The Tree Of Life reviewed by Mark Kermode

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ส.ค. 2024
  • Mark takes a look at director Terrence Malick's impressionistic drama, starring Brad Pitt and Sean Penn. The film has been dividing opinions since its debut at Cannes - what does the good doctor make of it?
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ความคิดเห็น • 296

  • @jamestaylormacarthur2258
    @jamestaylormacarthur2258 8 ปีที่แล้ว +327

    As a slight side note, this film had the best child acting I've ever seen.

    • @chrisshiel6438
      @chrisshiel6438 6 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Mud.

    • @The3rdGunman
      @The3rdGunman 6 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I was going to say the same thing. That kid in Mud was outstanding.

    • @-Roos97-
      @-Roos97- 5 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I think so too!! The child acting was superb, especially Jack!! So genuine and so realistic

    • @-Roos97-
      @-Roos97- 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      3rd Gunman One of the kids who played in Mud actually played in the Tree of Life. He plays Steve, the youngest son of Jessica Chastain and Brad Pitt’s characters :):)

    • @Lisa-qt4hh
      @Lisa-qt4hh 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      So good I agree, it felt so natural and especially the boy who plays young Jack was really a special presence in the film. His facial expressions and movements were all so good.

  • @adamjondo
    @adamjondo 10 ปีที่แล้ว +171

    That may be the best single movie review I've ever heard. The eloquence with which Kermode wrestled to channel his conflicted feelings was a drama in itself.

  • @thereturnoftheprodigalyams6763
    @thereturnoftheprodigalyams6763 3 ปีที่แล้ว +32

    I think that in terms of cinema people view this film with too much of a western cinematic understanding. This movie is a visual poem. Invoking sorrow, nostalgia, joy, acceptance. Just a great film.

    • @analazovic441
      @analazovic441 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      exactly ♥️♥️♥️

    • @CloseUpLover
      @CloseUpLover หลายเดือนก่อน

      Just a great piece of art

  • @ANGRYmuffin9000
    @ANGRYmuffin9000 7 ปีที่แล้ว +83

    Watched for the first time, and as a person who is now an atheist and also had a case of authoritative dad at home, the struggle depicted for the older boy was really touching to me.

    • @bobpolo2964
      @bobpolo2964 5 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Do you still identify as an atheist?

    • @nicholasguth5795
      @nicholasguth5795 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      bob polo do you still identify as a religious?

    • @hopelessent.1700
      @hopelessent.1700 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Weird how the movie is essentially an adaptation of the book of Job.

    • @adamfuller5640
      @adamfuller5640 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@nicholasguth5795 do you not ?

  • @Cloudrim
    @Cloudrim 12 ปีที่แล้ว +83

    Tree of Life was one of the first films in a very long time that genuinely made me reflect on my experiences and the time that I have spent on this planet. I believe if a film can make me think and reflect in such a way has enormous merit.

  • @jerchiury
    @jerchiury 8 ปีที่แล้ว +81

    This film is not about the family life, the loss of a child or remembrance. It is a fable of life, grace and nature, their intertwined relationship, and how we make sense of it, with the help of the story line. The narrative is merely a clever incarnation of this primary message in a more relatable manner. There are countless symbolism of the more abstract idea. If you think the dinosaur sequence is a waste think again. It is conveying a message about life and death, weakness and forgiveness, grace and nature, always enveloped in the fabric of our existence (and the universe's). The film's discrete narratives and long story-independent ten-minute long ending is almost a give away of the significance of the abstract thesis. You have to look at this film as a complete work of abstract art to penetrate deep into its secrets.

    • @prod.hxrford3896
      @prod.hxrford3896 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@shredbettystixx agreed. The imagery was very powerful in and of itself, but it just drags on and tests your patience. It’s like Terrence didn’t understand that brevity is the souls of wit.

  • @Poetic_Justice1962
    @Poetic_Justice1962 11 ปีที่แล้ว +42

    The Tree of Life is a masterpiece in every way. That's my review.

  • @Patrusfarr
    @Patrusfarr 8 ปีที่แล้ว +111

    The dinosaur part was good. It gave me sense of how ancient the world and life is, and how minuscule I am compared to it. Life has been going on for millions of years. Lives just as complicated as mine briefly coming and going billions of times over.

    • @lexxandera
      @lexxandera 7 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      But, but, but Marks says it was a mistake!

    • @Safwan37x
      @Safwan37x 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Moreover, that came after a line when the wife said who are we to you? and the magnificent Lacrimosa universe scene that the great creature which is the dinosaur and an indication of the start of the earth and also is a response to the question being asked, showing how human seems small in everything huge in the universe, yet God close to us and we should be connected to him.

