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BADLANDS
Rating:   
USA. 1973.
Director/Screenplay/Producer Terrence Malick, Photography Tak Fujimoto, Stevan Larner & Brian Probyn, Music George Tipton, Art Direction Jack Fisk. Production Company Pressman-William-Badlands Ltd.
Cast:
Martin Sheen (Kit Carruthers), Sissy Spacek (Holly Stargis), Warren Oates (Hollys Father), Ramon Bieri (Cato), Alan Vint (Deputy), John Carter (The Rich Man, Mr Carver)
Plot: The late 1950s in the town of Fort Dupree, South Dakota. Kit Carruthers meets 15 year-old Holly Stargis while working as a garbage collector and the two become involved. But then Hollys father forbids her from seeing Kit. And so Kit enters the house and shoots him. They burn the house to the ground and set out in Kits car, hiding in the wild. There they lead an idyllic existence until they are disturbed by bounty hunters. With Kit forced to kill rather than be captured, they go on the run, becoming the most wanted fugitives in the state.
The crimes of Charles Starkweather and his girlfriend Caril Ann Fugate have become legend. Starkweather grew up in Nebraska and in 1957 he, aged 19, became involved with 14 year-old Caril Ann Fugate. Starkweather had a poor work record because of his frequent arguments with employers and was working as a garbage collector at the time. He had developed a nihilistic view of life and believed that he would never achieve any better than that. In December of 1957, Starkweather abducted and then shot a gas station attendant who had refused to give him a fluffy toy on credit as a gift for Fugate. In January of 1958, Starkweather entered the Fugate house and killed Caril Anns mother, stepfather and sister. The two set out on a cross-country journey across Nebraska, Missouri and Wyoming. This became a massive manhunt with Starkweather eventually arrested after a car chase, just over a week after the murder of Fugates parents. The total body count ended up being 11 dead. Starkweather was executed by electric chair in mid-1958. There is debate about how much Caril Fugate was directly involved in the killings Starkweather claimed variously that she knew nothing to that she was more bloodthirsty than he; while she maintained throughout her trial (patently falsely) that she did not even know her parents had been killed when they departed on their cross-country journey and only joined him out of fear for her familys lives. She spent 18 years in jail and lives in Michigan under an assumed name today but refuses to speak about what happened.
The Starkweather-Fugate story has inspired a number of films, including the loosely fictionalized The Sadist (1963) and Natural Born Killers (1994), as well as the true life tv mini-series Murder in the Heartland (1993) starring Tim Roth as Starkweather and Fairuza Balk as Caril Fugate, and the low-budget film Starkweather (2004). Other films like Wild at Heart (1990) and True Romance (1993) that feature lovers on the run are said to be inspired by Starkweather and Fugate. There was even the Bruce Springsteen song about Starkweather with Nebraska (1982).
Badlands is also based on the Starkweather-Fugate killing spree. Director/writer Terrence Malick more or less keeps general faith with the true-life story. We see Kit working as a garbage collector when he meets Holly and comparing himself to James Dean, as Starkweather did. Theres the murder of Hollys parent, although Malick makes it her father rather than stepfather and the mother and baby sister are written out. There are various incidents in the film that approximate the true story the friend they took refuge with and then murdered; the couple that were locked in a storm cellar and killed; the scenes where they took refuge with a wealthy family and headed off in the family car; Starkweathers arrest following a car chase; the celebrity that Starkweather had attained by the time he was finally apprehended. There are a few omissions like no mention of the murder of the gas station attendant that started the killing spree off; while the wealthy family that they take refuge with are not killed; and the idyll in the wild and its shattering by the arrival of the bounty hunters is something that has been wholly invented by the film. The location of the story has also been moved one state over from Nebraska to South Dakota.
