I always leave a Terrence Malick film with my mind still
cloudy with its cadence, and my eyes seeing the world more closely. He’s always
been a poetic filmmaker, prone to gliding away from obvious plot progression
through visual metaphor and a roaming curiosity for finding the beauty, the
sublime, in any given moment. Lately, though, he’s been drifting further away
from narrative. Where once his artful and spiritual approach was tied to the
likes of a World War II film (The Thin
Red Line) or a tale of colonial America (The New World), he now digs into his character’s minds with
increasingly elliptical and empathetic discursiveness. He builds repeating
patterns of images and rhyming, rhythmic, trance-like editing. Through The Tree of Life and To the Wonder and now his latest, Knight of Cups, he’s been drawn to
similar images: beatific but sad women, stern fathers, people running barefoot
on wet sand, hands gliding along surfaces smooth (stone, sheets, running water,
skin) and textured (hair, grass, leaves). Does he repeat himself? Very well,
then he repeats himself.
In Knight of Cups
story and character are gathered only in flashes, flowing forth not in scenes
but in impressions, moods, juxtapositions. Malick’s recurring images are the
only entry point, and as a result it continues his trend toward gradually more
obscurant and opaque films, increasingly alienating for anyone who can’t quite
get on his wavelength or forgo skepticism about the sincerity of his
intentions. But there’s real meditative, contemplative power for those of us
who can. This new film stars Christian Bale as a disillusioned Hollywood
screenwriter wandering through a womanizing, glamorous life in Los Angeles. But
this is no hectic star-struck satire. Malick takes his style and approach to
urban environs for the first time, but finds the intimate and the natural
growing through. Every woman the man interacts with gets taken to the beach and
cavorts in the puddles and waves. Gardens and boulevards express themselves
through concrete and surround glassy mansions. One cameo-stuffed sequence finds
a party in a palatial mansion, but Malick’s eye is often drawn to the mountains
beyond.
This is an ethereal and spiritual story of a man who feels
hollow, who tries to fill the void with women (a terrific lineup: Cate
Blanchett, Natalie Portman, Freida Pinto, Imogen Poots, Teresa Palmer), with
family (a deadbeat brother, Wes Bentley; an imposing father, Brian Dennehy; a
warm mother, Cherry Jones), with nature, with religion (a priest played by
Armin Mueller-Stahl). But he can’t quite make the pieces fit. He’s a pilgrim
without progress (the first voice we hear is Ben Kingsley reading from John
Bunyan’s 1678 text), going through the motions. Not even an earthquake or a
robbery can shake him from his haze of disaffected yearning. He wants to be
made whole, and yet can’t figure out how to fill the missing parts of his soul.
There’s a solemn sadness to the film’s hovering beauty, Emmanuel Lubezki’s
luminous camera breathing and moving on a plane of enlightenment the character
can’t. It floats, slowly tracking or pushing, distracted by beauty all around.
It follows a stream of consciousness, of memory, poetic associations,
intuitive connections, casual and tactile expressions of faith and philosophy.
Bale walks along empty beaches and vacant backlots, stands
stranded in the desert, sees homeless and hurting people on sidewalks and in
clinics, hobnobs with Hollywood elites, rolls about with lithe naked women,
sinks into pools. He’s drifting through experiences, part of them without being
a part. Tarot cards, agents, parents, lovers, all have advice to impart about
what gives life meaning. Each person - a talented cast posing and maneuvering, each bringing a different flavor and tone into the mix - has an effect on him. And yet there are no direct dialogue exchanges of any
import as scenes slide and collide, linger on silences and flow with
wall-to-wall impassioned murmuring voice over and classical music cut with bits
of score and rock. The film is a fog, rootless, directionless, adding up to
great meaning that the character can’t access. Strangely, this walls off the
audience at times. I felt its yearning for completion, was often moved by it, and still had moments when
I stared at the screen in befuddlement as images collected while only
occasionally connecting.
Perhaps the key to unlocking this entrancing, beguiling,
beautiful mystery of a film comes when Bale imagines (or is it actually
happening?) a rooftop confrontation with his stubborn but frail father. The old
man laments that he thought as he aged everything about life would begin to
make sense, but instead he’s sad to find nothing but a confusing tangle of
messy memories. The film finds moments of intense emotional drama and
thoroughly somnambulant despair, holding them both at the same remove, behind
artful glass and sacred aloofness. Moments of pain and moments of grace are
swallowed up by the character’s depression and the film’s interest in turning
his distress into beautiful suffering. It all adds up to a heavy spell I’ve
found hard to shake, even as my mind struggled in the moment and afterwards to
puzzle through its throughlines. This isn’t one of Malick’s best efforts,
lacking his usual intuitiveness in its progression, but that’s mostly due to
how closed off it feels. I get the sense this is intensely personal, a movie
dragged kicking and screaming out of his innermost being and now sits there
vulnerable and foreboding, full of raw spiritual power.
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