    • @1qwasz12
      @1qwasz12 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      How old is the universe?

  • @ShyGuyTravel
    @ShyGuyTravel 3 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    Count me among the few that this film really spoke to. I think it's the best film of the 2010s. Mark's point about the need to look at transcendence through the corner of your eye was brilliant. I love the fact that the Tree of Life has the audacity to do both the sidelong view and head-on view - the small family drama juxtaposed with the God's eye view of creation. The dinosaurs, etc. didn't bother me, in fact I found it remarkable.
    Marks' review is a lesson for aspiring critics, and for the "critics of the critics" who believe a good review is one that most accurately reflects your own views.

    • @HAL--gb6uf
      @HAL--gb6uf 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Nice comment

    • @lukedoyle2770
      @lukedoyle2770 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      This film really spoke to far, far more than a few. It’s one of those like Synecdoche, New York or something. Sure, masses of people haven’t seen it, or even know it exists. But for many, many people it is one of their favourite films of all time

  • @Jamesbharris2
    @Jamesbharris2 13 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    The thing about this film is you can knock it, say it's pretentious, overambitious, ridiculous even... But when I went to see it, after the lights went down, and this beautiful music started, and they lost their son, I began to cry. And I don't cry easily. 'The Tree of Life' is a beautiful work of art and it would be churlish not celebrate it.

  • @Autonova
    @Autonova 10 ปีที่แล้ว +159

    the dinosaur scene was my favourite, not sure what the problem is. i thought it was astonishing and moving.

    • @Sphere723
      @Sphere723 7 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      You were moved by Raptor-Jesus .... really?

    • @TowerOfTheWest
      @TowerOfTheWest 7 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Funny how he doesn't mind the larger than life universe / space scenes but the dinosaurs are "too far fetched" of an idea for the audience to accept.

    • @BrandonDanz
      @BrandonDanz 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Agree!! It reiterated the insignificance of first world problems. And I believe the long length of that segment was necessary to impress upon us that humankind has been but a blip in the Earth's history...

    • @mistressmadeye1480
      @mistressmadeye1480 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Really? I bet you loved the dinosaur stepping on the other ones head.BREATH TAKING!!!!!!

    • @Autonova
      @Autonova 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@mistressmadeye1480 it's a scene depicting the birth of compassion, so yes

  • @danielcarlson3355
    @danielcarlson3355 7 ปีที่แล้ว +39

    I saw the movie as a series of prayers/ thoughts overheard by God, and the movie seems to be largely from God's point of view. The creation of the Universe scene is presented as the answer to Chastain's question posed just before it. The quote from Job at the beginning is the key to understanding the answer. I figure the dinosaur scene is important 1. because that species became dominant after a long series of evolutionary leaps being shown and 2. because it's about a creation that had its day and faced extinction...but not before one of the dinosaurs was shown sparing the life of the injured one on the ground. Sort of a "first example of empathy", a major evolutionary step, in a symbolic sense. Humans have the potential to evolve even more and take this empathic response further, by walking in the way of grace rather than nature. The rest of the movie is about the tension between those two choices, throughout a life. Just my interpretation.

  • @fuckem187
    @fuckem187 12 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Either you like this film or you dont, but please dont say you think its "pretentious" just say you didnt get it or like it. I hate when people describe a film as "Pretentious" a film trying to claim it has higher importance than it really does ? no this film certainly isnt that. It's Malick's view or meditation on life and its meaning and how we journey through life FROM HIS PERSPECTIVE. either you like it or you dont. simples.

  • @bradleymiddleton3473
    @bradleymiddleton3473 8 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    The Tree of Life is an incredible film. I think even the smallest vignettes and sequences have a startling power. Malik is a true genius of a filmmaker. As for Kermode's lukewarm review, I find Malik is quite open with his doubt about God and the divine, Jessica Chastain's character is so often asking questions of God, 'Lord, why?' 'Where were you?' 'Did you know what happened?' 'Do you care?' As he is with Javier Bardem's priest, going through a crisis of faith in To The Wonder. These characters remind me of Ishmael in Moby Dick, seeing the blankness of an unanswering God in everything including the whiteness of the whale. It isn't pantheistic at all. Malik introduces doubt into this film in a big way and I suspect that Kermode's reading of it and the 'cynicism' that got up and walked out is his particular brand of atheism reeling at Malik's viewpoint. But then, why should anyone listen to Kermode, he put Minions on his ten favourite films list for the first six months of 2015. Strange chap.

  • @BrandonDanz
    @BrandonDanz 4 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    The Tree of Life is a masterpiece in American cinema. It is a work of art as authentic as a van Gogh painting.

