]

An aging impresario and his creative person Harrison, a boyfriend with no arms or legs, travel from town to town in a carriage that converts into a small stage where Harrison theatrically recites classics such as Shelley's poem "Ozymandias"; the biblical story of Cain and Abel; works past Shakespeare, including Sonnet 29 and The Storm; and Abraham Lincoln's Gettysburg Address. The impresario collects money from the audition at the end of each performance, but profits are dwindling as they visit increasingly remote mount towns with smaller and more indifferent audiences.

Post-obit a performance that yields no turn a profit, the impresario observes a human being nearby drawing a crowd with a chicken that can ostensibly perform basic arithmetic by pecking at painted numbers to answer addition and subtraction equations that the audition calls out. Subsequently buying the chicken, the impresario drives the wagon through a mountain pass and stops by a span over a rushing river. He walks to the middle of the bridge and drops a large stone to gauge the water's depth before returning to the wagon. The impresario resumes driving the wagon, with the caged chicken every bit his merely passenger.

"All Gilt Coulee" [edit]

A retelling of the short story All Gold Canyon by Jack London.

A grizzled prospector arrives in a pristine mount valley and decides to dig for gold in a grassy meadow beside a river. Over the course of several days, he pans through shovelfuls of dirt to count the gold specks, and and then begins digging a deeper hole once he has triangulated the likely source. Subsequently his first night camping at the site, he spots an owl tending its treetop nest at the edge of the valley. When he climbs up and reaches the nest, her watchful gaze from a nearby tree causes him to replace iii of the four eggs he had taken for his breakfast.

On his third mean solar day, he digs out gilt nuggets of increasing size before finally reaching "Mr. Pocket", a large gold vein running through the quartz he has uncovered. No sooner has he made his discovery than a young human who has been abaft the prospector and letting him practice all the work sneaks up to the border of the hole. He shoots the prospector in the back and the prospector falls face down. When the boyfriend jumps into the pigsty to steal the gold, the prospector stops feigning death, wrestles the young man's gun away, and kills him. The prospector cleans and assesses his wound in the stream, confirming it is not lethal. He finishes mining the gold, buries the young homo'south body in the aforementioned hole, and departs the valley.

"The Gal Who Got Rattled" [edit]

A reimagining of the short story The Girl Who Got Rattled by Stewart Edward White.

Alice Longabaugh and her older brother Gilbert, an inept businessman, are journeying in a railroad vehicle train across the prairie towards Oregon, where Gilbert claims a new business partner will marry his sister. Gilbert has a violent coughing fit and dies presently after they embark. The wagon train's leaders, Mr. Billy Knapp and Mr. Arthur, attribute Gilbert's death to cholera and help Alice bury him.

Though she has no definite prospects in Oregon, Alice decides to continue the trip rather than return due east. Matt, the boyfriend Gilbert hired to pb their wagon, claims Gilbert promised him a higher-than-usual wage of $400, half of which he expects when they achieve the halfway signal at Fort Laramie. Fearing Gilbert's coin was buried with him, Alice conveys her predicament to Baton, who offers his support in contemplating how to proceed. He also does Alice the favor of starting time attempting to shoot Gilbert's small dog, President Pierce (named later on Franklin Pierce), then scaring him off, because the canis familiaris's constant barking has fatigued widespread complaint.

Through the form of their conversations, Billy grows fond of Alice. He proposes to solve her dilemma by marrying her in Fort Laramie, assuming Gilbert'southward debt to Matt, and retiring from leading wagon trains to build a habitation and family with her upon the 640 acres in Oregon that he can claim according to the Homestead Deed. Alice is surprised past Baton's proposal, but has grown fond of him, and then she accepts. Billy informs Mr. Arthur that this will be their concluding ride together.

