| Richard Gere, Brooke Adams, Sam Shepard,
Linda Manz, Robert J. Wilke, Stuart Margolin, Jackie Shultis
One-of-a-kind filmmaker-philosopher Terrence Malick has created
some of the most visually arresting movies of the twentieth century,
and his glorious period tragedy Days of Heaven, featuring Oscar-winning
cinematography by Nestor Almendros, stands out among them. In 1910,
a Chicago steel worker (Richard Gere) accidentally kills his supervisor
and flees to the Texas panhandle with his girlfriend (Brooke Adams)
and little sister (Linda Manz) to work harvesting wheat in the fields
of a stoic farmer (Sam Shepard). A love triangle, a swarm of locusts,
a hellish fire—Malick captures it all with dreamlike authenticity,
creating at once a timeless American idyll and a gritty evocation
of turn-of-the-century labor. |