Raiders
04-07-2008, 07:52 PM
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2065/1619050811_6dc710adbe.jpg
Everyone already knows the Deuteronomy passage that apparently lent itself to the title of the film. Its reference is to the bountiful days that await the fathers' sons and children as promised by the Lord as they live their lives as if heaven on earth. Of course, this is only a good promise as long as God's children do not stray from his blessings. Once outside the realm of God's love and providence, these days will be brought to the ground and a plague, God's wrath, will be reaped upon the Earth.
So it is that Bill and Abby, lovers playing siblings, should happen upon the land of the farmer. They are on the run from Bill's accidental murder of his foreman back in a Chicago factory. You could say it was the film's original sin, shot in a scene of agonizing fire and sound, muffling the human folly on display. They come to work the farm, to make a living. There is a shot as they enter this land that separates them from the known world: a train passes across an impossible tall bridge set against the sky.
Reason is not directly given for their lie about their relationship, but allow me to point to a different Biblical story: that of Abraham and Sarah. The story goes that as they entered Egypt, Abraham was frightened that if it was discovered such a lovely woman was his wife, he might be murdered and her taken from him. In the film, the lie is used as a means of separating the two characters, allowing for the attraction of the farmer to appear unchallenged. As with Abraham, Bill's own desires and fears drive him to whore his lover off; Abraham for self-preservation, Bill for a dream of no longer living in poverty.
In Genesis, Pharaoh is smitten with Sarah, and takes her for his wife. Therefore he spares Abraham and keeps him on, providing for him as his wife is Abraham's sister. But soon the Lord became angry at Abraham for his deceptions, and afflicted the Pharaoh's land with plagues. Pharaoh became angry at Abraham, questioned him about his relationship with Sarah, and Abraham and Sarah were banished from the land.
The film very much follows this storyline, but the differences, mainly after the farmer's (Pharaoh) discovery of the lie, are key in understanding the film's philosophy as opposed to the Bible's. Malick does not absolve his characters so easily, nor is he as easy to forgive as the Lord. Throughout, the land has looked on unsympathetically, dwarfing the characters in their own purgatory. The majority of the dialogue is the deadpan narration of the 13 year-old younger sister of Bill, played by Linda Manz. It is her conscience that drives the film, and we get the sense that unlike your typical cinematic innocence, she isn't particularly young in her vision of the world. It is likely telling she narrates events she wasn't even present for. Does she intuit, or fully fabricate, the death of the farmer and his realization of the deceit? As she states, "you are half angel and half devil," and she isn't absolved of this.
But then I think of the title and wonder where do I find this? In the middle section? No, here the characters are merely on borrowed time, waiting for the Lord and the land's wrath, waiting for their deception to catch up to them. I believe Malick never shows us these days, but in Linda's final scenes and in her closing dialogue, I think he presents hope, but not the kind God is promising. Rather, it is hope in the unknown and uncertainty of the future. I like to think she is going off to experience the days of heaven, free from the petty and the deception; off to find something of her own.
For years I have berated this film for its muted tones, for its failure to make any of the characters alluring enough to drive its story. But seeing it again, I was wrong. Malick isn't driving a story, but a feeling. The characters feel like mere images and specks against the lanscape of nature. They are objects of confusion. Nature is easier, it doesn't lie or cheat. Late in the film, Linda comments on people along the shore that "it was far off and you couldn't see what they were doing. They were probably calling for help or something--or they were trying to bury somebody or something." People confound, and it is nature that keeps us honest. The plagues that strike the land; Hell's emergence into the serenity; the distance put up between people; the wind's howling at sight of deceit; all these things point to a force simultaneously more complex and yet more simplistic than humanity.
In the end, God forgave Abraham, but Malick, and in particular Linda, do not forgive Bill. His death shows him attempting to save himself, leave them behind. When he is shot, Linda can only quip "Nobody's perfect." Indeed, we have all sinned, but some of us can look to the future, and can offer a prayer or thought about others. Linda's caring thoughts to the farmer's death show her as being compassionate beyond the rest of the petty characters. And he final lines, "I was hopin' things would work out for her. She was a good friend of mine," give her and the film a warmth and intimacy almost completely missing before. The future looks brighter indeed.
