The Sisters Brothers Access
The "feeler" of the duo, Eli is weary of the violence and dreams of a domestic life, at one point becoming fascinated by a new invention—the toothbrush.
The Sisters Brothers , directed by Jacques Audiard and based on the novel by Patrick deWitt, is a genre-bending Western that manages to be both a gritty road movie and a surprisingly tender character study. While it features the expected violence of the frontier, its true strength lies in its subversion of traditional "strong, silent" cowboy tropes. A Study in Contrast The Sisters Brothers
The film centers on Eli (John C. Reilly) and Charlie (Joaquin Phoenix) Sisters, hitmen for a mysterious figure known as the Commodore. The chemistry between Reilly and Phoenix is the film's heartbeat: The "feeler" of the duo, Eli is weary
The younger, more volatile brother, Charlie is an alcoholic who embraces their dangerous profession with a reckless, sometimes cruel enthusiasm. Narrative and Tone A Study in Contrast The film centers on Eli (John C
Ferocious and Precocious: Patrick deWitt's The Sisters Brothers