The post-obit morn, Mr. Arthur notices Alice missing. He rides over a nearby hill to detect her reunited with President Pierce and laughing every bit he barks at the antics of some prairie dogs. Mr. Arthur then spots a Native American lookout man and advancing war party. Preparing for a fight, he gives Alice a pistol and then that if he is killed, she can shoot herself and avoid capture. Mr. Arthur twice drives dorsum the charging warriors with his rifle, simply a remaining warrior momentarily appears to kill him. He kills the warrior, and so discovers that when he appeared to take died, Alice shot herself every bit he had instructed. Mr. Arthur sadly walks back to the railroad vehicle railroad train with President Pierce, unsure of what to say to Billy Knapp.

"The Mortal Remains" [edit]

At sunset, v people, an Englishman (Thigpen), an Irishman (Clarence), a Frenchman (René), a lady (Mrs. Betjeman), and a fur trapper ride to Fort Morgan, Colorado in a stagecoach. Thigpen says that he and Clarence often travel this route "ferrying cargo", alluding to a corpse on the roof, just he does not specify the nature of their business.

The Trapper rambles about his past relationship with a Hunkpapa woman in which neither knew the other'south language, but communicating through understanding each other'due south emotions led him to conclude that people are all akin in their bones needs, just like the animals he traps. Mrs. Betjeman, a devout Christian, indignantly retorts that in that location are only two kinds of people, upright and sinning, and explains that she knows this because her husband, whom she is traveling to run into afterward having been apart for three years, is a retired Chautauqua lecturer on "moral and spiritual hygiene." René challenges her dichotomy and the trapper'southward oversimplification with reflections on the unique and subjective nature of human being experiences. Equally an example, René questions whether Mr. Betjeman conceives of love the same way Mrs. Betjeman does, conjecturing that if he does not, perhaps he has non remained faithful to her during their separation.

Mrs. Betjeman becomes apoplectic, and René calls out the window for the charabanc to exist stopped, but the driver does not halt. Thigpen explains that the phase visitor's policy is non to finish for any reason. Clarence sings the bloodshot folk song "The Unfortunate Lad", which calms Mrs. Betjeman. He and Thigpen and so reveal themselves to be "reapers", or compensation hunters. Thigpen tells the grouping that their usual method is for him to distract their targets with stories while Clarence "thumps" them. Thigpen remarks that he enjoys watching them die, particularly the expression in their eyes as they "negotiate the passage" and "try to brand sense of information technology."

The other three are visibly unsettled past this as they arrive at the dark and foreboding hotel in Fort Morgan where they will all be staying. They remain in the stagecoach while Thigpen and Clarence carry the corpse into the hotel and upwardly its stairway, which is brightly lit from higher up past a white low-cal. They and then slowly disembark, and the bus departs without whatever luggage being unloaded. Mrs. Betjeman and the trapper warily make their ain way through the hotel door. René pauses to watch the coachman set off, then sets his top hat at a jaunty angle and enters with an air of amused resignation.

Cast [edit]

  • The Ballad of Buster Scruggs
    • Tim Blake Nelson as Buster Scruggs
    • Willie Watson as The Child
    • David Krumholtz every bit Frenchman In Saloon
    • E.E. Bell as Saloon Piano Player
    • Tom Proctor as Cantina Bad Man
    • Alejandro Patiño as Cantina Bartender
    • Clancy Dark-brown as Joe "Çurly Joe"[b]
    • Danny McCarthy as Çurly Joe'southward Brother
  • Near Algodones
    • James Franco every bit Cowboy
    • Stephen Root as Teller
    • Ralph Ineson as Posse Leader
    • Jesse Luken as Drover
  • Meal Ticket
    • Liam Neeson as Impresario
    • Harry Melling every bit Harrison, The Artist
    • Paul Rae every bit Craven Impresario
  • All Gilded Canyon
    • Tom Waits as Prospector
    • Sam Dillon as Immature Man
  • The Gal Who Got Rattled
    • Zoe Kazan as Alice Longabaugh
    • Neb Heck every bit Billy Knapp
    • Grainger Hines as Mr. Arthur
    • Jefferson Mays equally Gilbert Longabaugh
    • Ethan Dubin as Matt
    • Jackamoe Buzzell as Boarder #three
    • Rod Rondeaux as Sioux Chief
  • The Mortal Remains
    • Tyne Daly as Mrs. Betjemen, The Lady
    • Brendan Gleeson every bit Clarence, The Irishman
    • Jonjo O'Neill as Thigpen, The Englishman
    • Saul Rubinek as René, Frenchman
    • Chelcie Ross as Trapper

