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Disc #1 -- True Grit
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- Chapters
Disc #1 -- True Grit
1. Chapter 1
2. Chapter 2
3. Chapter 3
4. Chapter 4
5. Chapter 5
6. Chapter 6
7. Chapter 7
8. Chapter 8
9. Chapter 9
10. Chapter 10
- Features
Blu-Ray: Behind the scenes with Mattie Ross
Outfitting the Old West: Buckskins, chaps and cowboy hats
Colts, Winchesters & Remingtons: The guns of a post-Civil War Western
Re-creating Fort Smith
The cast
Charles Portis - The greatest writer you've never heard of...
The cinematography of True Grit
True Grit theatrical trailer
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Directors
Ethan Coen
Joel Coen
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Producers
Ethan Coen
Joel Coen
Scott Rudin
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Composers (Music Score)
Carter Burwell
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Editors
Roderick Jaynes
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Screen Writers
Ethan Coen
Joel Coen
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Others
Additional Casting - Rachel Tenner
Book Author - Charles Portis
Casting - Ellen Chenoweth
Cinematographer - Roger Deakins
Composer (Music Score) - Carter Burwell
Costume Designer - Mary Zophres
Costumes Supervisor - Lori DeLapp
Executive Producer - Steven Spielberg
Executive Producer - Robert Graf
Executive Producer - Paul Schwake
Executive Producer - David Ellison
Executive Producer - Megan Ellison
First Assistant Director - Betsy Magruder
Post Production Supervisor - Catherine Farrell
Production Accountant - Cheryl Kurk
Production Designer - Jess Gonchor
Production Sound Mixer - Douglas Axtell
Production Sound Mixer - Peter Kurland
Production Supervisor - Karen Ruth Getchell
Re-Recording Mixer - Craig Berkey
Re-Recording Mixer - Skip Lievsay
Re-Recording Mixer - Greg Orloff
Script Supervisor - Thomas Johnston
Second Assistant Director - Bac Delorme
Set Decorator - Nancy Haigh
Stunts Coordinator - Mike Watson
Supervising Sound Editor - Skip Lievsay
Unit Production Manager - Robert Graf
The Coen Brothers don't aim to reinvent the Western with
True Grit; quite the contrary. By going back to the
Charles Portis novel for inspiration, enlisting
Carter Burwell to compose a score that recalls the golden era of the once-proud genre, and paying close attention to every detail, the critically lauded duo instead offers up what may be the most satisfying traditional Western since the genre was muddled by spaghetti and revisionism in the late '50s.
Her father senselessly gunned down by notorious outlaw Tom Chaney (
Josh Brolin), 14-year-old Mattie Ross (
Hailee Steinfeld) seeks out trigger-happy U.S. marshal Rueben J. "Rooster" Cogburn (
Jeff Bridges) to follow Chaney into hostile territory and ensure that justice is served. Though initially rejected by the marshal when she states that she will be joining the hunt for her father's killer, the headstrong Mattie proves she has the makings of a true trail-hand when she purchases a horse and stubbornly follows Rooster and Texas ranger LaBoeuf (
Matt Damon) along for the ride. But the closer the trio gets to their target, the more treacherous the journey becomes. Later, just when it begins to appear that the trail has run cold, Mattie discovers that the most harrowing part of her adventure is still yet to come.
First things first, if veteran cinematographer
Roger Deakins doesn't finally earn an Oscar for his work on
True Grit, there is truly no justice in Hollywood. Thanks to
Deakins, the Coen Brothers'
True Grit is a visual feast right from the haunting first shot -- seducing us with the aftermath of a senseless killing, then holding us rapt as we're introduced to the character of Mattie Ross, a straight-talking firebrand whose fragile young heart has already been blackened by a lust for vengeance. The character is exquisitely embodied by talented young newcomer
Hailee Steinfeld, who portrays Mattie's complex range of emotions with a dexterity generally reserved for actors well beyond her years -- and level of experience. Strong-willed and determined from the moment we first meet her, Mattie is perfectly capable of stepping up to care for her family after her father is viciously gunned down, though the more time we spend with her, the closer her vulnerable side floats to the surface thanks to the many subtle character beats that slowly add up to give Mattie Ross vivid texture.