    • @jsammo6528
      @jsammo6528 ปีที่แล้ว

      Chorus's of Amen's dude.. I mean... dude

  • @Cebelihle1
    @Cebelihle1 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    The child acting in this film is phenomenal. Have you guys seen "Shoplifters"? It's a Japanese film with great child actors. Check it out.
    Respect to both Brad Pitt and Jessica Chastain as well.

  • @NebulaFilmFanatic
    @NebulaFilmFanatic 12 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    It's really a stunning, flawed, and beautiful cinematic experience.

  • @michaelz9892
    @michaelz9892 5 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Nothing else in cinema is quite like this film. A masterpiece.

  • @Auntkekebaby
    @Auntkekebaby 10 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    I don't love the walk on the beach. I'm on the fence about the dinosaurs but I think it's a wonderful piece. To me, its about the "divinity in nature" and not religion. Loved everything else.

  • @dhairorobayo9182
    @dhairorobayo9182 9 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    i liked the dinosaurs scenes, it shows a parallel situation with human race, from the rising, the behavior capacities to its extinction

  • @dvg87
    @dvg87 9 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    the sort of experience that Malick is trying to invoke in the film seeks to put the narrative aside and let the lens become the narrator instead.

  • @alaciacreek4977
    @alaciacreek4977 6 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I have to say that I'm not really very well versed in film, and I'm not very familiar with the director but I do enjoy watching movies. This was one that had caught my eye for some time, although I admittedly avoided it because of the poor reviews. I finally watched it this film last weekend, and I thought it was incredibly powerful. I actually hardly noticed that it was missing dialogue. I viewed it as though we were peaking inside Jack's mind, and thought the story was told well with music and the whispers of consciousness. I think that often our own thoughts flit about, and our memories are skewed, often glorifying one parent over the other. I'm a mother of three, and the movie was particularly moving when it showed the early childhood of the boys. It made me think of my own experiences, and made me feel overwhelmed with absolute glory that I've been able to love and be loved and to be a mother in such a vast universe, where we are so small. I didn't particularly like the long creation segment (I actually skipped through it), but this was a movie that will stick with me for a long time.

  • @TxxT33
    @TxxT33 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I cannot be friends with people who dislike mallick... especially post Haitius Malick

  • @Lee_Forre
    @Lee_Forre 11 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I think for the most part you're right. But have you seen BARAKA or even the QATSI trilogy? Once you begin to consider film as a total visual medium, you can accept cinema without narrative. TREE OF LIFE still works for me as a hybrid silent film. This and TO THE WONDER both are more about the moods, expressions, sequencing rather than act I, II, typical linear structure. Important to recognize this as experimental rather than expecting something more common.

  • @michaeldwatkins_
    @michaeldwatkins_ 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I will say, having watched it for the first time today, and going into it as a bit of a cynic being aware of its reputation that the harsher reviews that it had cultivated had bestowed upon it, I found it thoroughly enjoyable. I wouldn't say that I'm a massive sentimentalist either, but nothing about the narrative course that it takes - yes, even the dinosaur section - bothered me. The voice-overs, yes, I could absolutely do without, but to anyone that watches this review before watching the film itself, I'd just note that the stuff Kermode didn't get on with based on what he says here, is all pretty much out of the way in the first half-hour. The child acting is superb, it's one of the most visually stunning works of cinema I can ever recall seeing, and it isn't anywhere near as naïve or "lovey" as a lot of people would have you believe.

  • @TheJonnyEnglish
    @TheJonnyEnglish 5 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    This film changed my life, then he did it again with Knight of Cups and Song to Song.
    By far my favorite director.

    • @TxxT33
      @TxxT33 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Me too! Glad to run into you

  • @williamtalbot2125
    @williamtalbot2125 8 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    This reviewer has got the point of this film wrong, the family is not getting over the death of a child through the main portion of the film, as at the start of the film they're in a different house and Chastain looks older, and the furniture and decor is more modern, than the house they live in, in the main section of the film. It's implied that it is the second eldest son which dies and that it is after the main section of the film. It's also implied he drowns, by the several sequences - one where he is seen swimming out of his underwater room, one where the child drowns at the pool/river and the other where the clown is seen submerged under water. Futhermore at the end of the film, you see the second eldest child walk out of the house into the tundra, this imagery evokes that he has died as none of the other family members follow him. The film itself is focussed on a child developing more complex emotions and losing innocence. The scenes of creation emulate this, as the earth goes from a basic form to complexity. In the creation scene, we firstly see a sea dinosaur bleeding, after being attacked by the sharks - the music played her is the same as that played after Jack has stolen the girls dress, showing the loss of innocence and increasing complexity of emotions. Secondly the dinosaur exhibiting mercy is a reflection of Jack learning forgiveness, after he shoots his brother in the hand he then apologises soon after.

