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16 Things You Need To Know About Terrence Malick’s ‘The Thin Red Line’

In late ’98/early ‘99, on the eve of the release of “The Thin Red Line,” two major events were concurrently taking place, each threatening to consume one another but both feeding the anticipation around them (the film was given a limited release in December, followed by wide release in January). One was “The Thin Red Line” itself — Terrence Malick‘s first new film in 20 years, an approximately $52 million dollar war film backed by Fox 2000 (a shingle housed under 20th Century Fox) — and the other the hallowed return of Malick the director, believed to be lost in the wilderness, driving cabs in Paris, selling T-shirts on Les Champs-Élysées or whatever fictional rumor pleases you most.

Both were massive events in cinema; a sanctified resurrection of sorts met with feverish anticipation that drew in cinephiles and tourist pop-culture pundits who just had to weigh in. Adding appropriate noise to the latter point was a massive cinematic homecoming of sorts. 1999 would not only mark the return of Terry Malick, it would also mark the anticipated return of Stanley Kubrick (“Eyes Wide Shut“) and George Lucas (“The Phantom Menace“) to the world of filmmaking. Complicating things for Malick and, or maybe just the marketing team at Fox, was Steven Spielberg, who five months earlier would steal his thunder and release his more conventional WWII film, “Saving Private Ryan,” filled with moments of heartswelling American pride, heroism, patriotism and self-sacrifice. Malick’s take on the nature of war couldn’t be more polar opposite and abstract.

“What’s this war in the heart of nature?” is the first question quietly posed in narrative voice-over that opens the film laid over beautiful images of the Guadalcanal in the South Pacific. It would announce everything the viewer would need to know about the poetic, elusive and intangible anti-war film: the specific conflict at hand was just a side dish, the bigger concern was what madness lies in man that he feels the need to destroy himself and everything around it? What were the struggles and forces within humanity that compelled itself to act in such a savage manner? And finally, what seed, what root did evil grow from? As usual, Malick wasn’t fucking around with platitudes of heroism. His film was about the horrors of war, the fear and innocence lost that quaked through soldiers and the capacity for humanity that still existed amongst such insanity.

Nick-Nolte-The-Thin-Red-Line-Rosy-dawnIn the lead up to the wide release of Malick’s latest film, “The Tree of Life” (July 8 is the date), week by week, we’ve been getting reacquainted with his body of films and the behind-the-scenes making of each picture. Here’s similarly exhaustive features we wrote about  “The Tree Of Life,” “Badlands,” “Days of Heaven,” “The New World” and “The Thin Red Line.”

1. In many ways Terrence Malick did not want to make “The Thin Red Line,” or at least not a war film.
What Terrence Malick truly wanted to make was what ended up on screen, another meditation on the human condition that happened to be set around the setting of WWII. But he had his doubts early on when he too thought he was making a war picture.

“I feel like I’m boarding a train I can’t get off,” Malick told actor Jim Caviezel when he first hired him over the phone according to the actor on the Criterion Collection’s “The Thin Red Line” edition. “And I said, ‘Don’t worry I’ll be there.’ So I knew before my agents even knew! I had to call them,” Caviezel said trying to assuage the director, but perhaps missing the director’s main concern in his understandable excitement.

The characteristically cautious and indecisive filmmaker was reluctant to even make the picture in the first place and according to a 1999 Vanity Fair profile, he left open “numerous doors through which he might make a hasty exit. “

These doubts even existed during production in Australia. “I remember him wondering why he was [making] this movie,” editor Leslie Jones said on the Editing portion of the Criterion DVD (she had spent some time on set). “He doesn’t like war, he’s not an action director, battles scenes, he would say, ‘I don’t know how to direct a battle scene, what am I doing?’ And you can see what he turned the movie into – that sequence in the movie where they’re on rest, was time for reflection and a time for him to get out of that war experience.”

Co-editor Saar Klein echoed these same sentiments. “The logistics of it were so overwhelming. Having to direct like a huge army, running up the hill with all these cameras and tanks and walkie [talkies], he just kind of felt that wasn’t directing,” Klein said on the same DVD extra. “In fact, I think at one point he said it would be great to just get like Renny Harlin or some other director to direct those parts of it, so he could actually spend some time directing the actors. I don’t think [the war sequences] were his favorite part.”