Music [edit]

The movie uses music and song in every segment, sometimes as part of the action and sometimes as incidental music.[eight]

  • "Cool Water", written by Bob Nolan, performed past Tim Blake Nelson
  • "Randall Collins", written by Norman Blake
  • "Bearish Joe the Gambler", performed by Tim Blake Nelson
  • "Carefree Drifter", written by David Rawlings and Gillian Welch
  • "When a Cowboy Trades His Spurs for Wings", written past David Rawlings and Gillian Welch, performed by Tim Blake Nelson and Willie Watson
  • "Weela Weela Walya", traditional, performed by Liam Neeson
  • "The Sash My Begetter Wore", traditional, performed by Liam Neeson
  • "Under the Double Eagle", written past Josef Franz Wagner
  • "Female parent Machree", written by Rida Johnson Young, Chauncey Olcott and Ernest Ball, performed by Tom Waits
  • "La Ricciola", traditional, arranged by Gabe Witcher
  • "Has Anybody Hither Seen Kelly?", written by C.W. Murphy (as Clarence W. Murphy) and Volition Messages, performed by Jonjo O'Neill
  • "Campfire Fiddle", written by Gabe Witcher
  • "The Unfortunate Lad", traditional, performed past Brendan Gleeson

Production [edit]

Joel and Ethan Coen appear The Carol of Buster Scruggs in January 2017 as a collaboration with Annapurna Television.[9] In Baronial 2017, Netflix announced information technology would stream the work worldwide.[10]

The flick was based on Western-themed short stories, some of which were written by the Coens over a period of twenty to 25 years (accounts vary) that vary in mood and bailiwick.[5] [xi] Tim Blake Nelson was given the script for the eponymous story in 2002 and told that a 2d, "Meal Ticket", was in outline course, but only heard in 2016 that the projection would embark production.[12] "All Gold Canyon" follows a Jack London story past the aforementioned name.[xiii] "The Gal Who Got Rattled" was inspired past a story past Stewart Edward White,[fourteen] and is based in part on contemporaneous accounts, including those of heated arguments over pets.[fifteen] [16] While some reports claimed the work would be a half-dozen-part television series,[1] the Coens intended the stories to exist seen together, structured them that mode in the script they submitted to Annapurna, and shot the script as written.[17] [eighteen]

Throughout 2017 and into the start of 2018, James Franco, Zoe Kazan, Tyne Daly, Willie Watson, Ralph Ineson, Tim Blake Nelson, Stephen Root, Liam Neeson and Brendan Gleeson joined the cast.[xix] [20] [21] [22]

The Ballad of Buster Scruggs was the Coens' first moving-picture show to be shot digitally. The filmmakers saw the project, with its 800 visual effects and late magic hour shoots, as a expert opportunity to experiment with the medium.[23] Cinematographer Bruno Delbonnel employed a 1.85:ane aspect ratio and used a 27mm lens for the majority of the shots.[24] "The Gal Who Got Rattled" was shot on private country north of Mitchell in the Nebraska Panhandle, with a casting call for "ordinary" Nebraskans to appear equally extras.[25] In New United mexican states, "The Ballad of Buster Scruggs" and "Near Algodones" were shot on location; "The Mortal Remains" was shot entirely on a sound phase.[26] [27] "The Meal Ticket" and "All Aureate Coulee" were shot in Colorado, the latter in Telluride.[27] [28]

