When adapting Charles Portis's classic novel, the Coen Brothers deliberately sought to move away from the straightforward heroics of the John Wayne era and lean into a darker, more expressionistic vision of the American frontier. They specifically cited Charles Laughton's atmospheric masterpiece The Night of the Hunter as a key visual reference, aiming to capture its starry, terrifyingly vast nocturnal landscapes and the vulnerable perspective of a child navigating a world of predatory adults. The film's harsh, unsparing depiction of the wilderness also draws from the psychological intensity of Anthony Mann's grim noir-Westerns, particularly Winchester '73. Through these influences, the Coens recontextualized a classic revenge narrative into a chilling, moonlit frontier fairy tale.
Films That Influenced True Grit