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Badlands

Badlands – 1973

In 1959 a lot of people were killing time. Kit and Holly were killing people.

Director(s)
Terrence Malick

Writer(s)
Terrence Malick written by

Producer(s)
Jill Jakes co-producer
Terrence Malick producer
Edward R. Pressman executive producer
Louis A. Stroller associate producer (as Lou Stroller)

Cast
Martin Sheen – Kit Carruthers
Sissy Spacek – Holly Sargis
Warren Oates – Holly’s Father (Mr. Sargis)
Ramon Bieri – Cato
Alan Vint – Deputy
Gary Littlejohn – Sheriff
John Carter – Rich man
Bryan Montgomery – Boy
Gail Threlkeld – Girl
Charles Fitzpatrick – Clerk
Howard Ragsdale – Boss
John Womack Jr. – Trooper
Dona Baldwin – Maid
Ben Bravo – Gas attendant
Terrence Malick – Detective (uncredited)

Review by Theo Robertson
A Not Unimpressive Amoral Film

While the end credits were rolling I noticed an on screen disclaimer along the lines of ” All the characters and situations are fictional and any relation between the events depicted in this film is entirely coincidental ” which had me scratching my head because whenever I read about Terence Malik’s BADLANDS I’m told that it’s based on a true story about two teenage lovers who went on a killing spree in 1950s America . Thank you very much IMDb for pointing out via the trivia section and other reviewers comments as to why the producers suddenly wanted everyone to think that this is not intended as a true story . I’m sure it would have been impossible to make anti heroes out of the true life protagonists
As it stands Kit and Holly are portrayed as two amoral children living out a childhood wish fulfillment . They kill someone and then spend a long period of time living out in the woods . It’s almost like these childhood fantasies we have when we’re younger how wonderful it would be if we could just escape from a world of industrialization and adults and just do whatever the hell we wanted with no interference and the point is hammered home when Kit builds a tree house out in the woods . Who but a child has ambitions to spend their life in a tree house ? However I find myself asking myself how this would be possible , is it likely that two teenagers wanted for murder , who have no probable experience of rural life and who both smoke cigarettes being to live off the land without having to buy groceries or go into town ? I could have accepted this if it stuck to a true story but not if it’s been heavily fictionalised . Likewise we really don’t find out the motivation behind the killing spree , Kit and Holly ( Well Kit since Holly is portrayed as being a bystander of sorts ) allow some people to live and some people to die without any rhyme or reason to it . Come to think of it perhaps the reason BADLANDS is so well regarded is because it’s supposedly based on a true story . If you start looking upon it as a made up story it seems shallow and unimpressive for the most part doesn’t it ?

Not to be negative this is a good debut by director Terance Malik who manages to bring out two very good performances from the then fairly unknown Sissy Spacek and Martin Sheen . Remember I said something about childhood wish fulfillment ? that’s exactly how Spacek and Sheen play their roles – As two children with misguided views on the world in general and love in particular . It’s as if Kit and Holly are unaware of what consequence is , which again seems like a child’s mentality would be . I also couldn’t help noticing that Malik seems to have a great love of nature with shots of wild life and glorious and beautiful sun sets filling the screen , something he used in his later masterwork of THE THIN RED LINE which made me ask myself if Malik is a member of Greenpeace ? Perhaps not since he’s an auteur who seems to know that while there’s great beauty in nature there’s also great cruelty present too

A good though perhaps not great example of cinema from the 1970s when amorality was all the rage

Review by Jack Gatanella
Badlands (1973)

Meditative view of life, love, and death by Terrence Malick,
Badlands, based on the relationship between Charles Starkweather and Caril Fugate (and later an inspiration for Quentin Tarantino’s first two screenplays True Romance and NBK), never had a moment where something un-realistic occurred. Writer/producer/director Malick leads his film along with a true emphasis on both the psychological nature of Kit (Martin Sheen) and Holly (Sissy Spacek) and with the un-canny knack for a relaxing style in his camera. At best, Badlands is one of the successful homages to European cinema of the 1970’s, something that will last a long time due to its pairing of absorbing art-house and (perhaps) mainstream sensibilities. At worst, a viewer could feel bored with Malick’s intent on running with his poetic ideas as a director. If there was any pretentiousness at all, it went over my head.

Sheen and Spacek are totally believable as a couple on the run, as Kit continually has a trigger-happy attitude to people after he shoots Holly’s father. While Spacek holds the heart of the picture steady, I’d have to say that Sheen’s Kit is one of his best performances. He comes off in the perfect sense- you wouldn’t think for a second that Kit could be a killer, that is until he pulls out his pistol. It works just as well that Holly is the narrator, so that the viewer can understand where Kit’s coming from, and where he’s going.

Overall, Badlands works from start to finish as an atmospheric look at young people in love, and how escalatory events create a dis-illusioned feeling in youth. That it’s made on such a low budget gives it more merit. Kudos should go to the musical score by James Taylor, Gunild Keetman and George Tipton, too. Grade: (Strong) A

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70s Films

A tour through the great and not so great films of the seventies The seventies saw a huge change in styles and genres from the advent of the slasher horror movies like Halloween and the blockbuster summers films started by Jaws. More...

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