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Days of Heaven (1978) [The Criterion Collection #409] [Repost]

Posted By: Someonelse
Days of Heaven (1978) [The Criterion Collection #409] [Repost]

Days of Heaven (1978)
DVD9 | ISO+MDS | NTSC 16:9 | Cover+Booklet | 01:33:57 | 7,29 Gb
Audio: English AC3 5.1 @ 448 Kbps | Subs: English SDH
Genre: Drama, Romance | Criterion Collection #409

Director: Terrence Malick
Stars: Richard Gere, Brooke Adams, Sam Shepard

One-of-a-kind filmmaker-philosopher Terrence Malick has created some of the most visually arresting films 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 steelworker (Richard Gere) accidentally kills his supervisor, and he, his girlfriend (Brooke Adams), and his little sister (Linda Manz) flee to the Texas panhandle, where they find 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 a timeless American idyll that is also a gritty evocation of turn-of-the-century labor.



Days of Heaven (1978) [The Criterion Collection #409] [Repost]

With a curiosity in existence, chance and drives, Malick observes the calm and the chaos that fluctuate beneath the unpredictability of life.

Terrence Malick’s second feature film ruminates over the migrant farm workers of the early 20th century, scattering from one place to the next, drifting with the seasons. Richard Gere is Bill; a young, ambitious man, frustrated with his lot who takes a risk with his love, Abby, with the short-sighted hope of a big pay-off.

Days of Heaven (1978) [The Criterion Collection #409] [Repost]

Travelling with his little sister Linda, whose improvisational insights recall this pocket of time, Bill and Abby pass themselves off as siblings to avoid chitchat and take up work harvesting a wheat field. The lonely farm owner falls in love with Abby at first sight and becomes the object of Bill’s quick fix scheme for wealth. Overhearing that the Farmer will die soon, Bill urges Abby to marry him for the inheritance, failing to consider the complexities of bargaining with human emotions.

Days of Heaven (1978) [The Criterion Collection #409] [Repost]

Stepping out of the playwright shadows, Sam Shepherd is the quiet Farmer, watching over his labourers from his mansion that sticks out like a sore thumb on the landscape, both beautiful and pitiable in its isolated grandeur. Alienating and refined, his house mimics his awkward presence, towering with gothic power on the outskirts of life. With echoes of the Edward Hopper painting 'House by the Railroad', the lonely idyl radiates the vulnerable air of teetering on the brink of big change.

Days of Heaven (1978) [The Criterion Collection #409] [Repost]

Chipping into the impressive talent is composer Ennio Morricone, whose score sweeps out of the film, majestically evoking a dawn of change with pensive progression; permeating the events with foreboding and doubt. With its tale of a descent from paradise, the story rumbles with biblical undercurrents. Their days of heaven are numbered from the start, as Malick warns, heaven is unsustainable with the weakness of mankind.

Days of Heaven (1978) [The Criterion Collection #409] [Repost]

Human flaw steadily eats away at the buds of happiness that tentatively flower. Relayed through the retrospective impressions of young narrator, Linda, the thoughts of the characters and events are distant and elusive. Detached from these adult drives, the world is a mysterious chaos, where the devil has a lot to answer for.

Days of Heaven (1978) [The Criterion Collection #409] [Repost]

Malick dynamically manipulates audiovisual connections, blurring perspectives and interpretation. Sudden cuts of soundtrack reverberate from one scene into the next, merging sequences with innovative and striking power – the sound frequently expresses the story with greater force than words. In the buildup to their escape to the peaceful Texan fields, Bill lashes out at his jeering superior, his heated frustration muted by the thunderous beat of the industrial factory relentlessly smashing around them. Molten sparks erupt behind his head, forming an arc that apes the drowned out words he spits at his boss. Hotheaded, he scatters the seeds of destruction early into the fabric of the film.

Days of Heaven (1978) [The Criterion Collection #409] [Repost]

In their early days on the wheat field, the aesthetics illustrate the tranquility of their surrounding environment. The restoration, carefully supervised by Malick gives striking clarity to the cinematography of Nestor Almendros and Haskell Wexler (who took over when Almendros had to go and shoot a film for François Truffaut). Under strict instruction not to veer into misty-eyed rosy qualities that would make the film golden or postcard perfect, the restoration carefully emphasises the natural beauty they strived to capture in the original vision.

Days of Heaven (1978) [The Criterion Collection #409] [Repost]

The colours are mesmerising. Malick’s love of 'magic hour' – the sliver of time when the sun has just disappeared but before nightfall, imbues the imagery with a soft opal hue. The sparse lighting lends an authentic impression of electricity’s early days, and underscores their elusive, transitory oasis on the farm.

Days of Heaven (1978) [The Criterion Collection #409] [Repost]

Lucidly apparent is the art of Terence Malick’s filmmaking. Malick demonstrates a sensitivity to experience and the elements that trickle into perception, whether misleading or arbitrary, or intense. With a curiosity in existence, chance and drives, Days of Heaven observes the perilous course of the tangled trio, with the calm and the chaos that fluctuate beneath the unpredictability of life.
Days of Heaven (1978) [The Criterion Collection #409] [Repost]

Special Features:
- New, restored high-definition digital transfer, supervised and approved by director Terrence Malick, editor Billy Weber, and camera operator John Bailey
- New Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack
- Audio commentary featuring Weber, art director Jack Fisk, costume designer Patricia Norris, and casting director Dianne Crittenden
- New audio interview with actor Richard Gere
- Video interviews with Bailey, cinematographer Haskell Wexler, and actor Sam Shepard
- PLUS: A booklet featuring a new essay by critic Adrian Martin and a chapter from director of photography Nestor Almendros’s autobiography

All Credits goes to Original uploader.

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