Actor Ben Chaplin suggested the director just didn’t know what he was in for. “He never expected it to be this big thing with loads of men and machines,” the actor said in an extensive EW interview from 1999. ”He had written this film about people and nature, and he got here and there was this war going on.”

the-thin-red-line-terrence-malick-222. Like all Terrence Malick films, the script and the final film were eons apart.
”Terry’s wildly intuitive and impressionistic,” John Cusack said in the same 1999 interview with EW from the set of the film. “He wrote a script based on the novel, and he’s making a film based on the script, but he’s not shooting the script. He’s shooting the essence of the script, and he’s also shooting the movie that’s up there on the hill. He’s trying to transcend the book and the script and himself. He’s just out there. He’s a wild cat.” This might be the best description of what generally goes on during the filming of one of Terrence Malick’s movies.

“He has a script, but the script is not necessarily what he shoots,” Klein said on the DVD. “Once he gets on the set whatever inspires him is what he goes with. And then the way that you edit has to be completely reinvented because you don’t have any traditional coverage of anything.”

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26 COMMENTS

  1. For me, thin red line is one of the best war films I\’ve seen. A rare film that deals more with life, than with death. Five times better than saving private Ryan.

  2. Fascinating read. Thank you so much for this. I realize most of this is old, but I would have never come across ALL of this info without hunting the webs for days.

    Great stuff.

  3. \”His film was about the horrors of war, the fear and innocence lost that quaked through soldiers and the capacity for humanity that still existed amongst such insanity.\”

    Have you even seen Saving Private Ryan? Did you miss the chapel scene? Most of the conversations walking? The movie was a lot more than the D day. The entire movie was about the search for decency within war.

  4. I thought this was a great read and look forward to more posts like this by other directors. I would consider myself a Malick fan, but by no means an obsessive one. And I don\’t own any Malick films on Criterion, so I was new to a lot of this information. I still haven\’t been able to see Tree of Life because it\’s not playing in my town, but this post gave me just the right Malick fix.

  5. Yeah I knew most of this stuff too…but not all of it. And it was nicely written.

    The New World one is definitely the one I\’m most anticipating though.

  6. I saw this recently as part of the Malick retrospectives, and while it has a few dips and Days of Heaven is smoother, The Thin Red Line has so many passages of sustained excellence it\’s freakish. I mean, like the whole first hour.

  7. @CC

    I read that back in the day and even emailed Rachel recent, but no luck. I can\’t find a copy of it online.

    You don\’t happen to have, do you?

  8. As someone who\’s trying to make their way through the film production world, I really find all of these sort of posts to be absolutely fascinating. Behind the scenes production stories never cease to entertain me.

  9. Great work. Especially for clarifying exactly which actors were cut out and that there weren\’t 125 famous actors edited out of the final film. That rumor has been getting more and more elaborate over the years, and with Tree Of Life\’s release reached absurd proportions.

    Another superb Thin Red Line article fans of the film should seek out was in the January 1999 issue of \”Premiere\”, titled \”Welcome to The Jungle\”, by Rachel Abramowitz. She seems to have been one of the few journalists allowed to visit the set and actually be present during filming, and she qoutes Malick\’s directions to the actors several times.

  10. Well, we set out to do this: things you may or may not know about the MAKING of the film.

    That was the idea. So that\’s what we did. I collected tons of stuff for this piece and then filtered what I personally found interesting.

    Maybe on the frantisk blog you can discuss what you think is interesting?

    Personally, i just find this stuff much more interesting than my take on \”movie itself\” which would amount to the same review that\’s been written 4,0000 times.

    You sound like someone who knows this story well, so its probably dull for you, c\’est la vie?

  11. I\’m just saying, Thin Red Line is a pretty interesting movie, you guys could probably do something cool exploring the actual movie, rather than just rehashing the same \”Terrence Malick is so eccentric…he shoots birds instead of actors!\” type stuff.

    don\’t you think movie itself is a whole lot more interesting than casting gossip from 1999?

  12. Just saying…how many more \”Terrance Malick has unorthodox shooting methods and can be difficult to work with!\” posts do you guys really need?

    that\’s literally the gist of every single Malick post you put up, why not try exploring something other than that?

  13. \”what is this?\” uhh, we\’re celebrating the release of Terrence Malick films — as stated in the intro you dummy. Put some fruitjuice in your milk.

    \”In the lead up to the wide release of Malick’s latest film, “The Tree of Life” (July 8 is the date), week by week, we’ve been getting reacquainted with his body of films and the behind-the-scenes making of each picture.\”

  14. Are you guys really so dense? Not everyone has time or even knows about this info. Congratulations, you guys are obsessive Malick nerds and you can now crow about it. But there are lots of people who haven\’t dug into the film or may not know some of this stuff (certainly some of this info was new to me). And we explain why we did the feature in the first place in the article.

    So if you already know, don\’t read and stop getting your panties in a twist each week.

  15. this would be a really interesting article, if it were 10 years ago, we didn\’t already have the criterion DVD, and the articles where you took all of your info hadn\’t already been published.

    seriously, what is this?

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