Ballad of Buster Scruggs
Scrap wood, wood glue, nails, dirt, pyrite bits, rope, black, brown, and white acrylic paint, air dry clay, weathered coins, black string, and weathered rock
The exterior of the box is made from scrap wood and a distress stain
using a mix of several brown acrylic paints, black acrylic paint that
was watered down to create a stain effect. The holes on the lid mimic the bullets shot through characters so unrealistically that light will shine through them. The box itself is meant to look like a coffin due to the fact that there
is so much death within the anthologies but no coffin or burial scene
is shown. It is as if there is no time to grieve in the wild west.
Upon removing the lid the first layer is revealed. The five items represent five out of six stories shown within the film. The dice made from air dry clay has only 1's and 8's that references the poker hand that Buster Scruggs refuses to play that is Aces and Eights which is rumored to be the "Dead Man's Hand". The second item is a rope that was tied into a noose with two knots. This item represents the cowboy in "Near Algodones" in which he was revealed to have already been hung several times before his final hanging. The rock with weathered coins tied to is representative of the story "Meal Ticket". This story ended by Liam Neeson's character throwing his money maker, whom had no arms or legs, off a cliff into a stream. For the "The Gal Who Got Rattled" tale a small box was crafted to mimic a suitcase that was brought on the trail to Oregon. The two bibles represent the brother and sister whom both were practicing Christians. The last item in the small box is made to look like a dog collar that has Native American symbols carved on it that symbolizes the death of a man (the brother) and a woman (the sister). The last item within the first layer is a crow's beak made from air dry clay to represent the bounty hunters in "The Mortal Remains".
After removing the first layer one will be greeted with what can be assumed is just a pile of dirt. This section requires the viewer to move the dirt around in order to find small pieces of pyrite. This is representative of the story "All Gold Canyon" within the film in which Tom Wait's characters searches for long periods of time to find gold. The Prospector's death is the only death that is lingered on which reveals that he didn't die and in turn killed the man that tried to killed him for his gold.
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