We are still reeling from the shocking narrative disruption of the third act ofNo Country for Old Men.

Bell, whose role isreduced from the novel, takes center stage.

However, he fails to discover any closure in this case.

Tommy Lee Jones Final, Haunting Dream Speech in the Coen Brothers’ ‘No Country for Old Men,’ Explained

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“I think I lost it,” Bell says, remembering the vague details.

The second dream involves Bell and his father riding on horseback through the mountains.

Bell’s father rode past him, paying no mind to his son.

A close-up of Tommy Lee Jones as Sheriff Bell in No Country For Old Men

Image via Paramount Pictures

When he finally reached his father, Bell woke up,ending the dream andNo Country for Old Men.

Jones' monologue ends with theabruptness of an execution by Anton Chigurh.

Tommy Lee Jones Improvised Half of His Lines In ‘The Fugitive

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Violence and mayhem ensue after a hunter stumbles upon a drug deal gone wrong and more than two million dollars in cash near the Rio Grande.

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No Country for Old Men