Badlands was the first film of Terrence Malick. Terrence Malick is one of the great underrated American directors. Subsequent to Badlands, Malick went onto make the truly amazing Days of Heaven (1978), a story about a couple fleeing from a murder in the Great Depression, which would have to be on this authors list of the great films of the last thirty years. In Days of Heaven, Malick evokes a nostalgic dream-like landscape that is visually even more powerful than the drama or any of the characters in the film. Subsequently, in part due to production problems on Days of Heaven, Malick vanished and went to live in France for twenty years before returning to make the World War II film The Thin Red Line (1998) and then The New World (2005), a romantic retelling of the story of Pocahontas and John Smith. He has currently signed up to make the mystical fantasy film Tree of Life (2009).
Terrence Malicks films have an extraordinary cinematic power. Throughout all of them characters be they mass murderers like Charles Starkweather and Caril Ann Fugate, drifters in The Depression, American soldiers in the Pacific theatre of war during World War II, or Pocahontas and John Smith seem like innocents in a landscape, like Adam and Eve surrounded by the uncorrupted beauty of Eden before the Fall. Malicks films are often sentimental ones he is really a director who has elevated the elegiac voiceover to an art form and we frequently see the trivia of peoples lives contrasted with the immensity of the landscape. Malick is in a sense akin to the work of British painter Joseph Turner. Turners later work became almost impressionistic in nature, conducted in sweeps of abstracted colour and light where people often seem like tiny distant figures dwarfed by the power of nature in Malicks films, characters are distant figures where landscape has an almost overwhelming power that reduces them to a nakedness and innocence.
If there is a writer that Terrence Malick might be compared to, it would surely by J.D. Salinger. Almost at the point of becoming a major American director, Malick, exactly like Salinger, opted for retreat to seclusion. Little is known about his private life and he allows few images of himself to be photographed (although he can be briefly seen in Badlands in the role of a man who turns up at the door of the wealthy mans home and is turned away by Martin Sheen).
Although Badlands is not quite as fully developed as his later films, Malick really sweeps one up in an amazing lyricism. Theres a real visual poetry as we watch simple images like the contents of Hollys home going up in flame in a montage of shots where Malick focuses on the piano, the sheet music and the faded wallpaper as it is all consumed by flames. Sissy Spaceks voice comes over the soundtrack, describing things with a mix of crystal clear innocence and extraordinary poetic imagery. As with all of Terrence Malicks films, there is the sense of lovers adrift in a nostalgic landscape, of the American past as some lost Eden that we can never regain. The idyll in the woods is almost like a Tarzan film turned into a dreamy arthouse drama images like Sissy Spacek sitting in the midst of a field of grass putting on her makeup; the two sitting in a tree as she reads a book; strewn stereogram pictures abandoned in the grass.
Badlands is at its finest during the long drive through the desert where Malicks poetic imagery is at its most potent, focused on the contrast of the immense and the banal the bare loneliness of the desert where we see clouds in beautiful sunset patterns or with lightning storms roiling in their midst just above the horizon; Sissy Spaceks voiceover comparing a train in the distance to a caravan in The Adventures of Marco Polo (1938); where she talks about how they decided to bury items in the desert so they could come back later when they are different people to find them or leave them for future generations to discover; the two dancing to Nat King Cole in the light of the cars headlights amid the emptiness of the night desert.
The inspiration for Badlands one suspects might have been filmmakers wanting to create another Bonnie and Clyde (1967) with its highly romanticized story of outlaw lovers on a violent, albeit doomed, cross-country crime spree. Although it does seem slightly peculiar in seeing Starkweather and Fugate essentially transformed into innocents. You might compare Badlands to Oliver Stones Natural Born Killers. Where Stone incarnated essentially the same characters here, he saw them not as innocents in a wide-open American Midwest paradise, but rather as people who only had contempt for the hypocritical and media-saturated society that surrounded and gave birth to them. Both Stone and Malick see Starkweather and Fugate as standing free from society by their actions but for Stone there is not a purity and innocence in what they do, they only stand above society by dint of their having the courage to express contempt for it. Its really hard to think of two films that tell the same story but exist at almost complete extremes.
Copyright Richard Scheib 2008
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