Everyone already knows the Deuteronomy passage that apparently lent itself to the title of the film. Its reference is to the bountiful days that await the fathers' sons and children as promised by the Lord as they live their lives as if heaven on earth. Of course, this is only a good promise as long as God's children do not stray from his blessings. Once outside the realm of God's love and providence, these days will be brought to the ground and a plague, God's wrath, will be reaped upon the Earth.
So it is that Bill and Abby, lovers playing siblings, should happen upon the land of the farmer. They are on the run from Bill's accidental murder of his foreman back in a Chicago factory. You could say it was the film's original sin, shot in a scene of agonizing fire and sound, muffling the human folly on display. They come to work the farm, to make a living. There is a shot as they enter this land that separates them from the known world: a train passes across an impossible tall bridge set against the sky.
Reason is not directly given for their lie about their relationship, but allow me to point to a different Biblical story: that of Abraham and Sarah. The story goes that as they entered Egypt, Abraham was frightened that if it was discovered such a lovely woman was his wife, he might be murdered and her taken from him. In the film, the lie is used as a means of separating the two characters, allowing for the attraction of the farmer to appear unchallenged. As with Abraham, Bill's own desires and fears drive him to whore his lover off; Abraham for self-preservation, Bill for a dream of no longer living in poverty.
In Genesis, Pharaoh is smitten with Sarah, and takes her for his wife. Therefore he spares Abraham and keeps him on, providing for him as his wife is Abraham's sister. But soon the Lord became angry at Abraham for his deceptions, and afflicted the Pharaoh's land with plagues. Pharaoh became angry at Abraham, questioned him about his relationship with Sarah, and Abraham and Sarah were banished from the land.
The film very much follows this storyline, but the differences, mainly after the farmer's (Pharaoh) discovery of the lie, are key in understanding the film's philosophy as opposed to the Bible's. Malick does not absolve his characters so easily, nor is he as easy to forgive as the Lord. Throughout, the land has looked on unsympathetically, dwarfing the characters in their own purgatory. The majority of the dialogue is the deadpan narration of the 13 year-old younger sister of Bill, played by Linda Manz. It is her conscience that drives the film, and we get the sense that unlike your typical cinematic innocence, she isn't particularly young in her vision of the world. It is likely telling she narrates events she wasn't even present for. Does she intuit, or fully fabricate, the death of the farmer and his realization of the deceit? As she states, "you are half angel and half devil," and she isn't absolved of this.
But then I think of the title and wonder where do I find this? In the middle section? No, here the characters are merely on borrowed time, waiting for the Lord and the land's wrath, waiting for their deception to catch up to them. I believe Malick never shows us these days, but in Linda's final scenes and in her closing dialogue, I think he presents hope, but not the kind God is promising. Rather, it is hope in the unknown and uncertainty of the future. I like to think she is going off to experience the days of heaven, free from the petty and the deception; off to find something of her own.
For years I have berated this film for its muted tones, for its failure to make any of the characters alluring enough to drive its story. But seeing it again, I was wrong. Malick isn't driving a story, but a feeling. The characters feel like mere images and specks against the lanscape of nature. They are objects of confusion. Nature is easier, it doesn't lie or cheat. Late in the film, Linda comments on people along the shore that "it was far off and you couldn't see what they were doing. They were probably calling for help or something--or they were trying to bury somebody or something." People confound, and it is nature that keeps us honest. The plagues that strike the land; Hell's emergence into the serenity; the distance put up between people; the wind's howling at sight of deceit; all these things point to a force simultaneously more complex and yet more simplistic than humanity.
In the end, God forgave Abraham, but Malick, and in particular Linda, do not forgive Bill. His death shows him attempting to save himself, leave them behind. When he is shot, Linda can only quip "Nobody's perfect." Indeed, we have all sinned, but some of us can look to the future, and can offer a prayer or thought about others. Linda's caring thoughts to the farmer's death show her as being compassionate beyond the rest of the petty characters. And he final lines, "I was hopin' things would work out for her. She was a good friend of mine," give her and the film a warmth and intimacy almost completely missing before. The future looks brighter indeed.