Browse: Home / Year of the Month: James Williams on THE TREE OF LIFE

Menu

Skip to content
  • Home
  • Who We Are
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Contact Us
  • Login

The-SoluteLogo

A Film Site By Lovers of Film

Menu

Skip to content
  • Features
  • Reviews
  • Long Reviews
  • News
  • Articles and Opinions
  • Other Media
  • The Friday Article Roundup: The Truth is In Here
  • Lunch Links: Schwarzfahrer
  • Websites on the Internet: THE SOLUTE
  • New on DVD and Blu-Ray
  • Movie Gifts Holidays 2024

Year of the Month: James Williams on THE TREE OF LIFE

Posted By Sam "Burgundy Suit" Scott on April 26, 2023 in Uncategorized | Leave a response

It’s strange to think back to 2011, when the prospect of a new Terrence Malick movie was rare enough to inspire excitement rather than dread in the cinephile community. For the first four decades of his career, Malick only made five movies, with the legendary and mysterious 20-year hiatus between 1978’s Days of Heaven and 1998’s The Thin Red Line becoming the source of persistent rumors and speculation. Even after The Thin Red Line, we had to wait seven years for his follow up, The New World. It was six years after that when Malick released his next feature (and this author’s personal favorite movie) The Tree of Life, earning critical plaudits, winning the Palme D’Or, and alienating audiences around the world.

The Tree of Life feels like a culmination point in Malick’s filmography. Previously, he had a style all his own, featuring gorgeous cinematography, philosophical voiceover, and a focus on man’s interaction with the natural world. But his movies still had strong narrative throughlines — from the Battle of Guadalcanal in The Thin Red Line to the Starkweather killings in Badlands to the clashes between the Jamestown settlers and the Native tribesin The New World. But with The Tree of Life, Malick went full experimental. What narrative there is focuses on an architect, Jack (played by Sean Penn as an adult and Hunter McCracken as a boy) thinking back on his childhood in the 1950s with his brothers R.L. and Stevie (Laramie Eppler and Tye Sheridan, respectively) and parents (Brad Pitt and Jessica Chastain), on what is implied to be the anniversary of R.L.’s death. 

What Malick understands, instinctively, is that memory isn’t a continuum; we remember bits and pieces, little snatches of experience we assign great meaning to. As such, scenes in the movie rarely play out in full, and even when they do, they do it with copious jump cuts. It creates the effect of watching a childhood in montage, keeping the pacing somehow propulsive and contemplative at the same time. Widely believed to be at least semi-autobiographical (Malick is notoriously protective of his personal life), Malick for the first time unmoors himself from the historical record and lays out, in the most maximalist terms possible, his life and beliefs.

What remains remarkable about The Tree of Life is Malick’s all-consuming vision. Working with special effects master Douglas Trumbull, Malick connects this one family’s love and grief to the creation of the universe in one stunning 20-minute sequence near the beginning of the film. It’s an incredible scene, awesome in its totality, and an illustration of the movie’s themes of nature and grace. Malick mirrors the sequence near the end of the film, depicting the destruction of earth by the sun going supernova, and an afterlife where the adult Jack is greeted by everyone he’s ever known. While the film betrays a spiritual (if not religious) tone, it never lapses into Evangelical fare like God’s Not Dead, mostly because it’s able to see the very functions of science itself as miraculous.

Even though Malick is my favorite director and The Tree of Life is my favorite film, I must confess that I never saw a movie he did after The Tree of Life. Part of the reason is that the diminishing critical returns scared me off of his subsequent projects (which, like The Tree of Life, are widely assumed to be semi-autobiographical). But mostly, it’s because The Tree of Life feels like the natural endpoint he’s been building up to his entire career; it’s not surprising that many of the rumors about his twenty-year hiatus revolve around him perfecting an early version of its script. What else is there to do after you create the universe in 20 minutes (with the assistance of Trumbull and cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki, who also does career-best work here)? After recapturing some of his old magic with A Hidden Life, Malick has a new project coming this year, The Way of the Wind, a depiction of the life of Jesus (my guess: he portrays Jesus as a character with a deep spiritual connection to the natural world). For the first time in a while, it feels like a new Malick film is a cause for optimism.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged 2011, Brad Pitt, James Williams, Jessica Chastian, Sean Penn, Terrence Malick, year of the month

About the Author

Sam “Burgundy Suit” Scott

Sam is a features writer for Looper and studied writing under Kevin Wilson at Sewanee: the University of the South. He’s been a staff writer for The Solute since its launch in 2014 and editor of the Year of the Month series since 2017.

I don’t know how to put this, but he’s kind of a big deal. He has many leather-bound books and his apartment smells of rich mahogany.

Now on Patreon!
https://www.patreon.com/user/creators?u=23744950

  • Tumblr
  • Twitter

Related Posts

Coors, the official beer of drinking in a little league dugout.Year of the Month: THE BAD NEWS BEARS→

Year of the Month: FALL (2022)→

No One Likes Chili Dogs That Much: Persia on GONE GIRL→

Then gaze out the window and draw a peen on the board: DON’T TRUST THE B—- IN APT. 23→

  • Comments
  • Popular
  • Most Recent
  • j*****@yahoo.com'
    mr_apollo on Year of the Month: Mon OncleWonderful piece, Sam. It's made…
  • j*****@yahoo.com'
    mr_apollo on Year of the Month: Mon OncleFellow heretic here. I've never…
  • n***********@gmail.com'
    Ruck Cohlchez on Film on the Internet: AN AMERICAN CRIMEI wouldn't have called it…
  • j***********@gmail.com'
    Son of Griff on LIFE ITSELFGlad to hear back from…
  • n*********@gmail.com'
    Jake Gittes on Film on the Internet: AN AMERICAN CRIMEThis is the single most…
  • “The End” of SAVAGES

    38393 views / Posted November 10, 2014
  • The Untalented Mr. Ripley: The Craft of Standup Comedy and the Non-Comedy of TOM MYERS

    30737 views / Posted June 26, 2018
  • What the fuck did I just watch? SPHERE

    30347 views / Posted March 19, 2015
  • Gordon with Mr. Looper

    Attention Must Be Paid: Will Lee

    27651 views / Posted January 7, 2023
  • Scenic Routes: SHOWGIRLS (1995)

    23352 views / Posted November 20, 2014
  • The truth is FAR out there.

    The Friday Article Roundup: The Truth is In Here

    December 6, 2024 / The Ploughman
  • This is a way lower res image than I will be allowed to get away with at the new site.

    Lunch Links: Schwarzfahrer

    December 5, 2024 / The Ploughman
  • Websites on the Internet: THE SOLUTE

    December 4, 2024 / ZoeZ
  • New on DVD and Blu-Ray

    December 3, 2024 / Greta Taylor
  • Movie Gifts Holidays 2024

    December 2, 2024 / The Ploughman

Last Tweets

    ©2014 - 2016 The-Solute | Hosted, Developed and Maintained by Bellingham WP LogoBellinghamWP.com.

    Menu

    • Home
    • Who We Are
    • About
    • Privacy
    • Contact Us
    • Login
    Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!