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The Thin Red Line

United States

1998

170 Min
  • Currently 4.1/5 Stars.
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DIR Terrence Malick

PROD Robert Michael Geisler, Grant Hill, John Roberdeau

SCR Terrence Malick, James Jones

DP John Toll

CAST Sean Penn, Woody Harrelson, John Cusack, Nick Nolte, John Savage, Ben Chaplin

Berlinale, Berlinale (Retrospective)

Synopsis

The return of director Terrence Malick to feature filmmaking after a twenty year sabbatical, this World War II drama is an elegiac rumination on man’s destruction of nature and himself, based on James Jones’ semi-autobiographical novel, his follow-up to From Here to Eternity. James Caviezel stars as Private Witt, a deserter living in peace and harmony with the natives of a Pacific island paradise. Captured by the Navy, Witt is debriefed by a senior officer (Sean Penn) and returned to an active duty unit preparing for what will be the Battle of Guadalcanal. As Witt goes ashore in the company of his fellow soldiers, they meet diverse fates. Sergeant Keck (Woody Harrelson) is killed by an exploding grenade. Captain John Gaff (John Cusack) is an intelligent, sober leader facing the destruction of his command because his commanding officer Colonel Tall (Nick Nolte) is bucking for a general’s star. Sergeant McCron (John Savage) loses his mind. Private Bell (Ben Chaplin) gets a “Dear John” letter from his beloved wife. However, as the U.S. troops advance up grassy slopes toward entrenched Japanese positions, it is Witt’s voiced-over ruminations on life, death, and nature that are the real heart and soul of The Thin Red Line (1998). Adrien Brody appears as Private Fife, the major character of Jones’ novel and the author’s alter-ego, although Fife has been relegated to a minor supporting role by Malick’s filmed adaptation.

(From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:174294)

Director

Terrence_malick

Terrence Malick

Terrence Malick is one of the great enigmas of contemporary filmmaking, a shadowy figure whose towering reputation rests almost entirely on a pair of near-perfect features released a generation ago. A visual stylist beyond compare, Malick emerged during the golden era of 1970s American movie-making, bringing to the screen a dreamlike, ethereal beauty countered by elliptical, ironic storytelling; resonant and mythic, his films illuminated themes of love and death with rare mastery, their indelible images distinguished by economy and precision. Born in Waco, TX, on November 30, 1943, Malick spent many of his formative summers working as a farmhand, an experience upon which he would draw extensively in his films. Upon graduating from Harvard with a degree in philosophy, he entered Magdalen College in Oxford as a Rhodes scholar, but exited prior to completing his final thesis. On returning to the U.S., he became a freelance journalist, with his byline appearing in such publications as Life… read more

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richmondhill

7Feb10

Worthy but ponderous and inordinately overlong. We've been here before - Apocalypse Now, Platoon, The Big Red One, Full Metal Jacket - albeit more noisily and less introspective, but surely it doesn't take three hours to quietly tell us that war is hell?  
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GuyPutOutYourCampfire!

28Jan10

The anti-Saving Private Ryan. Actually, it's pretty much the antithesis of every other successful war movie ever made. Filled to the brim with questions regarding nature and the human condition, it is confusing, chaotic, and deeply, richly beautiful.  

H. Paul Moon

27Jan10

A war movie where political war is incidental, this Terrence Malick pinnacle confronts good and evil within nature, never overlooking the existence of God and never turning to combat as a process to entertain.  

roberto2112

27Jan10

had to watch we were soldiers to realize how brilliant this is...   

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The Thin Red Line

By Jye Sherwel​l on January 6, 2010

I just had my third viewing of this film. For me this was the most important viewing, because I’ve now seen two other of Malick’s films.

This is a good film. The scenes taking the ridge are…  read review

Two wars: Internal and external.

By Vocalit​ies on December 24, 2009

The Thin Red Line, like every movie by Terrence Malick, is deep and difficult, but grossly satisfying as well. There is a poetry here, and it’s written with honesty and fear, and challenging to convey…  read review

Untitled

By rajiv ibrahim on November 2, 2009

forget platoon, forget saving private ryan, forget full metal jacket, forget all war movies, this is the best war movie ever.,
not the typical ‘oscar’ war movie, this is also about life and death…  read review

Untitled

By Rüdiger Tomczak on August 13, 2009

I still regret not to have seen this film in 1999, when it was screened in the competition of the Berlin Filmfestival. I discovered it years later.
I go for more than 20 years to the Berlin Filmfestival…  read review

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terrence malick

11 posts by 5 people 28 days ago