    • @brianconnolly6551
      @brianconnolly6551 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      nicely put. i watched this last night and it had me riveted to the scree. utterly beautiful film. for me, it's memory fragments. what we're watching is sean Penn remembering. at least during the narrative part..his memories of life with his brothers and especially his father...I believe the end was his own death and the peace it brought with it for him.

  • @theotormon
    @theotormon 12 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I'm not always crazy about Kermode, but this is one of the most insightful reviews I've seen in quite a while. He talks specifically about the movie, gives a great sense of it, its feel, its strenghts and weaknesses, while also speaking cogently and sensitively about larger issues with the nature of art and criticism. I actually feel like I gained a little clarity while listening to him here.

  • @markashdown5374
    @markashdown5374 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Years ago the sign on the box office said, "If you don't like the movie, there are no refunds." So I walked away. Then I turned back because I did come to see the movie. For me it had one of the most extraordinary moments of cinema. In one of the most painful moments a person could encounter, the death of a child, the film diverts to remind us of the absolute miracle of life and the potential billions of years of creation that had to unfold just for us to even be born and to experience the worst day we could possibly ever imagine. That life truly is a miracle at every level and in our worst or darkest moments, we should still strive to find gratitude for just the gift to experience even a bad day.

  • @murdnum
    @murdnum 8 ปีที่แล้ว +38

    A great , beautiful meditation on life and our place in it.

    • @domzbu
      @domzbu 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      and it’s place in us

  • @oliviawilson8161
    @oliviawilson8161 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The book of Job is about suffering ( which ultimately ends with Gods grace and blessings) And here we see that such is life, there is suffering. Which if met with Grace we can enjoy the fruits of life, if met with nature we can get caught up in a tangle of regret, unhappiness and anger.
    There is a choice in which we are free to make (freewill)
    I feel there are so many levels at which there can be many insights and aha moments about life in this film.
    The main insight into life is that the character that Sean Penn played, lived his life ‘natures way’ and could not break free from past suffering which still in a way held him hostage and caused suffering in the present day.
    On this day as he reminisced and agonised over his childhood sufferings and regrets, he purged all this ill feeling (including forgiving his father), in this purging he released natures way and grace fell upon him, (because God does not forsake his “children” ). And his pain and suffering was lifted.
    The ending shows acceptance and rejoicing of suffering (and death) as part and parcel of this magnificent life!
    ❤️❤️❤️
    Loved this film! I am sure it must be watched several times to fully absorb all its insights and realisations.

  • @jamesrobertson9012
    @jamesrobertson9012 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    To me, the dinosaur scene always represented the relationship between Jack and his father, but it could mean anything knowing Malick. I don't know if it works but it's just...there

  • @apollocobain8363
    @apollocobain8363 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This film expanded the language of cinema. It defies comparison to other films in part because it isn't telling a linear story. Spoke to my soul in a language my soul understood, somewhat like the music that pervades it. The best of it simply evokes and calls to our own experiences. It rolls like a dream that is strange and familiar at the same time, where the living and the dead see each other again and connections overcome physics and time.

  • @hahaha430
    @hahaha430 9 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    my friend had the perfect impression of this film 'it really dares you to turn it off, so you keep watching just to say you did it'.

  • @pricklyphlox
    @pricklyphlox 9 ปีที่แล้ว +34

    non-irony is good

    • @MrAkashvj96
      @MrAkashvj96 9 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      pricklyphlox That's true. But the problem is the ending, where we witness earth and water, life and death coexisting together, works only if you're a religious person (particularly if you're a christian). His other films didn't have this problem.

    • @andrew5500
      @andrew5500 9 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Nameless Paladin The ending is *not* the afterlife. It is a metaphorical situation happening only inside adult Jack's imagination. Notice that everybody (except Jack) appears as they did during Jack's childhood. It represents adult Jack's mental catharsis, where the loose ends that have haunted him for his entire life become resolved.

    • @el_mal_de_ojo
      @el_mal_de_ojo 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@MrAkashvj96 Totally wrong. You absolutely do not have to be religious to enjoy this film.

  • @taosalyte
    @taosalyte 12 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    This is now my favourite film

  • @ajrnagy100
    @ajrnagy100 12 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    It's not, it's one of the greatest films ever made and will be remembered as such.

  • @bonnie43uk
    @bonnie43uk 12 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Just finished watching it, I quite enjoyed it, ..Malick has that Kubrickian touch in a lot of scenes. I loved the early scenes with Jessica Chastain and the very young children. Brad Pitt was excellent as the tough father, and the kids performance was utterly believable. Not everyone's cup of tea, but it held my attention throughout.

