Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Richard Gere | ... | Bill | |
Brooke Adams | ... | Abby | |
Sam Shepard | ... | The Farmer | |
Linda Manz | ... | Linda | |
Robert J. Wilke | ... | The Farm Foreman (as Robert Wilke) | |
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Jackie Shultis | ... | Linda's Friend |
Stuart Margolin | ... | Mill Foreman | |
Timothy Scott | ... | Harvest Hand (as Tim Scott) | |
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Gene Bell | ... | Dancer |
Doug Kershaw | ... | Fiddler | |
Richard Libertini | ... | Vaudeville Leader | |
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Frenchie Lemond | ... | Vaudeville Wrestler |
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Sahbra Markus | ... | Vaudeville Dancer |
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Bob Wilson | ... | Accountant |
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Muriel Jolliffe | ... | Headmistress |
Bill and Abby, a young couple who to the outside world pretend to be brother and sister are living and working in Chicago at the beginning of the century. They want to escape the poverty and hard labor of the city and travel south. Together with the girl Linda (who acts as the narrator in the movie) they find employment on a farm in the Texas panhandle. When the harvest is over the young, rich and handsome farmer invites them to stay because he has fallen in love with Abby. When Bill and Abby discover that the farmer is seriously ill and has only got a year left to live they decide that Abby will accept his wedding proposal in order to make some benefit out of the situation. When the expected death fails to come, jealousy and impatience are slowly setting in and accidents become eventually inevitable. Written by Theo de Grood <tdg@xs4all.nl>
I can understand why Malick didn't make another movie after he made Days of Heaven. The film was panned by the majority of the critics who could only find the cinematography worthy of praise. However, Malick was hugely misunderstood by these dumb critics.
They complain that the film is ponderously slow. This was the intention. Malick used pause to convey that the characters think. Too many actors rattle off their lines without letting their characters think of them. It also conveys the slow pace of their lives.
Critics complain that the characters are too remote - one feels removed from them and can't get involved. Hello! It is narrated by a 13 yr old and is essentially her view of the events that transpired. Naturally she does not grasp most of the more adult moments between them and thus is herself removed from being fully involved in Bill and Abby's relationship and that is what has to come across.
Then Malick, in a moment of genius, allied the four main characters to the four elements; Earth, Air, Fire & Water. Bill is Fire - he is seen at first in front of the furnaces of a foundry where he works. We can see his temper is volatile. Abby is water - in the very first shot she is scavenging(?) by a stream and she is seen against the backdrop of the river. Linda is Earth - In her narration she says that she is close to the "Oith". The Farmer is Air - constantly tinkering with his weather vane, and his fields of wheat are often seen waving in the wind.
All in all a severely mies-judged film and the critics owe Malick a huge apology. The work is pure genius!