Sometimes, All It Takes Is a Good Movie 🎬

Moody Western landscape inspired by The Ballad of Buster Scruggs, showing a lone rider against a vast frontier sky, evoking dark humor and quiet reflection.

The Coen Brothers struck again.

The Ballad of Buster Scruggs absolutely rocks.
Just watched it (on Netflix)—pure treat.

Released in 2018, this American Western black-comedy anthology was written, directed, produced, and edited by the indefatigable Coen Brothers. The cast alone is a roll call: Tim Blake Nelson, James Franco, Liam Neeson… and that’s before the frontier itself becomes a character.

Some vignettes are quietly unsettling. Others are laugh-out-loud absurd. Often, they’re both at once—classic Coens: humor with a loaded revolver under the table.

Joel Coen later mentioned the shoot was physically brutal: exposed exterior sets, merciless weather, and endless travel across wide-open locations. The long wagon train in “The Gal Who Got Rattled” was especially punishing—coordinating oxen teams for timing and direction turned into a frontier-grade logistical nightmare.

Note to self:
If I ever direct a movie—no oxen teams.
Just bulls. 🐂

My personal top five Coen films still stand:

  • Fargo

  • Blood Simple

  • No Country for Old Men

  • The Big Lebowski

  • Burn After Reading

I probably need to rewatch True Grit. I wasn’t quite as dazzled as most—but Coen films have a funny habit of aging better than our first impressions.

Sometimes, all it takes is a good movie to reset the compass.

Carpe Diem.