Then, of course, there's
Bridges -- one of the most respected actors in film for good reason. He entered into a new era of grizzle with last year's
Crazy Heart that seamlessly carries over into his role as the crusty, hard-living Rooster Cogburn. Any actor would have been foolish to try to imitate the iconic swagger of
John Wayne; fortunately,
Bridges is a smart enough actor to blaze his own trail, and strong enough to walk tall as he does it. His Cogburn is precisely the brand of gruff lone wolf that has come to define the American Old West in film. Occasionally ill-tempered but always even-handed, his acute perception of justice is rooted more in intuition than in the laws of the land. And though Cogburn's unapologetic gruffness is without question the single trait that makes him such a fascinating personality, the Coen Brothers' script offers some well-placed character exposition that helps to make him more of a full-bodied character than a simple Western caricature. On the other hand, virtually every character in the film, with the sole exception of Mattie Ross, skirts the line in this respect (viewers may instinctively reach for a hanky after watching
Barry Pepper spray his lines through mangled teeth), though
Brolin does fill the boots of a psychopathic Western villain rather nicely. Likewise, it's the frequent, tempestuous banter between Cogburn and LaBoeuf that lends a much-welcome sense of levity to the proceedings, and
Damon handles those scenes as effortlessly as he does effectively.
Nonetheless, while some of the humor and character nuances that
Joel and
Ethan Coen work into their screenplay do indeed distinguish
True Grit as a "Coen Brothers Film" (perhaps a bit more so than, say,
Intolerable Cruelty, which feels more like a job for hire than a labor of love), it's the fact that the celebrated siblings knew when to rein in their quirky impulses that reveals just how much care went into the making of the film. While the die-hard Coen Brothers fan may quickly sense the pacing, performances, and tone that have long distinguished their work, chances are that anyone who walks into
True Grit hoping for nothing more than an all-around solid film wouldn't necessarily recognize it as the work of an auteur (or, in this instance, a pair of auteurs). With this film, it's the Coens' seeming ability to step out of the way and allow the original source material to take precedence that speaks to their strength and savvy as filmmakers, and in a catalogue that includes such undisputed classics as
Blood Simple,
Fargo, and
O Brother, Where Art Thou?,
True Grit comfortably ranks among their very best. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
- Jeff Bridges : Best Actor - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2010
- Hailee Steinfeld : Best Actress - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2010
- Ethan Coen : Best Adapted Screenplay - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2010
- Joel Coen : Best Adapted Screenplay - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2010
- Roger Deakins : Best Cinematography - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2010
- Mary Zophres : Best Costume Design - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2010
- Jeff Bridges : Best Actor - Screen Actors Guild, 2010
- Ethan Coen : Best Adapted Screenplay - Writers Guild of America, 2010
- Joel Coen : Best Adapted Screenplay - Writers Guild of America, 2010
- Roger Deakins : Best Cinematography (Runner-up) - L.A. Film Critics Association, 2010
- Roger Deakins : Best Cinematography - National Society of Film Critics, 2010
- Nancy Haigh : Best Production Design - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2010
- Douglas Axtell : Best Sound - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2010
- Peter Kurland : Best Sound - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2010
- Craig Berkey : Best Sound - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2010
- Skip Lievsay : Best Sound - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2010
- Jess Gonchor : Best Production Design - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2010
- Greg Orloff : Best Sound - British Academy of Film and Televisio, 2010
- Hailee Steinfeld : Best Supporting Actress - Screen Actors Guild, 2010
- Jeff Bridges : Best Actor - London Film Critics Association, 2010
- Jeff Bridges : Best Actor - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Ethan Coen : Best Adapted Screenplay - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Ethan Coen : Best Director - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Ethan Coen : Best Picture - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Ethan Coen : Best Director - London Film Critics Association, 2010
- Ethan Coen : Best Screenplay - London Film Critics Association, 2010
- Joel Coen : Best Director - London Film Critics Association, 2010
- Joel Coen : Best Picture - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Joel Coen : Best Director - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Joel Coen : Best Adapted Screenplay - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Roger Deakins : Best Cinematography - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Roger Deakins : Best Cinematography - American Society of Cinematographers, 2010
- Nancy Haigh : Best Art Direction - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Scott Rudin : Best Picture - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Peter Kurland : Best Sound Mixing - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Mary Zophres : Best Costume Design - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Craig Berkey : Best Sound Mixing - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Craig Berkey : Best Sound Editing - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Skip Lievsay : Best Sound Editing - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Skip Lievsay : Best Sound Mixing - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Jess Gonchor : Best Art Direction - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Jess Gonchor : Best Art Direction in a Period Film - Art Directors Guild, 2010
- Greg Orloff : Best Sound Mixing - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Hailee Steinfeld : Best Supporting Actress - Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sc, 2010
- Hailee Steinfeld : Best Supporting Actress - Austin Film Critics, 2010
- Hailee Steinfeld : Best Actress - London Film Critics Association, 2010
- Joel Coen : Best Screenplay - London Film Critics Association, 2010