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IMDbPro

Les moissons du ciel

Original title: Days of Heaven
  • 1978
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
67K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,996
165
Les moissons du ciel (1978)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer1:56
3 Videos
99+ Photos
DramaRomance

A hot-tempered farm laborer convinces the woman he loves to marry their rich but dying boss so that they can have a claim to his fortune.A hot-tempered farm laborer convinces the woman he loves to marry their rich but dying boss so that they can have a claim to his fortune.A hot-tempered farm laborer convinces the woman he loves to marry their rich but dying boss so that they can have a claim to his fortune.

  • Director
    • Terrence Malick
  • Writer
    • Terrence Malick
  • Stars
    • Richard Gere
    • Brooke Adams
    • Sam Shepard
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    67K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,996
    165
    • Director
      • Terrence Malick
    • Writer
      • Terrence Malick
    • Stars
      • Richard Gere
      • Brooke Adams
      • Sam Shepard
    • 260User reviews
    • 102Critic reviews
    • 94Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 13 wins & 13 nominations total

    Videos3

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:56
    Official Trailer
    A Guide to the Films of Terrence Malick
    Clip 2:31
    A Guide to the Films of Terrence Malick
    A Guide to the Films of Terrence Malick
    Clip 2:31
    A Guide to the Films of Terrence Malick
    Top 5 Forbidden-Love Films With 'Disobedience' Star Alessandro Nivola
    Video 2:33
    Top 5 Forbidden-Love Films With 'Disobedience' Star Alessandro Nivola

    Photos448

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    + 442
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    Top cast18

    Edit
    Richard Gere
    Richard Gere
    • Bill
    Brooke Adams
    Brooke Adams
    • Abby
    Sam Shepard
    Sam Shepard
    • The Farmer
    Linda Manz
    Linda Manz
    • Linda
    Robert J. Wilke
    Robert J. Wilke
    • The Farm Foreman
    • (as Robert Wilke)
    Jackie Shultis
    • Linda's Friend
    Stuart Margolin
    Stuart Margolin
    • Mill Foreman
    Timothy Scott
    Timothy Scott
    • Harvest Hand
    • (as Tim Scott)
    Gene Bell
    • Dancer
    Doug Kershaw
    Doug Kershaw
    • Fiddler
    Richard Libertini
    Richard Libertini
    • Vaudeville Leader
    Frenchie Lemond
    • Vaudeville Wrestler
    Sahbra Markus
    • Vaudeville Dancer
    Bob Wilson
    • Accountant
    Muriel Jolliffe
    • Headmistress
    John Wilkinson
    • Preacher
    King Cole
    • Farm Worker
    Terrence Malick
    Terrence Malick
    • Mill Worker
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Terrence Malick
    • Writer
      • Terrence Malick
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews260

    7.766.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7Prismark10

    A Prairie story

    This is gorgeous looking film very much filmed at dusk and dawn. A film misunderstood upon its time of release and only after Terrence Malick's subsequent films can you now understand what the writer- director was aiming at.

    The fact that Malick's next film emerged 20 years later we understand this is a person who wants to tell his story by visuals. Actors talking is just secondary and those scenes end up on the cutting room floor.

    Days of Heaven which was shot in 70mm always had a reputation for its Cinematography which won an Oscar.

    Now we can marvel at it in our homes on widescreen high definition television. You can really have those close ups of those insects. It is also a surprisingly short film, coming in at just over 90 minutes.

    The tale is slight, Gere is a hothead with a girlfriend that is pretending to be his sister and his actual younger sister. They get a job whilst fleeing from Chicago in a farm in Texas where the Farmer played by Sam Shepard takes a shine to the girlfriend and marries her. Gere is aware that the Framer only has a year to live.

    Apparently the film took several years to be edited and the narration from the youngest sister had to be added to make the story flow. A similar device was used by Malick in 'The Thin Red Line.'

    The film might be seen as slow and maybe hard to fathom because there is relative little dialogue but as mentioned you admire the visuals and at 90 minutes it is not as slow moving as you think.

    A brave beautifully crafted film.
    8ackstasis

    "You'd give him a flower, he'd keep it forever"

    Terrence Malick is less a storyteller than a visual poet. At times, the images in 'Days of Heaven (1978)' seem too beautiful to be believed – could Mother Nature even construct such moments of magnificence at her own accord? Cinematographers Néstor Almendros and Haskell Wexler (credited only as "additional photographer") consistently shot the film during the "magic hour" between darkness and sunrise/sunset, when the sun's radiance is missing from the sky, and so their colours have a muted presence, as though filtered through the stalks of wheat that saturate the landscape. Crucial alongside the film's photographers are composer Ennio Morricone – utilising a variation on the seventh movement ("Aquarium") in Camille Saint-Saëns's "Carnival of the Animals" suite – and a succession of sound editors, whose work brings a dreamy, ethereal edge to the vast fields of the Texas Panhandle. The film's final act, away from the wheat-fields, recalls Arthur Penn's 'Bonnie and Clyde (1967),' but otherwise Malick's style, contemplative and elegiac, is in a class of its own, more comparable perhaps to Kurosawa's 'Dersu Uzala (1975).'

    Malick refuses to explore his characters' motivations. The viewer is deliberately kept at an arm's length, and Malick eschews cinema's traditional notions of narrative development. Instead, the story is told as a succession of fleeting moments, the sort that a young girl (the film's narrator, Linda Manz) might pick up through her day-to-day experiences and muted understanding of adult emotions. Note that the girl is always kept separate from the dramatic crux of the film – the love-triangle between Billy, Abby, and the Farmer – and her comprehension of events is tainted by her adolescent grasp on adult relationships and societal norms. I was reminded of Andrew Dominik's recent 'The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (2007)' {another sumptuously-photographed picture}, which also refused to explore its title character, Jesse James, kept at a distance through the impartial objectivity of the historical narrator. In Malick's film, Linda's narration tells us one thing, and the viewer sees another. But one can never fully understand the complex emotions driving human behaviour, so perhaps the girl's perspective is as good as any other.

