Tree Of Life – two hours and nineteen minutes of my life that I’m never getting back

Red Steps - The Tree of Life
This is how it all ends. Apparently.

My friend and I were both very much looking forward to seeing Tree of Life, starring Brad Pitt and Sean Penn, as it has been getting the kind of awe inspired reviews from film festivals that indicated to us that the cinema wouldn’t be filled with the sort of vile little popcorn munchers who chatter incessantly from the trailer to the closing credits.

We booked our tickets at one of those fancy-pants cinemas, you know the sort, the ones with the plush seating, foot stools and booze service and so, with vino in hand, we settled in for some deliciously cultural film snobbery.

I was faced with one of the worst crimes a film can inflict on a cinefile – I had trouble keeping my eyes open! I can forgive a film for being a bit trashy and low brow (Tank Girl and Legally Blonde, you will always have a place in my heart), I can forgive a film for being a thinly veiled re-hash of previous films (Avatar, I’m talking about you. Apologise to Kevin Costner and we’ll say no more about it) but for being boring, pretentious and tedious? There is no excuse.

I can imagine the film pitch went a little something like this: Director, Terrence Malick, on a night out with Brad and Sean, necking tequila shots and slurring “I’ve got this awesome story, it’s aaaaawesome. It’s about the universe and stuff. And *hic* I’m not going to make a film, I’m going to make a VISION! You two are the my best, best friends. Who’s round is it?”. It should have stayed at film school.

The film basically centres on Brad Pitt as the not perfect father of a family in the 50’s, he has three kids and an insipid wife. There is a tragedy involving one of their sons. We flash forward to Sean Penn walking round a modern-day city, looking pensive. He doesn’t say much, just walks around modern angular architecture, looking, well… pensive. We’re supposed to take from this pensive look/architecture combo that he’s troubled by the relationship he had with daddy (Brad Pitt) and that he’s feeling lost and overwhelmed by modern society. Try less caffeine, Sean.

We cut back to some more 1950’s (lack of) action, hoping to see whatever tragedy it is that befalls Brad and Mrs Insipid, which could possibly offer some faint hint of story arc but then we’re suddenly launched into what feels like an hour of an acid trip, as experienced by Patrick Moore. Lots of spacey, arty, swirly stuff with moody music, supposedly designed to make the audience contemplate the birth of the Universe and marvel at God’s mighty power. And then there are dinosaurs. Dinosaurs?!?!

Let me recap the story so far. Brad Pitt in the 1950’s, Sean Penn looking constipated among some sky scrapers, yawn inducing swirly shit. Dinosaurs.

The film ambles on like this for another painful hour or so of eyelid drooping tedium; Brad Pitt being a not perfect dad (big whoop), Sean Penn gazing up at tall buildings (yawn) and then more of the swirly shit and all the characters of the film walking round in white robes which is apparently the end of the Universe. Or a Pink Floyd music video. I’m not too sure.

When the film finally ended, there was an uncomfortable silence across the whole of the cinema indicative of slack-jawed disbelief, as the collective mass contemplated whether they should pretend they “got it” and try to appear highbrow and claim to feel “moved” or admit they thought it was a load of self-indulgent tosh. The silence was soon destroyed as my friend and I looked at each other and burst out laughing uncontrollably. Far from being ostracised for our derision of Malick’s “vision”, the man next to us nodded in approval and summed it up perfectly: “Emperor’s new clothes”.

Comments

17 responses to “Tree Of Life – two hours and nineteen minutes of my life that I’m never getting back”

  1. Erin McNaughton Avatar

    EXACTLY my sentments. Second worst movie I’ve ever seen (after Eat, Love, Pray). I could have just stayed home and flipped between the Discovery Chanel and some movie set in the 50s. My friend and I broke the end of the movie silence with awkward laughter as well. I still can’t believe how disappointing that movie was.

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      Thank god you warned me, I’ve just seen an ad for Eat, Pray, Love on Sky. You’ve just added 2 hours and 13 minutes to my life!

      1. Erin McNaughton Avatar

        Yess, would not recommend it…that is unless you enjoy hours of a close up of someone eating, Pretty bad…

        1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

          Urgh. Can I just spend 5 minutes in a Burger King and we’ll call it quits?

          1. Erin McNaughton Avatar

            That would be about the equivalent of the movie lol

  2. skitalica Avatar
    skitalica

    (: thank you for this, I burst out laughing in a few instances, because I can relate..
    My dad and I were sitting in the middle of the row in a cinema filled to the brim contemplating how to escape oh about 20 min into it. All the while cursing the Cannes
    Brilliant summary here: “..the collective mass contemplated whether they should pretend they “got it” and try to appear highbrow and claim to feel “moved” or admit they thought it was a load of self-indulgent tosh”

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      I was so grateful that the cinema I was in served wine. The only thing that kept me there through the first half hour was the delicious malbec in my hand.

  3. youarenotlostyouarehere Avatar

    Unbelieve film – I wrote a similar blog post on this movie, majorly slagging it off. About 20 minutes of actual acting. The rest is taken up by wooshy wave shots and balls of fire. With the occasional dinosaur, of course.

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      I wouldn’t have minded the wooshy starry bits if I had bought a ticket to a creationist visual art show. I didn’t.

      I love a nit of highbrow cinema but this really took the dinosaur shaped biscuit.

      1. youarenotlostyouarehere Avatar

        Absolutely, couldn’t agree more. It wasn’t one of those educational trips to the iMax theatre! Got a bit of a headache too – such a roller coaster with the camera all over the place. Was the camera man on acid or something?! Here’s my review, not dissimilar to yours. Pile of tosh. http://wp.me/p1KVmF-4m

  4. Seraphina Avatar

    omg. I can’t stop laughing. My favorite thing is to laugh in grossly inappropriate moments…mostly because that’s when the most superbly hysterical things happen and it would be criminal not to laugh. I’m so delighted to have found a kindred spirit 🙂

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      With this film, having forked out the price of a ticket, you only have two choices. Laugh or cry.

  5. myeclecticdialectic Avatar
    myeclecticdialectic

    I’m so glad you said this! The audience had a similar reaction when I went – dazed, confused, but attempting to look like they ‘got it’ so as to appear ‘high brow’. I walked as fast as possible out of the cinema and into the nearest bar – I needed a drink to compensate for the fact that I’d just spent £8 and over two hours of my life on such a pretentious piece of rubbish.

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      I’m still trying to drink the memories out of my head. I’m just two vodkas away from no longer being able to remember Sean Penn gazing out the window for ages at nothing. NOTHING!

      The dinosaurs may take a while longer.

  6. rantonit Avatar

    Having had to common sense to never watch this particular movie ,I’ll instead let you laugh it up with the story of how I walked the worst one I’ve seen till date …. to be honest I started writing a massive ass comment here before I realize it was something to be posted :p .

    1. prettyfeetpoptoe Avatar

      You were indeed very wise to give this one a wide berth. Dare I ask what film is getting your full scorn and derision?

      1. rantonit Avatar

        ‘Stormbreaker’ my newest post was on that :p . Felt it deserved it ,and then some.

Leave a reply to youarenotlostyouarehere Cancel reply