  • @Nataloff
    @Nataloff 13 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    This is the first coherent review I've heard of this film and it made me want to see/endure it. And I don't much care for Malick's work, either.

  • @walidb123
    @walidb123 13 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Some people walked out of the cinema where I saw it but personally I'm glad that it was not only made but has also seen such a wide release despite how experimental it is (I'm sure Pitt, Penn and the director's prestige obviously helped.) I went in with a decent understanding of Malick's films so overall I enjoyed and appreciated it on many levels, more so in hindsight. The abstract and difficult nature of it will clearly divide people but if given the chance, it's an incredibly rewarding film.

  • @bennoclassico
    @bennoclassico 11 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Basically everything I was gonna say. Malick is reinventing cinematic language for his own gain. And the dinosaur bit was inspired, not contrived like some people are making out. The Tree Of Life was everything I wanted it to be, and more.

  • @theotormon
    @theotormon 12 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Your idea that nobody using modern techniques could compare with your idol is a little silly. Kubrick used what he did because it was what was available at the time. The constraints of his day certainly had the advantage of forcing deliberation upon his directorial decisions. And the freedom digital allows does often cause directors to find too-easy, too-quick visual formulations. But a filmmaker with self-restraint and a deliberate mind can accomplish anything traditional FX can do, and more.

  • @jonathanbrewster7823
    @jonathanbrewster7823 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Disagree. This is my favorite film & by far the most explicitly existential film I’ve ever seen.

  • @neilwallaceandlolawallace1969
    @neilwallaceandlolawallace1969 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Watched it lastnight, loved all the actors, but we both got completely lost and bored, it's a well made boring film with moments of pure magic that mean absolutely nothing ,absolutely love this film maker who got it wrong this time.
    Best War Film Ever Made!
    Without doubt
    The Thin Red Line.

  • @Experimentalfilms123
    @Experimentalfilms123 13 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I loved it. Its the first Malick film that I really loved the first time without repeat viewing.

  • @jonathan45278
    @jonathan45278 11 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I saw the film as the pivotal time in a persons life when they must decide to be good or bad. The scene with the car jacked up with the hated father under it while the boy looks to see if anyone is watching. How easy it would be for the boy to dis-engage the jack, thus killing his father. I think the dinosaur scene was great. I interpreted it as the first time empathy & compassion were carried out. The raptors would now be ruling the world in not for the asteroid that hit earth.

  • @msisisful
    @msisisful 11 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    try to enjoy the emotions that the image and sound bring- it is a dream....

  • @xXxJokerManxXx
    @xXxJokerManxXx 11 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Ahh.. so Doug Trumbull did the speciall effects on the cosmic part..
    I knew it, because he was also the effects director of 2001

  • @ciaran6171
    @ciaran6171 8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I first learned that there was a sort of morality in the dinosaur world - where some dinosaurs were good and some bad, and some that would positively save the day - in Jurassic Park. Malick was not the first. He simply has a more nuanced morality than - yes! - Spielberg.

  • @ajrnagy100
    @ajrnagy100 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    Much appreciated.
    I understand how hard it can be to convey tone over youtube comments.

  • @roncinephile
    @roncinephile ปีที่แล้ว

    Trying to put The Tree of Life into words is a hell of a task. Incredible attempt. Kudos.

  • @avastyer
    @avastyer 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    @DoctorHello Hi there. I agree that it was not supposed to be taken literally. That's why I interpret it as Sean Penn's reconciliation with his past rather than his literally being in heaven - which is how many people, including those who hooted with derision at its Cannes screening, have interpreted it. It seemed to me as if Malick wanted to say that love and forgiveness are heavenly, if not heaven per se.

  • @OkLetsPlayFilms
    @OkLetsPlayFilms 7 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    The middle of the film was some of the most emotional character development i have seen but the beginning and end looked like a long car advert

  • @snakey973
    @snakey973 10 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    I agree fully with this review

  • @theotormon
    @theotormon 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    On your point about Kubrick, fair enough about him pushing limits. Regarding high-quality art being time consuming, though, obviously from my original post I agree with you. That is why I say CG is often harmful (it is too easy) -- but also why it doesn't have to be harmful (because diliberation can be applied there as well). The thing that matters is not where the effect came from, computer or handmade, but rather the heart and care that goes into the effect's realization.

  • @brennenspice6098
    @brennenspice6098 12 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I agree with the stupid critisism, but I just was not grabbed by it, I appreciated it, but I did not love it. Kind of like the fountain

  • @Pi10sco
    @Pi10sco 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    I totally agree with his last statement. For those who have suffered a loss or who witness pain and death daily (I work in an intensive care unit), this film does resonate and bring one to a ?catharsis/?resolution/?consolation. Most of us going to a movie won't necessarily be in such a frame of mind; entertainment is what we usually seek, not introspection.

