Terrence Malick

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A01=Lloyd Michaels
American auteur
American film
American literature
American novels in film
art film
auteur
Author_Lloyd Michaels
Badlands
camera technique
Category=ATFB
cinema
cinematography
Days of Heaven
depth
director
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
European
feature film
film
filmmaking style
formal technique
Hollywood
independent
independent film
interview
interviews with Terrence Malick
long les
Malick and art film
Malick and philosophy
Malick cinematography
Malick films and philosophy
Malick influences
Malick screenplays
Malick themes
Malick visual style
movie
myth
New Hollywood
New Hollywood directors
original
philosophy
philosophy in cinema
philosophy in film
repetition
romance
structure
synthesis
technique
The New World
The Thin Red Line
theme
voiceover
writer-directors

Product details

  • ISBN 9780252075759
  • Weight: 200g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Sep 2008
  • Publisher: University of Illinois Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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For a director who has made a limited number of feature films over four-plus decades, Terrence Malick sustains an extraordinary reputation as one of America’s most original and independent directors. Lloyd Michaels analyzes Malick’s first four features in depth, emphasizing both repetitive formal techniques such as voiceover and long lens cinematography as well as recurrent themes drawn from the director’s academic training in modern philosophy. Like Heidegger, Malick seems to regard the human experience of nature as a mystery revealed primarily through moods rather than cognition. Like Wittgenstein, he is less concerned with apprehending the world than with simply acknowledging its beingness 

Michaels's critical approach explores Malick’s synthesis of the romance of mythic American experience and the aesthetics of European art film. He pays particular attention to paradigmatic moments: the billboard sequence in Badlands, the opening credits for Days of Heaven, the philosophical colloquies between Witt and Welsh in The Thin Red Line, and the epilogue of The New World. Michaels also sheds light on the two dark decades separating Days of Heaven from The Thin Red Line, when the director mostly lived as an expatriate in Paris. Two 1975 interviews with the famously elusive Malick round out the volume.

Lloyd Michaels is a professor of English at Allegheny College. Since 1977, he has edited the journal Film Criticism, and he is the author of The Phantom of the Cinema: Character in Modern Film.

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