Early
in Terrence Malick's film The Tree of Life (2011), a 17-minute sequence visually
describes the history of the earth from the point of the Big Bang to the
present day. The images in this sequence are mostly suggestive rather than
literal. They focus especially on the first stirrings of life and spend some
time with the dinosaurs, which some have made fun of. This sequence illustrates
events in time that have led up to the present time of the film and the family
which is its main concern. The point is, I think, that events in the present,
however small or major, represent the culmination of every moment since the
universe began. Voyage of Time: Life’s Journey (2016), also directed by Malick,
runs parallel to The Tree of Life, especially
the long sequence at its beginning. The Voyage
of Time is a documentary history of the universe and the development of
life on our planet leading up to the present. It too relies on a sequence of
suggestive images, some of them set in the present day as Malick draws
parallels between teaming schools of fish in the ocean and animal herds on the
prairies of Africa with crowds of human beings. Most of the scenes involving
modern humans seem to be set in Asia, but we see briefly other parts of the
world as well.
The Voyage of Time is not just a documentary
about natural history. It's a sustained and often moving meditation on the
meaning of it all. A voiceover narrator (Cate Blanchett) addresses the Mother, which
Malick takes to be as God. The film contemplates faith, spiritual doubt, the
relationship that the speaker (and by extension Malick) has with God. The
speaker often questions God, asking, "Where are you? Why are you not here?.”
Is this a reference to the modern world, its discord and uproar?
The
film’s imagery is beautiful. It focuses both on the natural world: frozen
regions, mountains, the ocean, and so on. But it also focuses on life. We see
representations of early life in the ocean, microorganisms, amphibians, early
reptiles, and dinosaurs. Then we move gradually towards the present day. A
sequence late in the film shows early humans on the plains of Africa, hunting
and interacting in social groups, playing, and laughing. This scene parallels the
dinosaur early in the film searching for its missing mother. The yearning for a
Mother, a Creator, is the film’s larger context. Individual organisms and
animals seem to have agency. They’re part of a pattern. They're not merely wandering
without purpose. They have intentions, they reproduce, become ill, die.
Special
effects are hardly noticeable. The dinosaurs are shown simply as themselves, as
dinosaurs, not especially huge or loud, not menacing, just creatures of their
time. This aspect of the film impressed me.
The Voyage of Time is a deeply religious film.
It's about faith and God. It takes the tone of the Book of Job from the Old
Testament. It has a culminating effect on the viewer. At least it did on me.
And by the time it ended, I found myself moved even though I don’t share Malick's
religious beliefs. My only problems with the film concern the fact that there
was a certain randomness to some of the images, and that Malick tended to show
them too quickly so that one doesn't have time to take them in, but rather has
to absorb them as elements in a quickly moving sequence.
There
are few films like this one. Its intelligence is informed by science and by
faith. It is not currently available in the United States, apparently because
of a lawsuit by one of the companies that produced earlier films by Malick. I
hope to see it officially available here soon.
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