SPOILER ALERT! The plot will be discussed.
Badlands (1973), directed by Terrence Malick, has an appropriate title, not only because of where the movie takes place, but because of the criminal action that it depicts. It is based on the story of Charles Starkweather and Caril Ann Fugate and the deaths of ten people during a nine-day period. The movie focuses on how someone gains attention through infamy if the chance at legitimate fame is out of reach. The film explores the same area that Truman Capote addresses in his novel In Cold Blood, that is, the underbelly of the United States. As Michael Almereyda says in his essay “Misfits,” the two main characters symbolize “some lethal short circuit in the American psyche.” Badlands also touches on the American fascination and celebration of outlaws, revealing its citizens’ anti-authoritarian feelings.Almereyda notes that Malick left out some of the more gruesome acts of Starkweather to construct an almost bloodless fairy tale, as Malick once described the film. Most of the story is told from the perspective of an innocent, the fifteen-year-old Holly (Sissy Spacek), which allows the audience to gradually perceive what is happening in her association with Kit (Martin Sheen). She moves from a place of teenage romance to shell-shocked detachment.
Her story, though, is not one of youthful protection
from the effects of reality. She says that her mother died young and her
relations with her father (Warren Oates), became strained after the death. He
moved her to Fort Dupree, South Dakota, which added to the feeling of
disconnection from the outside world and increased her feeling of being an
outsider. Malick provides still shots (the emphasis on “still”) of an alley of
trash cans and peopleless streets, which promote the feeling of isolation.
Kit tries to make money selling some of the trash and analyzes the people from the refuse he finds, which shows he has a bit of insight into what makes people tick. He meets Holly as she practices baton twirling. It is a wholesome image which Mallick possibly wants to contrast with what happens to her, and which may be the reason for Kit’s initial interest, if opposites attract. One of the first things he says to her is that he’ll try anything once. Which shows that prohibitions are not what he cares about. That attitude can be exciting to a young, lonely girl like Holly.
To add to his alienation from society, Kit gets fired.
When asked at the unemployment office, he says he can’t think of anything he’s
qualified to do. His line stresses how detached from the mainstream he is.
Holly narrates that she found Kit handsome and that he reminded her of James
Dean. That is a telling remark. Dean epitomized the renegade, and his good
looks made that lifestyle attractive. Kit holds that same fascination for Holly,
but he is a sort of Hollywood knock-off.
Kit goes to Holly’s place again and says he quit (a
lie) and that he’s going to be a cowboy (not true – he will be working at a
cattle feedlot). He tries to make it seem that he is more independent and
important than he is. He may feel that way about himself, since he earlier told
her that he has things to say, and most people don’t. She ran away from him the
first time, saying her dad wouldn’t approve of Kit. Now she says she has
homework to do when he wants her to join him. She acts like she is clinging to her
routine life, but she is only giving lip service to it, and this time she goes
for a ride with him. He notes that someone threw a bag on the ground and
observes how filthy everything would be if everyone did that. His work as a
trash collector probably elicits this comment, but it also shows that he feels
all people are transgressors, so why should he be judged?
Holly says the two fell in love, adding that she
wasn’t popular at school because she “didn’t have a lot of personality.” The
interest of a handsome young man raises her self-esteem, as she notes that he
could have had any other girl. She keeps their relationship secret from her
dad, since Kit is ten years older than she. She says that secrecy kept them
“away from all the cares of the world.” She saw her bond with Kit as an
emotional oasis in an empty personal desert.
She says he wanted to “die” with her, which is a kind of dark way of expressing feelings for another. She is now smoking, which shows the rule-breaking effect he has on her. Mallick gives us a shot of a catfish in a bowl. Is that an image of a bottom feeder who tries to get by on the leftovers of society? She admits to throwing her pet fish out before it died when it was sick. She felt guilty about this act but can confess it to Kit, who has no moral judgment.
After the first time they have sex, Holly questions why is it supposed to be such a big deal? It was not noteworthy for either, which may show a feeling of letdown of their hopeful dreams by reality. Kit says they should smash their hands to remember the day, noting pain will remind them of their consummation. What stands out for him is not something pleasant but hurtful, an indication of his dark outlook on life and how they can’t be remembered by anything positive in their lives. He puts a note about standing by her and other mementos in a balloon that flies away. Holly points out that he did this act because he must have known they would never be happy in the future. The balloon could indicate how Kit’s hopes were not felt to come true and just drift away like the way a dream disappears after waking to reality.When Holly’s father discovers the relationship, he shoots Holly’s dog as a punishment. What a disturbing way of disciplining her. He recreates a loss of something she loved, like the death of her mother. It shows how disturbed he became due to the loss of his wife which led to the end of his dreams of happiness.Her father rejects Kit’s desire to keep seeing Holly. So, Kit breaks into her house and packs Holly’s clothes so she can leave with him. When father and daughter return, Kit shoots and kills the father. His remorseless pathology is obvious now, showing no emotion about his act of violence. His action shows he will no longer let others stand in his way. She smacks his face at first but she quicky switches to coverup mode as she wonders if neighbors heard the shot. He leaves her fate up to her though, saying she can call the police.
Kit leaves a recording saying that he and Holly
decided to kill themselves. He does this act to gain time, hoping the
authorities would think they were dead. He ends the recording by perversely
saying, “I can’t deny we’ve had fun, though,” summing up their relationship as
pleasant, despite his committing murder. That statement alone shows his
sociopathic mentality. He sets fire to Holly’s house, in essence destroying her
attachment to the past. He says they will change their names and hide out up
north. She goes along with him because she says, “it was better to live a week with
someone who loved me for what I was, then years of loneliness.” Her statement
shows how empty her life felt to her.
