Is there anything that the man in the background could possibly have done to have saved his own life during this scene?
Did he live?
>>82471154
Turn 360° and walk away
>>82471154
I would have just knocked him out while he had his back turned.
>>82471181
You mean walk toward the killer? Are you retarded?
>>82471154
yelled "cut"?
>>82471154
He lives in the book so we assumed he lived in the film too.
>>82471154
Why would he die? He just learned a valuable lesson. You use the correct tool for the job. If Chigurh wanted him dead, then there would have been no discussion about the transmitters or the Mexicans
>>82471154
He lived, retard.
>>82471742
>assumed he lived in the film too.
Not really.
>That depends.
>Do you see me?
Is that line in the book? I always thought that meant since he did see him, he had to die. I guess that could be interpreted as him expecting a negative and false answer, but it seems rather ambiguous to me. It's not like his other murders left any witnesses.
>>82471154
that depends, did you see him?
>>82472112
He left the boys alive and asked them the same, so the directors wanted us to think he lived. However, he was in no shape to kill them, so it's possible
I like to think he got spared as sort of a message by Anton that he had some concept of mercy since he thought of himself as an angel of death.
>>82471651
Hello newfriend.
>>82471154
he didnt die though
>>82472454
>asked them the same,
Not quite. He gives them some money and says:
>Take it and... You didn't see me.
>>82472545
>get BTFO
>call other people new
>>82471154
No and no.
>>82472112
In the book, Chigurh uses special ammunition in that scene so as to not break the windows and hurt the innocent people below. The guy he asked if he saw him wasn't a threat, had nothing he needed, and hadn't triggered his autism and it's strongly implied Anton let him live.
>>82472664
Okay? So you're referring to the book, (which isn't the same as the movie), and even then, it's somewhat ambiguous that the guy lived.
>>82472738
Not arguing with you fampai. It's just muh personal take on it. One of the big themes4uof Anton's character is that he's death who kills as many bad people as he does good people and isn't rational in his choices. He does what he wants.