For
his fifth film in 40 years, you wonder whether magisterial slowcoach
Terrence Malick took stock of his recent output — such abstruse
meditations on war, colonialism, and the ineffable fabric of nature as
The Thin Red Line and The New World — and felt it was high time he
brought a halt to this worrying slide into crass commercialism. After
six years chewing over a bit of Heidegger with his Weetabix, and
smothering his intentions in a blanket of secrecy like an impenetrable
hybrid of J. J. Abrams and J. D. Salinger, he has summoned forth a
dizzyingly impressionistic study of family life that doubles as a
vaulting enquiry into the very nature of the universe and the
possibility of God.
Kubrick’s
2001 comes close, but Malick’s philosophy pines for the salve of love
and spirit, and comes light on psychotic super-computers. Even the hardy
concept of dialogue falls prey to his exquisitely aloof vision. Against
the constant murmurings of nature, we catch only odd lines and
whispered voiceovers querulously calling to a hard-of-hearing deity:
“Where were you?”
In
other words, the kind of highly personal filmmaking where we must first
pass though the dawning of time — literally nebulous bodies billowing
cloudlike against the black veil of the universe; raw planets spewing
gas and lava, primordial pools fecund with boiling matter; sparks of
life in the nuclei of swarming cells, dancing proto-fish spinning
lightwards, and a wounded plesiosaur on a desolate beach as a meteor
strike scours the surface clear for the birth of mankind — before we get
to what is commonly referred to as a scene. Cycles of life and death on
a cosmic scale contrasted with the intricate dynamics of family.
Actually,
instead of beginning at the very beginning, the film kicks off in the
mid-1960s with news of the death of R. L. (Laramie Eppler), our
protagonist Jack’s (Hunter McCracken) brother, aged only 19. How he died
remains elusive, but Malick’s younger brother is reputed to have
committed suicide at 19. This shudder of grief will reverberate like a
meteor crash through the film, stirring the first of so many questions:
what does the loss of a loved one mean against the backdrop of eternity?
Much, it transpires.
It
is this unshakable heartache, as bitter as the taste of a madeleine is
sweet, that casts Sean Penn’s grown-up Jack down a Proustian time tunnel
from the metallic canyons of present day Houston, by way of the
aforementioned Creation, to the sun-softened enchantment of his
childhood. Jack and his two brothers (all three actors wonderfully
naturalistic unknowns) are nurtured in an Edenic youth recalled via an
organic pulse of ‘memories’: fragments of story, grace notes, wisps of
emotion, the odd flicker of Lynchian weirdness. Together an uncanny
distillation of how human memory stirs its keeper, awash in Malick’s
transcendent imagery: light cascading through leaves, the kiss of a
breeze on wild grass, filigree curtains billowing through window frames,
dogs running wild.
Theirs
is a harmony held in balance by the opposing poles of their parents. A
luminous, angelic mother (Jessica Chastain), made holy by the exaltation
of Jack’s recollection, bestows a lilting ideology: “The way of nature
and the way of grace. You have to choose which one you follow.” She is
exemplified as grace. While the astonishingly mature Brad Pitt as Jack’s
terse patriarch — a soul damped down by quashed aspiration, veering
between brutal discipline and astringent love — espouses the doctrine of
nature: nothing can be achieved without will. Even without the
scaffolding of story, this is a sublime evocation of the tides of
ecstasy and torment flowing through an American boyhood.
Malick
conducts his five editors the way great composers conjure art from thin
air, creating an unforgettable symphony of beauty, introspection, and
wells of unabashed feeling. And to accompany such cinematic inspiration,
not for this director the dreadnought snarls of Nickelback, but
extracts of Couperin, Berlioz, Brahms, Mahler and Bach, interposed with
Alexandre Desplat’s yearning score. The very execution poses its own
spiritual enquiry — how can such beauty be created in a meaningless
void?
The
result is so disarmingly unironic, and therefore open to mockery, it’s
easy to see why it was met with a chorus of boos from Cannes’
sincerity-phobic critics. Sure, at times it lifts off too far, becoming
too remote and self-involved to fully grasp. And the closing images of
Sean Penn blundering across a metaphorical beach in his sodden Armani
suggest a potential afterlife as drunkenly off-kilter as that rum-do at
the end of Lost.
It
is equally clear why The Tree Of Life landed the Palme D’or — against
the brute attack of modern cinema it feels heaven-sent. A film awestruck
by life: why are we here? What are we for? Where did it all go wrong?
And where could it yet go right? Malick doesn’t pretend to have actual
answers. But then neither, one suspects, does Transformers 3.
jadi ancur Bosss.....
BalasHapus