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Terrence Malick was born in Illinois, and grew up in Texas and Oklahoma. He graduated from Harvard University in 1966, attended Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar, worked for Life and The New Yorker, and taught philosophy at MIT before joining the inaugural class of the American Film Institute Center for Advanced Film Studies.
He is the writer/director of Badlands, Days Of Heaven, The Thin Red Line, The New World, The Tree Of Life, and To The Wonder.
Natalie Portman To Play Lady Macbeth
1st May 2013
Natalie Portman is set to play Lady Macbeth on the big screen.The 'Black Swan' actress has signed on to star...
Rachel Mcadams Lied About Horse Hair Allergy To Win Terrence Malick Movie Role
10th April 2013
Actress Rachel Mcadams lied about her horse hair allergy to land a role in Terrence Malick's new movie To The...
Ebert's Final Review Is Posted
8th April 2013
When Roger Ebert died last week at the age of 70, several movie columnists assumed that his final review was...
Can Oscar Darling Ben Affleck Save Malick's To The Wonder? (trailer)
26th March 2013
Ahead of its full U.S. release, a full theatrical trailer has been released for Terrence Malick's latest movie 'To The...
Rachel Weisz Opens Up About Terrence Malick Snub
8th March 2013
Rachel Weisz has no regrets over taking a job on Terrence Malick's last movie even though her part was axed...
To the Wonder 2012, Review by Rich Cline
Frankly, a bad Terrence Malick film is better than 90 percent of movies released in...
The Tree of Life 2011, Review by Rich Cline
Malick takes a bold, intensely personal approach to this big story about life, the universe...
Amazing Grace 2007, Review by Matt McKillop
For a film with all the stylistic panache of a BBC period yawner and all...
The New World 2005, Review by Chris Barsanti
Is there a more frustrating living director than Terrence Malick? It's hard to imagine another...
The Beautiful Country 2004, Review by Pete Croatto
It's getting harder to appreciate an immigrant saga like The Beautiful Country in which audiences...
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