  • @videoclerks5135
    @videoclerks5135 12 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Best and most balanced review I have seen for this movie. Great job doctor.

  • @GiantSandles
    @GiantSandles 8 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    There are moments of Tree of Life which are pretty amazing, but the 20-odd minute sequence which doesn't have any humans in it from what I can remember culminating in the dinosaur scene was beyond too much. The stuff about Sean Penn's character growing up was great but a lot of the stuff outside of that was just utter nonsense. It also seems odd to me that you'd cast an actor as good as Sean Penn in your movie just to have him walk around looking somewhere between angry and confused

  • @dbob3405
    @dbob3405 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Malik is at heart a Christian filmmaker. If you approach it from a Christian perspective, it resonates deeply. If you don’t, it will likely leave you cold

  • @ryanbarnhart8295
    @ryanbarnhart8295 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Tree of Life is a perfectly human film. Flawed, digressing, non-sensical, yet meaningful and real.

  • @n4mu2b
    @n4mu2b 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    When watching this movie,you have to 'enter' this movie, as you would a work of art. The whispers seem to be the deep thoughts he hears when entering past childhood memories. The child in this man's memory comes to terms with life in all its glory and misery, even back to why we are all here and how mankind began. I believe the child in us must meet the adult we've become in order to resolve difficult issues hidden in the soul and to realize how we stand in the big picture of creation.

  • @CarrotBallSquash
    @CarrotBallSquash 13 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I like the good doctor, so I'm going to offer him a quick refresher on how to recognize a masterpiece.
    Inception=not a masterpiece
    The Tree Of Life=a masterpiece
    right then carry on.

  • @edgardevice
    @edgardevice 6 ปีที่แล้ว

    Most people don't seem to understand that Malick isn't setting down laws with these voice-overs. He is posing questions. He usually directly contradicts any character's edicts later in the film.

  • @avastyer
    @avastyer 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    @DoctorHello I agree with your interpretation of the dinosaur scene. However, I also think this is why many people have reacted negatively towards that scene (and the film in general) as it appears to anthropomorphise dinosaurs. I believe that the scene can be viewed as I described it and also explains the confusions that arise in the family, between Pitt and Penn. As a boy, he asks himself: "Why do I do things I hate?" This also muddies the simplistic dualities that people have criticised.

  • @jsammo6528
    @jsammo6528 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This film really touched me - in my pain receptors, not just utter nonsense but whisperingly so

  • @As_ad_A
    @As_ad_A 13 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    lol how ironic that kermode finishes with "God bless him" when he's been showing his reticence throughout for anything that is openly religious or spiritual. The fact that he said it without irony and with sincerity shows that it definately has taken an effect on him rather then just another one of those "oh, its well meaning and humanistic but just doesn't hit the mark intended" type of films.

  • @ThierryLoa
    @ThierryLoa 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    Dear Kermode, I'm surprised in your review and analysis of the film, you didn't mention anything about 'the book of Job' which is clearly at the center of this film and its themes and structure. Malick gives us a hint in the opening as he quotes from the book. The space sequence comes right after the mother questions God by asking why God took his son away, and like in the book of Job, God answers by showing what he's been up to: hence the space sequence and creation of the universe etc...

  • @bennoclassico
    @bennoclassico 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    Again, agreed - I think when he said narrative, he meant conventional structure. Of course anything filmed cut against something else filmed is instantly a narrative, if we're talking basics. Malick was heading in the direction of a loose/poetic narrative and hit the nail on the head with The Tree Of Life. To The Wonder explored the method a little deeper and I see it as a kind of 'b-side' to the (frankly superior) Tree Of Life. But both are beautiful...Knight Of Cups soon I hope.

  • @WilliamBrownGuitar
    @WilliamBrownGuitar 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    This analysis was much better than most. What does Malick believe ? Whilst still perhaps clinging to modern pantheism and cliched scientism, he seems close to Christianity in seeing the real possibility of hope, purpose and an eternal perspective.

  • @Cybjon
    @Cybjon 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    No he wasn't. If you read the credits, the credit for "Special Photographic Effects Director" goes to Stanley Kubrick. Trumbull was one of 3 supervisors; the others were Con Pederson and Wally Veevers, and there where literally hundreds of other technicians. Reportedly, Kubrick was really furious that Trumbull got all the credit in the press. Trumbull's main contribution was, along with Zorin Perisic, the stargate and the nebulae-type things seen in that sequence and solving matte work problems.

  • @dariusasghari
    @dariusasghari 13 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Films that contain high spirituality levels and abstract originality, always get badly reviewed e.g Enter The Void which was highly original. This film is wonderful.