Joel Coen said the shoot was physically demanding: exterior shots with uncovered sets, "really vicious weather" and much travel over wide-ranging locations. "Information technology wouldn't have hurt if we were younger."[17] The long wagon railroad train in "The Gal Who Got Rattled" proved especially challenging because of the difficulty of coordinating the oxen teams for timing and direction.[15] Fourteen wagons were built from scratch in a New Mexico blacksmith shop, and and then shipped in pairs on flatbed trailers to the shooting location in Nebraska. Their design was influenced by the 1930 motion picture The Big Trail. Most of the costumes were handmade for the product. Designer Mary Zophres credited historical reenactment supply companies for carrying difficult-to-find period fabrics, noting that U.S. wool product, at the time of filming, was "practically nil".[27]

Funding and distribution [edit]

From the commencement, the Coens ruled out traditional film studio funding, seeing an industry shift in how smaller projects are financed. Joel Coen said that Netflix was investing in movies that are not based on Marvel Comics or other established activeness franchises, "which is pretty much the business of the studios now."[17] The filmmakers had mixed feelings regarding Netflix distribution equally The Carol of Buster Scruggs was given only a limited theatrical run before its Netflix streaming debut. The Coens credited home video with helping constitute their ain careers and admitted that they succumbed to the temptation to watch film screeners at home rather than going out to a theater; but the "hours and days and years you spend struggling over details" of a picture "is appreciated in a dissimilar style on a big screen," Joel Coen said.[17]

Netflix funding was too the reason composer Carter Burwell conducted his score, with upwards to 40 musicians, at Abbey Route Studios in London, which, he noted, is ironic given that the film is an American Western. "In this instance, Netflix equally a distributor is non a signatory to any of the union agreements hither. So they wanted to go to London then they wouldn't be involved in that. I mention that because more and more than films are existence made by companies that aren't signatories." He said that the event has festered over the past twenty years, to the point where the flick score recording business has disappeared from New York with no prospect of beingness rebuilt.[29]

Reception [edit]

Box function [edit]

Although Netflix does not disclose box office results, IndieWire tracked reserved online seating sales and deduced The Ballad of Buster Scruggs made $6,600 on its first mean solar day from its Los Angeles and New York Metropolis locations.[30] Information technology then estimated the film made nigh $36,000 in its opening weekend, for a four-24-hour interval total of effectually $45,000. Had the results been made official, the debut per-venue estimates of $12,000 would have ranked as the lowest of the Coen Brothers' career. IndieWire estimated that the opening exceeded most Netflix releases and noted that, for the distributor, "getting people to see their films in theaters is not the point."[31]

Critical response [edit]

On the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the motion picture holds an approval rating of 89% based on 234 reviews, with an average rating of 7.viii/10. The website'southward critical consensus reads, "The Carol of Buster Scruggs avoids album pitfalls with a consistent collection tied together past the Coen brothers' signature alloy of dark drama and black humor."[32] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 79 out of 100, based on 48 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[33]

Critic Matt Zoller Seitz admired the picture, with high praise especially given to the "Buster Scruggs" vignette, stating that it "captures the contradictions of American mythology better than whatsoever total-length revisionist western I've seen. Joyous, optimistic, confident fable-making, in service of adulthood and homicide."[34] Seitz added that "Buster is also (incidentally) US war machine policy, seeking out and often escalating threats in order to demonstrate his awesome killing prowess, and then retroactively justifying it, even singing his own songs of glory and goodness."[35]

Vignette rankings [edit]

Some critics ranked the six vignettes.[36] [37]

Accolades [edit]

