5.The Thin Red Line(1998)

It had been 20 years since Malick’s previous movie by the timeThe Thin Red Linewas released, and that previous movie (Days of Heaven) had already been called one of the best movies of the 20th century.

So when it came time for Malick to developThe Thin Red Line, he had his choice pick of actors for this poetic war drama. (Famously, Adrien Brody signed on as its star, but during his editing process Malick decided to shift the narrative to Jim Caviezel’s Robert E. Lee Witt.)

The Thin Red Lineis a movie that doesn’t focus on the brutality of war, but rather on other parts of the world around the soldiers, frequently cutting away to nature while the actual fighting occurs.

This pretty much wiped Brody’s performance from the film as he’s reduced to only a few lines. It also happened to George Clooney and John Travolta, whose roles were drastically reduced in the final edit.

Despite the brutal culling process, Malick’s film is a one-of-a-kind beautiful rendition of the hopelessness of war and the young men that died fighting in Vietnam.

Related:The Greatest Ensemble Movie Casts of All Time, Ranked

4.Badlands(1973)

Badlandsis the first film Terrence Malick made and it stars Martin Sheen and Sissy Spacek. As Malick’s first picture, much of the production budget came from personal loans and investors who had never invested in a movie before (like dentists). What a start.

The film tells the story of Kit and Holly, two young lovers who run away together after Kit kills Holly’s father during an angry confrontation. As the pair evade the law with rapidly multiplying crimes, Holly becomes disenchanted with Kit and tells him she wants to turn herself in.

Malick’s debut picture isn’t the typical escape drama. It showcases the same kind of maturity and substance of depth that would mark most of his subsequent works. The central figures in the film are tragic in so many ways and come across as fully formed humans who are lost in naivety.

3.The New World(2005)

The New Worldtook time to be considered one of Malick’s best movies, but after it was critically reevaluated, many now rank it as one of Terrence Malick’s best movies ever made.

The film tells the story of the first settlers in America and their encounter with the local tribes. The plot focuses on the real-life tale of Pocahontas and John Smith as they fall in love during a time of tension between the Native Americans and settlers.

Starring Colin Farrell, Christian Bale, and Q’orianka Kilcher, the immediate strength of the film can be found in its cinematography, helmed by Emmanuel Lubezki. Between the strong performances and excellent camerawork,The New Worldfeels like a moving painting.

2.Days of Heaven(1978)

Terrence Malick’s second feature film told the story of an idyllic America when people could ride a train until they found a farm that needed workers for the harvest. The movie stars Richard Gere, Sam Shepard, and Brooke Adams with a debut for child actress Linda Manz.

After Richard Gere’s Bill kills his boss in Chicago, he and his girlfriend Abby and his little sister Linda end up working on a farm in the Texas Panhandle. From there, Bill and Abby (who are posing as siblings) engage in a plot to entice the sick farmer and inherit his wealth when he dies.

The movie is a subtly creeping picture that gently enfolds the audience into the Bill, Abby, and Linda’s desperation. They aren’t inherently evil people—they’re lacking and they see an opportunity to have something for themselves and they decide to take it.

Malick’s work in crafting the film is akin to an art piece hanging in the Louvre—and is precisely the reason why so many actors begged to work with Malick onThe Thin Red Linetwo decades later.

Related:Famous child actors and their best movie performances

1.The Tree of Life(2011)

During Malick’s 20-year hiatus from filmmaking, he began writing and developing a motion picture calledQ. It would tell the story of the world and life on the planet, from birth to life as we know it. But the film was abandoned and he returned forThe Thin Red Lineinstead.

Years later, Malick took that old concept and re-imagined it into a new film calledThe Tree of Life. This movie is unlike any made before or since.

The story focuses on the O’Brien family as they live in the 1960s. Starring Brad Pitt and Jessica Chastain as parents who lose one of their children,The Tree of Lifeexplores the effects of grief on the family—while also showcasing the birth of the cosmos and the Earth as we know it.

It may sound like the work of overactive hubris, but Malick’s film is anything but. It’s his truest masterpiece, a motion picture with the kind of ambition that we haven’t felt since the days of Orson Welles and Charlie Chaplin and the vision of Kubrick thrown in for good measure.

It’s often cited as one of the best films ever made, and was even selected asSight & Sound’s Best Film of 2011.

Read next:What is cinematography? Movies with the best cinematography

whatNerd

whatNerd

whatNerd

The 5 Best Terrence Malick Movie Masterpieces, Ranked

The 20 Best Movies About Law and Justice, Ranked

The 13 Best Movies About Orphans, Ranked

The 13 Best Femme Fatale Movies, Ranked

The 14 Best Natural Disaster Movies That Are Actually Great

The 13 Best Movies Set on Trains and Subways, Ranked

The 11 Most Depressing Movies You Can Only Watch Once

The 20 Best Western Movies About the Old, Wild West

The 13 Best Movies With Incredible Wardrobe Designs

The 15 Weirdest Movies of the 21st Century Worth Watching

The 15 Best Movies Set in Outer Space, Ranked

The 10 Greatest Ensemble Cast Movies of All Time, Ranked

The 10 Best Child Actors in Hollywood (And Their Best Performances)

15 Great Movies With the Best Cinematography, Ranked

22 Famous Movie Directors and Their Cinematic Styles, Explained

The 10 Best Horror Movie Directors of All Time, Ranked

The 10 Greatest Documentary Filmmakers (And Their Best Films)

The 12 Best Director’s Cuts of Movies Better Than Their Theatrical Cuts

The 7 Greatest Sci-Fi Movie Directors and Filmmakers, Ranked

The 12 Greatest Female Movie Directors (And Their Best Films)

The 7 Most Difficult Movie Directors to Work With (And Why)

The 10 Best Robert Rodriguez Movies, Ranked

The 15 Best Movies by Black Directors, Ranked

whatNerd