Top review. Emptying out, in search of the true face. With Malick I usually come away with few things, simple wonderings about meaning and the desire to transcend.
But there is something here worth talking about, a wondering that I believe matters. It is about the great lie upon which we have placed all our hopes and has fed us only suffering. It includes god but goes beyond, way beyond. Those of us in the West trace it back to Descartes, the foundation of what we call our Enlightenment. The title of the book where he tells us that we are because we think translates as "Meditations touching the first philosophy in which the existence of God and the distinction between the body and soul are demonstrated".
Imagine the yawning breach with the natural world that gives us to itself at birth; we posit that we are because we think, not because we simply are! This alone reveals it; a distinction between body and soul and how the concept of God is born from it, in a mind that regards itself as separate from its vessel , that has produced a culture that considers everything a commodity, that revolves around pleasing the needs of one or the other.
And about us perceiving things as what we are in need of and by our ideas of them. The imaginary conundrum of duality goes way back, it's what the film starts with. A distinction between the way of nature and the way of grace, again body and soul. Implying there is no grace in the first and that a way of grace cannot be found in what we readily observe around us, in how the world simply presents itself to us which includes our body and what sensations appear in it - either considered impure or to satiate , but needs to be separately thought by us.
The nuns told us; about a world devised from nothing in the creator's own good time, and us separately placed in it, even created in a separate day from the rest of creation, to atone for an original sin. This is the worldview we are born into. A world itself as punishment, which we are called to subdue to our satisfaction. Modern science has done little to improve it, only now we explain away in order to subdue and have replaced one creation myth with another.
Now both ways created by Malick, so that we can see where the lie begins. The creation of creation, from the Bing Bang onwards, rendered with overblown Wagnerian crescendos like what Kubrick did 40 years ago. Malick shows us here that mercy exists among the predators. And then us separately born into creation. The first words uttered by the infant are "it's mine", the first words uttered by the father a lesson to his young son about the imaginary line that separates his garden from the neighbor's and never to cross it.
In the second half of the film we get a few codas on what destructive illusions have evolved from these notions. How we should strive to obtain and subdue until satisfied, and to admit otherwise is weakness.
And how the pursuit never satisfies the hunger, but only leads us to imagine a lacking in what we already have. And how we desperately cling to things, things felt as either ours or to be made ours, even as we know that they will come to pass.
But at the absence of the fatherly authority, we see how the kids become an aimless mob. And how the violence trickled inside the kid, eventually poisons and erupts. Over the course of all this, we get Malick's tricly soliloquy that has always been the easiest to attack. It's not my favourite aspect of his work, but I truly believe he's a feather-brained bard and deeply means it.
The rest is in the finale. It's not so much about closure that restores balance, but a process of emptying out and letting go of what has poisoned the soul. So that upon transcending the illusions of duality, remains only the unbound sentience of the world giving itself back to us.
Pitt is terrific in this, in ways he hasn't been before compare to Ben Button that strived for a similar somber effect. But what truly stands out is the boy and the look of grief piling inside. Malick tells us about his parents fighting inside of him, this is the great war in nature. Who of the two to become, without betraying the other? The one who loved harshly because he wanted his kids to have, or the one who loved tenderly but did nothing to alleviate the suffering in her own home.
So these are the two natures as falsely taught to us by the 'nuns', one as cautionary warning, the other to aspire to. The father as embodiment of the "nature that only wants to please itself", but that nature is only our false notion of a self, an ego that expects to be pleased.
A tree doesn't please itself when it's watered, it takes only what it must to grow into what it has potential to be. And the mother's way of grace that stoically accepts, also false because it accepts without complaint the injury of the innocent.
The mother allows by her passive stance both her children and her husband to remain unhappy. So, who to be eventually, as grown men who have lived so long with grieves that are not ours? Something to meditate upon. FAQ Is 'The Tree of Life' based on a book? To what does the opening biblical passage refer? Who is speaking in the opening dialogue? Details Edit.
Release date May 17, France. United States. Houston, Texas, USA. Box office Edit. The EW. It also garners three Academy Award nominations, including for Best Picture. Something called The Artist wins; was that a movie? What I'm getting at, Leah, is that Tree of Life was a major topic of conversation. Some people saw the film as Malick's magnum opus, the dreamy naturalist carrying the explorations of his earlier work to a personal-biblical apotheosis. Other people wondered, with some justification, what the hell was happening.
Consider me a complete Tree of Life apostle — like, I am the person who left the theater in total gobsmacked awe and walked all the way from Sunshine Cinema RIP! Did I walk across a bridge, or float across the East River? I enjoy seeing three brothers grow up in ethereal midcentury Texas.
As their mother, Jessica Chastain gives one of the most amazing screen performances I've ever seen, balancing so many layers of parental concern with a primal evocation of maternal adoration. Brad Pitt and Penn are two distinct shades of masculine sad, palpably struggling against themselves. I love the dinosaurs.
I love them, Leah! Where did you stand on the movie when it came out? Has your opinion shifted in the intervening years? LEAH: Well fortunately for the purposes of today's debate, I did not float across the East River; you and I fall on different sides of this thin red line. Thin Brad line? Sorry, I'll see myself out. While I too swooned at certain moments — tell me more, dinosaur!
One moment it's about the cosmos, the next it's a Calvin Klein ad; sometimes it's just a very special episode of Planet Earth without Sir David Attenborough to guide us.
I admit I was also intrigued by the premise, such as it is. Is Brad a bad dad? Why is Sean sad? Wait, what were those patents for? And on the face of it I truly do admire anyone who attempts to reimagine the domestic drama as something so strange and beautiful and holy, even if that means zooming through old-growth redwoods and cloud nebulae while Jessica Chastain whisper-talks about "the way of grace.
Speaking of Chastain, let me dig into another extremely personal peeve. I agree with you that she is phenomenal in this — in fact without her I'm not sure that the film would have worked at all; she's the heart and human tether to a story that otherwise threatens to float away into the stratosphere like one of those Mylar space balloons.
But I'm still vaguely creeped out by the way the camera seems to fetishize her as a sort of divine Mother-Goddess. Is Malick just giving us the male gaze, specifically the kind of sentimental filter that countless grown men undoubtedly and understandably see their moms through when they look back through the mists of time? Main page Community portal Recent changes Random page Admin noticeboard. Official site On Steam. Gamepedia support Report a bad ad Help Wiki Contact us.
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