The odds of Terrence Malick?s The Tree of Life being crowned best picture next weekend are slim, but the film has already claimed the Golden Palm at Cannes, a fittingly arboreal award for a film that takes its trees seriously. In Malick?s fifth and most experimental feature, an oak tree towering above a shady lane in Texas is the portal through which the O?Brien family, headed by Brad Pitt and Jessica Chastain, connects to the origins of the universe. Getting the oak prepped for the big screen seems to have been as demanding a task as reproducing the Big Bang. Under a veil of secrecy, tree scouts scoured the county surrounding Smithville, the small town that doubled for the Waco of Malick?s youth, searching for a tree that captured the director?s imagination, while also providing a wide enough spread for the three branch-swinging O?Brien boys to climb. As Terry Hagerty reported in the Bastrop Advertiser, the scouts arranged to excavate the 65,000-pound behemoth of their choosing and transport it across town in an oversized trailer. To ensure safe passage, every telephone and electrical wire in their path had to be temporarily removed as the towering cargo was inched toward the set. This willingness to upend the same natural order the film fetishizes, all while motivating a crew to achieve spectacular results, puts Malick in esteemed company, as many of the cinema?s finest filmmakers have gone to similar lengths to photograph the perfect tree.
Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=402e039b3908f0c39e31ea9e298810c4
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