Director: Terrence Malick
Stars: Martin Sheen, Sissy Spacek, Warren Oates, Ramon Bieri
"He wanted to die with me and I dreamed of being lost forever in his
arms." A young couple goes on a Midwest crime spree in Terrence Malick's
hypnotically assured debut feature, based on the 1950s
Starkweather-Fugate murders. Fancying himself a rebel like James Dean,
twentysomething Kit (Martin Sheen) takes off with teen baton-twirler
Holly (Sissy Spacek) after shooting her father (Warren Oates) when he
tries to split the pair up.
Once bounty hunters discover their riverside
hiding place, Kit
and Holly head toward
Saskatchewan, leaving dead bodies in their wake. As the law closes in,
however, Holly gives herself up -- but Kit doesn't hold it against her,
as he basks in his new status as a momentary folk hero. Inaugurating the
use of voice-over narration that he would continue in Days of Heaven
(1978) and The Thin Red Line (1998), Malick juxtaposes Holly's flat
readings of her flowery romance-novel diary prose with the banal and
surreal details of their journey. Singularly inarticulate with each
other, Kit and Holly are more intrigued by mythic celebrity gestures, as
Holly peruses her fan magazines and Kit commemorates key moments before
orchestrating a properly dramatic capture for himself (complete with
the right hat). The sublime visuals lend a dreamlike beauty to the
couple's trip even as their actions are treated casually; Malick neither
glamorizes Kit and Holly nor consigns them to the bloody end of their
fame-fixated predecessors in Bonnie and Clyde (1967). With the couple's
opaque dialogue and Holly's fanzine dream narration, Malick further
denies an easy explanation for their crimes. Made for under 500,000
dollars, Badlands debuted at the 1973 New York Film Festival, along with
Martin Scorsese's Mean Streets, and was released within months of two
other outlaw-couple road movies, Steven Spielberg's The Sugarland
Express and Robert Altman's Thieves Like Us. Although Badlands did not
make an impression at the box office, its pictorial splendor and cool
yet disquieting narrative established Malick as one of the most
compelling artists to come out of early-'70s Hollywood. ~ Lucia Bozzola,
Rovi
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