  • @ThierryLoa
    @ThierryLoa 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    Following my previous comment: people are being quick to jump to conclusion about the film. Many people (and some film critics) forgot that cinema can be a form of art, that linear narrative isn't the only form of cinema. For instance, when you look at a Leonardo Da Vinci's painting, do you take one glance and say 'I got it' or 'I don't get it' to then walk away? No, you would need to contemplate the painting and reflect upon it. Tree of Life calls for contemplation and reflection.

  • @jsammo6528
    @jsammo6528 ปีที่แล้ว

    Chorus's of Amen's... yup we all love them (jeez)

  • @theotormon
    @theotormon 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    You're misreading me. I never said "outdated." I said "dated." Very different. (I think 2001 looks gorgeous, but much of it looks little artificial, for example the flatness of the objects in the docking sequence, something you would not see now.) I also didn't say that CG always looks realistic. Honestly, neither FX nor CG look totally convincing most of the time. Just a select few of both look convincing or artistically impressive. And even those select few tend to look less so with age.

  • @ThierryLoa
    @ThierryLoa 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    @avastyer The beach scene could be interpreted in many ways. It wasn't meant to be taken literally, it's more experiential and allegorical than anything else. Whether or not they died and are in heaven, however the idea being explored is love, forgiveness and reconciliation indeed. The beach scene could be interpreted as heaven is on earth if we love and forgive one another. The dinosaur scene is about empathy. A prehistoric creature exercising empathy. It's consistent with the film.

  • @RichardKleiner
    @RichardKleiner 12 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I've seen the movie. It was a 2 hour, 15 minute screensaver.

  • @ThierryLoa
    @ThierryLoa 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    @avastyer Further, Pitt's character represents Nature while the mother represents Grace. Nature is strong, bold and beautiful but can be brutal and harsh -- Survival of the fittest. These ideas are part of the father's character and could well explain his attitude toward his sons, teaching them how to be strong, brave and disciplined otherwise they'll be overpowered by others.

  • @tinyturnip7676
    @tinyturnip7676 10 ปีที่แล้ว

    I didn't care much for Tree of Life; even though several people gave me the pretentious "it's art" explanation to the surreal nature of film. Thanks to this review; I do have a more appreciative understanding of Terrence Malick and his work, even though I'm not a fan of Tree of Life.

  • @65g4
    @65g4 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    I remember seeing it in the theatre for the first time and not quite understanding it. Over the years ive really loved it more and more and think it is a great movie

  • @Stockmuncher
    @Stockmuncher 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    My mum saw this and she said it was beautifully shot but dull. My dad fell asleep apparently. On another topic, it seems like Kermode really gets on Mayo's nerves sometimes. It could just be Mayo's way, sort of haughty, but look at 1:16 and tell me he's not getting cross with Kermode.

  • @bransby
    @bransby 11 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Just finished watching it and it's almost as boring as Melancholia. The music alongside the space sequence was incredible, and I didn't even mind the dinosaurs, but then the whole thing degenerated into a tedious "meaning of life" thing, and apparently the meaning of life is having kids, so up yours childless couples.

  • @robertjordan355
    @robertjordan355 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Kermode once again wildly off the mark. The dinosaur scene, and the entire sequence to which it belongs, is there to undermine the anthropocentric frame by which we tend to view the 'meaning of life', the 'meaning of existence' , 'of the universe' etc; and yet Kermode dismisses it for precisely anthropocentric reasons - it's too much, it's not relevant to the human narrative (which, by the way, is the real site of transcendence according to Kermode says).

  • @WAAAAAAAAAAAY
    @WAAAAAAAAAAAY 12 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    TOL was a nice cinematic experience and [even though I've never been religious in any way] I did not have a problem with the spirituality in the film. However I began to lose patience with the Sean Penn sections/voicover which just reminded me of a perfume advert. There were times that i felt that it was too long and meandering and after seeing it I did not feel that i needed to see it again on dvd......it's not that i didn't like it I think it's just that i need narrative
    :)

  • @Carfer22
    @Carfer22 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    It was the brother (Sean Penn) who was remembering, wasn't it? Surely in this respect it was about him forgiving both himself and his parents for the ills that came before. I thought he (Penn) was accepting his past, and obviously that fed into the wider metaphorical point Malick was making about life in general.

  • @theotormon
    @theotormon 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    Witty reply but an unfair example. Kubrick is a special case since arguably no big budget director has come along since him that has his technical vision. (Before his films, what would you have to go back to for such splendor? 1933 King Kong, maybe.) Better to compare the standard CG of today with standard FX of 2001's day: 1968. That same year saw Planet of the Apes. I'd say the FX of the original Planet of the Apes and the recent one are about on par, cool and cheesy in equal measure.