    'Days of Heaven' derives its title from a passage in the Bible (Deuteronomy 11:21), and Malick's tale of jealousy and desire is suitably Biblical in nature. Essential to this allegory is an apocalyptic plague of locusts, which descend upon the wheat-fields like an army from the heavens. When the fields erupt into flame, quite literally from the broiling emotions of the film's conflicted characters, the viewer is confronted by the most intense manifestation of Hell-on- Earth since the burning village in Bondarchuk's 'War and Peace (1967).' But, interestingly, Malick here regresses on his own allegory: Judgement Day isn't the end, but rather it comes and goes. Life is driven by the inexorable march of Fate: The Farmer (Sam Shepard) is doomed to die within a year; Bill (Richard Gere) is doomed to repeat his mistakes twice over. In the film's final moments, Linda and her newfound friend embark purposelessly along the railway tracks, the tracks being a physical incarnation of Fate itself: their paths are laid down already, but we mortals can never know precisely where they lead until we get there.
    rustyk-5

    Up there with Casablanca & Citizen Kane

    I can understand why Malick didn't make another movie after he made Days of Heaven. The film was panned by the majority of the critics who could only find the cinematography worthy of praise. However, Malick was hugely misunderstood by these dumb critics.

    They complain that the film is ponderously slow. This was the intention. Malick used pause to convey that the characters think. Too many actors rattle off their lines without letting their characters think of them. It also conveys the slow pace of their lives.

    Critics complain that the characters are too remote - one feels removed from them and can't get involved. Hello! It is narrated by a 13 yr old and is essentially her view of the events that transpired. Naturally she does not grasp most of the more adult moments between them and thus is herself removed from being fully involved in Bill and Abby's relationship and that is what has to come across.

    Then Malick, in a moment of genius, allied the four main characters to the four elements; Earth, Air, Fire & Water. Bill is Fire - he is seen at first in front of the furnaces of a foundry where he works. We can see his temper is volatile. Abby is water - in the very first shot she is scavenging(?) by a stream and she is seen against the backdrop of the river. Linda is Earth - In her narration she says that she is close to the "Oith". The Farmer is Air - constantly tinkering with his weather vane, and his fields of wheat are often seen waving in the wind.

    All in all a severely mies-judged film and the critics owe Malick a huge apology. The work is pure genius!
    10katsat

    One of the most haunting and beautiful films ever made

    If any movie could be called filmed poetry, this would be it. From its first opening shot to its last frame, there is such lyricism and emotion and beauty that it almost leaves you speechless. I have not seen this movie in years, but it still affects me and I want to write about it. There is a pervading sadness to the movie, like a memory of something wonderful that could have been, that should have been, that almost was, and is all the more tragic because it was in your hands but slipped through your fingers. This is not a movie for everyone, but if you believe that film can be one of the highest forms of art, this is the film to see.
    10SteveSkafte

    You're a peripheral character in someone else's dream

    Days of heaven is exactly what this is. The magic hour (when much of the film was shot), those moments before dawn and after dusk when everything is indirect, dreamlike, breathless, heartwaking. There's no real story, as such. Sure, there's a general plot line which should satisfy any casual viewer. This isn't, after all, a hard film to follow. It is simply that the environment is the main character as opposed to the human elements. Linda Manz's young character narrates the story sporadically, like a sleepy traveler beside the campfire telling you of half-forgotten memories, and wonderful, casual observations that will seem clearer in the morning light, but no longer worth mentioning. Her voice is halting and uncertain, belying a personality that is confident in all other respects. Other actors, good (Brooke Adams, Sam Shepard) and not-so-good (Richard Gere) blend in perfectly. Their performances are so understated that you forget they are actors playing characters. Even Richard Gere, who never learned subtlety and would never again employ it, is almost invisible here.

    This is not a long film. For all its leisurely pace, ninety-six minutes is all it needs to tell its tale. Terrence Malick is out for sight and sound. There is nothing lost to unneeded expression, nothing not shared in the space in front of you. That leaves cinematographer Néstor Almendros with the freedom to photograph, to observe without opinion whatever seems to be happening most openly before him.

    When I first finished watching "Days of Heaven" it felt like waking from a dream. I couldn't be sure how much time has passed. It seemed so long, but the silence was the same, and little had changed outside my window. Nothing but the heavy quiet was all around me, and I felt the desperate desire to move. Everything beneath my feet felt moving, quietly slipping past and all I had to do was put soles to earth and start walking. This is a film of photographs, images of the purest sort. Open your eyes.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The shot of locusts ascending to the sky was shot in reverse with the helicopter crew throwing peanut shells down, and actors walking backwards.
    • Goofs
      Towards the end of the movie, Bill fires three shots from a double-barreled shotgun without reloading.
    • Quotes

      Linda: Nobody's perfect. There was never a perfect person around. You just have half-angel and half-devil in you.

    • Connections
      Featured in Sneak Previews: The Wiz/Who is Killing The Great Chefs of Europe?/Girlfriends/The Big Fix/Days of Heaven (1978)
    • Soundtracks
      Enderlin
      Written and Performed by Leo Kottke

      Used by permission of Overdrive Music A.S.C.A.P. Copyright 1978

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    FAQ20

    • How long is Days of Heaven?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 16, 1979 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Días de gloria
    • Filming locations
      • Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada(Lethbridge Viaduct High Level Railroad Bridge)
    • Production company
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $3,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,446,749
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,492,909
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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