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The
New World (2005)
Moody, photographic and delicate, but also detached and introverted. Terrence Mallick's direction is pompous and arrogant, but what can you expect from a filmmaker who on average makes a film every ten years. Not particularly appropriately entitled, The New World is simply a love story, depicting the famous John Smith/Pocahontas/John Rolfe love triangle. Having been treated by Disney in the 90s, Malick tries to revitalize the story, taking a seemingly more realistic approach. Still, the story is very much based on myth, and hence the grand monologues by our three protagonists seem pretentious. Malick is at his best in a few dwelling, romanticized scenes early on, but his narrative can't justify his slow pacing, and once introduced, the Christian Bale character is never allowed to establish himself properly, making the film's final third tedious. Ultimately, I found myself wishing for a film that was actually about the new world.
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