  • @lordmunch1
    @lordmunch1 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    well said, but what i think is that you can't have themes with out narrative. I mean you can't really explore theme with out story, which is narrative.

  • @durango-CODEBUILDER
    @durango-CODEBUILDER 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    I thought the dinosaur section was demonstrating the continuation of progress of life since its genesis. But also to show the vulnerability and perhaps the insignificance of life... ?

  • @TomWyn123
    @TomWyn123 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    I watched this film but stopped at around the 10min mark because I thought I knew where it was going. Then I heard what Kermode said about the dinosaurs, and i knew I had made a grievous error. Love this film.

  • @MrGeoffHilton
    @MrGeoffHilton 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    I was really affected by this film, especially the white dwarf segment which will happen in 5 billion years, and the thought that not a single atom of life will exist at this point and probably hasn't for 3 billion years before this, the end of something incredibly special, all history, science, terrestrial life and human doings lost forever.

  • @RossCampbell1992
    @RossCampbell1992 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    Because all of that anthropomorphism and great storytelling through parables taught anybody anything as clear as this abstract work of art has done.

  • @ThierryLoa
    @ThierryLoa 13 ปีที่แล้ว

    Following my previous comment (2): Tree of Life reminded me of what cinema can do as a form of and medium for expression, art, philosophy and storytelling. It reminded me of Andrei Tarkovski's works. It reminded me of my own childhood as it brought back certain childhood memories and feelings of mine. We need more films like Tree-of-Life, or at least more attempts at making such type of cinema; otherwise cinema will be forever hijacked by the Michael Bay and brainless action CGI flicks.

  • @theotormon
    @theotormon 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    No individual talent? I could similarly say Harryhausen's work was done with dolls and therefore requires no talent. But that wouldn't be an actual argument, just a tautology. The same with what you say. Also, 2001's FX enchant us, yes, but hardly look realistic to modern eyes. They have "aged" just like CG usually ages. Neither is objectively better. Traditional FX has that "glow" for you because you have a penchant for it (so do I, by the way), but many disagree with us.

  • @Cloudrim
    @Cloudrim 12 ปีที่แล้ว

    Some very interesting thoughts. I pretty much agree with what Kermode is saying here, particularly with regards to how completely unabashed it is. I'd argue that to call this film pretentious (which you're certainly entitled to) is to skirt over just how heartfelt it is and how much effort Malick poured into it. I don't think anyone can deny that the cinematography is nothing short of stunning throughout, for instance. Overwrought? Almost definitely. A film that needs to be seen? Absolutely.

  • @llac_zhonghuajia
    @llac_zhonghuajia 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    I think the dinosaur sequence has a meaning. It reflects the relationship between the two elder brothers.

  • @jameskunisch5747
    @jameskunisch5747 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    As you lose your youth and life no longer has the magical powers that seemed to have presented itself , cynicism and ennui take its place. Supertramp Lyrics of the Logical Song is the best quote for this movie.

  • @Paperbagman555
    @Paperbagman555 10 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I finished this movie and almost agree with everything you say. Perhaps I wasn't in the right "frame of mind", but I found most of the non-narrative sequences a chore to sit through. Beautifully shot - Malick's\Lubezki's craft is extraordinary - but tediously long and it left me with a mixed opinion of the film.

  • @timeticker326
    @timeticker326 11 ปีที่แล้ว

    I am also on your side. 'Sloppy' is a bad term for it, however formulaic is a better term to describe the cinematography in this movie.
    Ooh let's change the perspective and show a character's emotion through facial expressions while soft operatic music plays in the background. Then let's do it for EVERY SINGLE FUCKIN SCENE aside from a few scenes with scripted dialogue which were all already shown in the trailer.

  • @Nifava
    @Nifava 4 ปีที่แล้ว

    The only thing I would cut off from this movie is Sean Penn. Too much Sean Penn, and he was reportedly pissed because his character ended up being a lot smaller in the editing process. Otherwise, I LOVE Tree of Life. It's deeply moving and gets to me.

  • @gavinohlhauser1258
    @gavinohlhauser1258 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The movie is Christian monotheistic, not pantheistic

    • @albertkim7882
      @albertkim7882 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You heard the Nicean Creed in the film?

    • @bastiat8322
      @bastiat8322 11 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Malick is a devout Christian. All his films since TTRL are Christian. The title is from Genesis. The quote at the start is from Job. There is an extended Theistic evolution scene. The characters repeatedly pray, quote or paraphrase The Bible. The film itself is a re-enactement of Job. There is repeatedly Christian imagery. There is a scene where Penn chooses grace by walking through a door in the.middle of nowhere. Not getting that this is a deeply Christian film shows that you probably kniw very little about actual Christianity.