Dans une petite ville perdue, une adolescente influençable et son petit ami plus âgé se lancent dans une tuerie dans le Dakota du Sud.Dans une petite ville perdue, une adolescente influençable et son petit ami plus âgé se lancent dans une tuerie dans le Dakota du Sud.Dans une petite ville perdue, une adolescente influençable et son petit ami plus âgé se lancent dans une tuerie dans le Dakota du Sud.
- Nominé pour le prix 1 BAFTA Award
- 4 victoires et 1 nomination au total
- Boy Under Lamppost
- (uncredited)
- Chinese Kid
- (uncredited)
- Caller at Rich Man's House
- (uncredited)
- Boy Under Lamppost
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe actor originally cast as the architect who rings at the rich man's door did not show up, so Terrence Malick played the part himself. Malick later wanted to re-shoot the scene with another actor, but Martin Sheen refused to re-do the sequence with anyone else.
- GaffesThe passenger train that passes Kit and Holly on the trestle is pulling Amtrak cars. Amtrak was not established until 1971, and this film takes place in 1959.
- Citations
Holly Sargis: One day, while taking a look at some vistas in Dad's stereopticon, it hit me that I was just this little girl, born in Texas, whose father was a sign painter, who only had just so many years to live. It sent a chill down my spine and I thought where would I be this very moment, if Kit had never met me? Or killed anybody... this very moment... if my mom had never met my dad... if she had never died. And what's the man I'll marry gonna look like? What's he doing right this minute? Is he thinking about me now, by some coincidence, even though he doesn't know me? Does it show on his face? For days afterwards I lived in dread. Sometimes I wished I could fall asleep and be taken off to some magical land, and this never happened.
- Bandes originalesMusica Poetica
Written byCarl Orff and Gunild Keetman
At the heart of Malick's method is the fabulous interior monologue by Holly explaining and ironically commenting on the story. "Kit made me take my schoolbooks so I wouldn't fall behind with my studies...". This has been characteristic of each of Malick's films - Linda in 'Days of Heaven' and Witt in 'The Thin Red Line' have somewhat similar monologues - and 'New World' is monumentalised by the haunting monologue/montage with which it ends. Here it totally sucks the viewer into the story and makes the montages that it accompanies into, just about, the high-point of seventies cinema.
Alongside this, Malick uses some of the most haunting music in existence. Whether it is Carl Orff or Nat King Cole, Malick transports us with fabulous romantic imagery that perfectly balances it.
I started on this comment determined not to use the word 'poetry', but I just can't avoid it. With nearly all filmmakers, including very great ones, the style that they present is very much prose - great prose, perhaps, but firmly rooted on the ground. With Malick, we are taken, emotionally, to the stars by the lyric magnificence of the totality of his vision.
It is said that Welles learned cinema by watching John Ford's 'Stagecoach' before embarking on 'Citizen Kane'. Every young filmmaker should watch this amazing masterpiece again and again and again and inform their work with Malick's matchless sense of true cinema.
- Balthazar-5
- 3 févr. 2005
- Lien permanent
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 450 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 54 396 $ US
- Durée1 heure 34 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1