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ Roderick Jaynes is the shared pseudonym used by the Coen brothers for their editing.
  2. ^ a b The character's proper noun as listed in the film credits is "Çurly Joe" with a cedilla under the first letter of the alphabet. The song's lyrics also include a line that references the letter C and the cedilla. In the subtitles, when Buster sings the vocal the proper name is spelled "Bearish Joe".
  3. ^ The song is a reference to the Marlene Dietrich song "Piddling Joe the Wrangler" from the 1939 film Destry Rides Once more.[seven]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Tapley, Kristopher (July 25, 2018). "Surprise! The Coens' 'Ballad of Buster Scruggs' Is a Pic and It'due south Headed for Oscar Season". Variety . Retrieved July 25, 2018.
  2. ^ "THE Ballad OF BUSTER SCRUGGS | British Board of Film Classification".
  3. ^ Roxborough, Scott (August 31, 2018). "Coen Brothers Say Their Netflix Western 'Ballad of Buster Scruggs' Volition Go Theatrical Release". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved August 31, 2018.
  4. ^ Vivarelli, Nick (September 8, 2018). "Venice Moving-picture show Festival: Alfonso Cuaron'due south 'Roma' Wins Golden Lion (Complete Winners List)". Variety . Retrieved September ten, 2018.
  5. ^ a b Chu, Henry (August 31, 2018). "Coen Brothers Confirm Theatrical Release for 'The Ballad of Buster Scruggs'". Variety . Retrieved August 31, 2018.
  6. ^ Brent Lang (October 31, 2018). "Netflix'southward 'Roma,' 'Carol of Buster Scruggs,' 'Bird Box' Get Sectional Theatrical Releases". Variety . Retrieved November xviii, 2018.
  7. ^ Sorondo, Alexander (November xiv, 2018). "Coen Brothers Provide Half a Masterwork in The Ballad of Buster Scruggs". The Jitney. Miami, FL.
  8. ^ "The Carol of Buster Scruggs (2018) Soundtrack", IMDB , retrieved February 5, 2019
  9. ^ Sandberg, Bryn Elise (January 10, 2017). "Coen Brothers Set First-Ever TV Project With Annapurna". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved August 31, 2018.
  10. ^ "The Coen Brothers come to Netflix in the new Western Anthology THE BALLAD OF BUSTER SCRUGGS". Netflix Media Center. August 9, 2017. Retrieved November 18, 2018.
  11. ^ Terry Gross (November 19, 2018). "Filmmakers Joel and Ethan Coen On Singing Cowboys And Working With Oxen". Fresh Air (Podcast). NPR. Event occurs at 3:00.
  12. ^ Radish, Christina (November 16, 2018). "Tim Blake Nelson on 'The Carol of Buster Scruggs' and Damon Lindelof's 'Watchmen' Series". Collider . Retrieved November 23, 2018.
  13. ^ Morgan, David (October four, 2018). "The Coen Brothers on "The Ballad of Buster Scruggs"". CBS News . Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  14. ^ The Daughter Who Got Rattled. americanliterature.com.
  15. ^ a b "Filmmakers Joel and Ethan Coen On Singing Cowboys And Working With Oxen" (Podcast). Event occurs at fifteen:20.
  16. ^ Stevens, Dana (November 8, 2018). "The Coen Brothers' New Netflix Movie Is a Western Out to Break All the Rules". Slate Mag . Retrieved November 21, 2018.
  17. ^ a b c d Rottenberg, Josh (November xiv, 2018). "The Coen brothers on their Western anthology moving-picture show 'The Carol of Buster Scruggs,' Netflix and the future of moviegoing". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  18. ^ Lewis, Hilary (November 18, 2018). "Coen Brothers, 'Buster Scruggs' Cast Insist Western Anthology Was Always Going to Be a Movie". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved November 19, 2018.
  19. ^ Dickinson, Chrissie. "Willie Watson sounds like a man from another time". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on Oct 13, 2017. Retrieved Dec 29, 2017.
  20. ^ Giroux, Jack (July ix, 2017). "'The Carol of Buster Scruggs' Cast Includes James Franco, Tim Blake Nelson, Zoe Kazan, and More". /Film . Retrieved August two, 2017.