Kit insisted that she take her schoolbooks with her.
It almost seems like he is in some way nurturing her growth as a child. It is
interesting that she reads from Kon Tiki, a book that details a voyage
on a raft, since its survivalist story away from society is something Kit and
Holly would be interested in. She says she grew to love the forest because she
felt like all the rest of humanity were dead. Again, we have this anti-grownup,
outsider feeling.
She ruminates about her life, the actions of parents
and meeting Kit that led to this very moment in her life. She then lived “in
dread” about how short life is and how destiny comes down to a domino effect set
in motion out of one’s control.
Kit’s violence seems to have put Holly into a state of
numbness. She calls it feeling “blah,” but her description of feeling like all
the water being drained out of a bathtub reflects her emotional emptiness. Now
the police are on alert in several states, and citizens are armed and vigilant,
not knowing where Kit might strike next. To avoid public places, Kit and Holly
go to an upscale house and he tells the owner that he is sorry to disturb him
as he reveals his handgun. His politeness is disarming, as he hides his violent
nature under a calm surface.
(At one point an architect visits the upscale house.
He says he talked to the owner the night before, but Kit, answering the door,
says the man is sick. The visitor is Malick, and his role as an architect is
appropriate for a man constructing the film we are watching).
Holly’s detachment increases as she says that the
world now feels like a “faraway planet” that she could not return to. She
wanders around the rich man’s estate, whose lavish beauty stresses how out of
place she is. She may wish to escape into a fantasy world, a pleasant dream
distant from the horrors of reality.
Kit uses a Dictaphone to record a message which is ironically funny given his actions. He sounds like an upright citizen when he says that one should listen to parents and teachers, consider the viewpoints of others, and accept the majority opinion once it prevails. He acts like he is just temporarily taking the car of the rich man (John Carter) and gives him a list of the things he has “borrowed.” His friendly attitude makes him seem like a nice fellow until he turns violent. The Cadillac he steals is the only way he can show what it would be like to be prosperous.
They leave South Dakota and go to Montana. Almereyda says at this point “the landscape drains like that tub, and we may glean that Badlands is a story of lost children at large in a moral vacuum.” There is a shot of Kit from the back as he holds a rifle over his shoulders with his raised hands. The view from that angle makes him look like a scarecrow. That figure is supposed to scare but not harm, but Kit is very scary in reality. She talks about traveling like Marco Polo, which points to her wish to be on a great adventure, when in fact they are living like fugitives where no place provides them with solace. Kit buries some of their things, saying they will revisit them to remind them of how they were. He acts as if they will overcome the miserable fate that awaits them due to his actions. He says the buried objects will be like a time capsule for future people to consider, which shows a grandiose idea of a legacy.Holly narrates that although Kit needed her given his
desperate situation, she says, “something had come between us. I’d stopped even
paying attention to him.” She says she, “spelled out entire sentences with my
tongue on the roof of my mouth where nobody could read them.” Her loneliness is
palpable now as she seems to be in a no man’s land, disconnected from everyone,
and only communicating with herself.
She privately vows never to run around with someone as
wild as Kit again. She seems to lack any insight into what kind of trouble she
is in, having attached herself to someone like Kit in the first place. Finally,
she voices her concerns to Kit about how even if they somehow escaped to
Canada, he couldn’t provide them with any income. He is so lacking in insight
when he says, “I can get a job with the Mounties.” He stops the car to dance to
a Nat King Cole song and talks about how he wished he could sing like that. He
can be romantic as he realizes what a different life he would have if he had
other talents. He can appreciate the beautiful look of the sun rising over the
mountains. Instead of gaining notoriety through artistic talents he thinks
about being remembered for his infamy.
As a helicopter chases them, Holly is no longer willing to go on with Kit’s crazy adventure. As Kit escapes he adds another policeman to his body count and drives away. After stopping at a gas station, he throws away all their stuff, as if freeing himself from the objects of the world that he is tethered to. He does hold onto Holly’s journal, the source of the narration we hear. Possibly he feels that it can be something that will let his story live on. After a high-speed chase Kit stops and builds a pile of rocks that marks where he was caught. It is a sort of monument to his notoriety. (At one point Malick shows a photograph of a native holding a rifle in front of the Great Sphinx. Could Kit be similarly, in a mock-epic manner, attempting to erect his personal object for prosperity?). And he has gained a renegade’s fame as one of the officers says, “We did it,” as if they will now receive recognition for capturing such a well-known criminal, who actually gave himself up. One of the policemen, after looking at Kit, says, “Hell, he ain’t no bigger than I am.” His remark shows how publicity exaggerates the aspects of an individual.
Kit continues to act so much like an average person
that it shows how odd he is. He is conversational, talking about guns to the
cops, and how he’ll attach his well-known status to them, calling them “heroes”
for taking down such a famous outlaw. One of the policemen knocks the hat he
stole from the rich man off Kit’s head, as if removing any perception on Kit’s
part that he belonged to the upper class. Even the patrolman says Kit looks
like James Dean, another left-handed association with fame. The cops feed his
desire to be a well-known by talking about how they admire his clothes, receiving
his lighter as a souvenir like it belonged to a celebrity, and asking who his
favorite movie star is.
He seems considerate as he reunites with Holly while being taken into custody. He says he’ll make sure she’ll get off and find a good man to be with. But then he says that the rich man was lucky he didn’t kill him, too. She does get off on probation and marries the son of the lawyer who defended her. Kit is sentenced to die in the electric chair, but donates his body to science, which shows that Dr. Jekyll side which was offset by his Mr. Hyde killer. The last shot is of the air transport taking the captured duo away, and the camera shows the sun-laced sky, as if ironically showing that Kit felt he rose above the masses to achieve fame in the only way he knew how.
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