  21. ^ Otterson, Joe (August 9, 2017). "Coen Brothers' Boob tube Series 'Ballad of Buster Scruggs' Lands at Netflix". Variety . Retrieved Baronial nine, 2017.
  22. ^ "'Exclusive: Liam Neeson and Brendan Gleeson to star in Coen Brothers' Ballad Of Buster Scruggs". Entertainment IE. Jan xv, 2018. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  23. ^ "Filmmakers Joel and Ethan Coen On Singing Cowboys And Working With Oxen" (Podcast). Result occurs at 20:50.
  24. ^ Tizard, Will (November 16, 2018). "'Buster Scruggs' DP Bruno Delbonnel on Lensing Coen Brothers' Starting time Digital Motion picture". Diverseness . Retrieved November nineteen, 2018.
  25. ^ Hammel, Paul (July 20, 2017). "'Coen brothers seek 'ordinary' looking Nebraskans for new miniseries being filmed in Panhandle". Omaha World-Herald . Retrieved August two, 2017.
  26. ^ Zahed, Ramin (Nov 21, 2018). "Color, giant props, moving trees — creating the many moods of the Coen brothers' 'The Ballad of Buster Scruggs'". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved November 22, 2018.
  27. ^ a b c Desowitz, Pecker (November 10, 2018). "'The Carol of Buster Scruggs': Pushing the Limits of Western Actuality in Coen Brothers' First Netflix Film". IndieWire . Retrieved November 21, 2018.
  28. ^ Hart, Hugh (November xv, 2018). "The Ballad of Buster Scruggs Production Designer on How the W Was Congenital". Motility Picture Association of America. Retrieved November 21, 2018.
  29. ^ Giardina, Carolyn (November 16, 2017). "Composer Carter Burwell Is the Latest Guest on The Hollywood Reporter's 'Behind the Screen' Podcast Series". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved November 24, 2018.
  30. ^ Tom Brueggemann (Nov nine, 2018). "'The Ballad of Buster Scruggs': Grosses Reflect Smaller Theaters and Netflix Priorities". IndieWire . Retrieved November xxx, 2018.
  31. ^ Tom Brueggemann (November 11, 2018). "Netflix's Strange 'The Ballad of Buster Scruggs' Results; Jason Reitman's 'The Front Runner' Flops". IndieWire . Retrieved November 30, 2018.
  32. ^ "The Ballad of Buster Scruggs (2018)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved Oct 10, 2021.
  33. ^ "The Carol of Buster Scruggs Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved December viii, 2018.
  34. ^ Matt Zoller Seitz [@mattzollerseitz] (Nov xx, 2018). "That first segment of BUSTER SCRUGGS..." (Tweet). Retrieved March 23, 2019 – via Twitter.
  35. ^ Matt Zoller Seitz [@mattzollerseitz] (November 20, 2018). "Buster is also (incidentally) US armed services policy..." (Tweet). Retrieved March 23, 2019 – via Twitter.
  36. ^ Placido, Dani Di. "The Six 'Ballad of Buster Scruggs' Shorts, Ranked". Forbes . Retrieved Dec 28, 2018.
  37. ^ "All six chapters in The Ballad of Buster Scruggs ranked". Radio Times . Retrieved December 28, 2018.
  38. ^ Vivarelli, Nick (September 8, 2018). "'Venice Flick Festival: Alfonso Cuaron's 'Roma' Wins Golden Lion (Complete Winners List)". Variety . Retrieved September 9, 2018.
  39. ^ Xu, Linda (October 17, 2018). "'A Star Is Born,' 'Black Panther' Lead Hollywood Music in Media Awards Nominees". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved December 12, 2018.
  40. ^ Hipes, Patrick (December 12, 2018). "SAG Awards Nominations: 'A Star Is Built-in', 'Mrs. Maisel', 'Ozark' Lead Way – The Total List". Deadline Hollywood . Retrieved Dec 12, 2018.
  41. ^ "The full list of nominations for the Baftas 2019". Guardian. Jan 8, 2019. Retrieved January ix, 2019.
  42. ^ "The Ballad of Buster Scruggs – Awards". IMDb . Retrieved January 22, 2019.

External links [edit]

  • The Ballad of Buster Scruggs on Netflix
  • The Carol of Buster Scruggs at IMDb
  • The Ballad of Buster Scruggs at Box Office Mojo

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ballad_of_Buster_Scruggs

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