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* AnimalMotifs: The time when the swarm of locusts attacks the fields coincides with the moment when the farmer realizes that Billy is Abby's lover and [[spoiler:decides to kill him]].

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* AnimalMotifs: The locusts symbolize a threat. The time when the swarm of locusts attacks the fields coincides with the moment when the farmer realizes that Billy is Abby's lover and [[spoiler:decides to kill him]].
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* OldRetainer: The farm foreman is devoted to his boss. At some point, he tells Billy that he considers him as his son. Therefore, he is determined to find [[spoiler:his murderer]] in the end.

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* OldRetainer: The farm foreman is devoted to his boss. At some point, he tells Billy that he considers him his boss as his own son. Therefore, he is determined to find [[spoiler:his murderer]] in the end.

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* NoNameGiven: The farmer, the foreman...pretty much every character apart from the three leads, and even they aren't given last names.

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* NoNameGiven: The farmer, the foreman... pretty much every character apart from the three leads, and even they aren't given last names.names.
* OldRetainer: The farm foreman is devoted to his boss. At some point, he tells Billy that he considers him as his son. Therefore, he is determined to find [[spoiler:his murderer]] in the end.
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* AnimalMotifs: The time when the swarm of locusts attacks the fields coincides with the moment when the farmer realizes that Billy is Abby's lover and [[spoiler:decides to kill him]].


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* TheSwarm: A swarm of locusts attacks the fields. This is the time when the farmer goes after Billy.
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* AccidentalMurder: In the opening scene Billy hits a foreman at the factory, accidentally killing him.
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* RomanticFakeRealTurn: Abby pretends to be attracted to the farmer as part of a plan to inherit his fortune after his death, but then she falls in love with him.
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* MarriageBeforeRomance: Abby falls for the farmer after marrying him.
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* EverybodySmokes: Even Linda, Billy's younger sister.

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* CrazyJealousGuy: When the farmer understands that Billy was Abby's lover, he goes after him [[spoiler:to kill him with a gun]]. This is somewhat justified by the fact that Billy and Abby lied to him from the start, but at the time he does it, Abby had ended her realtionship with Billy.


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* GoldDigger: Abby marries the farmer only to inherit his money when he will die. Justified because she is really poor.


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* YourCheatingHeart: Abby cheats on her husband with her former lover, Billy. When she falls for her husband, she ends this affair.
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* ImprovisedWeapon: [[spoiler:Billy]] uses a screwdriver to kill [[spoiler:the farmer]].
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* TheBeard: {{Inverted|Trope}}. Abby and Billy are lovers, but they pretend to be siblings.
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* BecomingTheMask: Abby pretends to be attracted to the farmer as part of a plan to inherit his fortune after his death, but then she falls in love with him.


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* FirstPersonPeripheralNarrator: The narrator is Linda, the protagonist's sister. [[spoiler:This is because Billy is dead at the end of the story.]]
* HuntingAccident: Billy considers killing the farmer during a hunting trip. {{Subverted|Trope}} because he does not dare to do it.
* KillingInSelfDefense: [[spoiler:Billy]] kills [[spoiler:the farmer]] with a screwdriver, only because the latter threatened him with a gun.


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* MurderTheHypotenuse:
** Billy considers killing the farmer during a hunting trip. {{Subverted|Trope}} because he does not dare to do it.
** In the end, [[spoiler:the farmer goes after Billy with a gun to kill him, but Billy finally kills the farmer in self-defense with a screwdriver.]]


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* RichSuitorPoorSuitor: Abby has two lovers: Billy, a poor worker, and the rich farmer. At first, Abby is in love with Billy, but she marries the farmer and then falls in love with him.
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->''Nobody's perfect. There was never a perfect person around. You just have half-angel and half-devil in you.''

A 1978 romantic drama by Creator/TerrenceMalick, in what would be his last feature before a twenty year absence from filmmaking.

to:

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

"''

A 1978 romantic drama by Creator/TerrenceMalick, in what would be his last feature before a twenty year twenty-year absence from filmmaking.






!!This Movie Contains The Following Tropes:

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!!This Movie Contains The Following Tropes:
film contains the following tropes:
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A 1978 Creator/TerrenceMalick film.

to:

A 1978 Creator/TerrenceMalick film.
romantic drama by Creator/TerrenceMalick, in what would be his last feature before a twenty year absence from filmmaking.
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* WholePlotReference: The main plot of Billy encouraging his girlfriend to marry the farmer so they can get his money is taken from Creator/HenryJames' ''The Wings of the Dove''.

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* WholePlotReference: The main plot of Billy encouraging his girlfriend Abby to marry the farmer so they can get his money is taken from Creator/HenryJames' ''The Wings of the Dove''.
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* WholePlotReference: The main plot of Billy encouraging his girlfriend to marry the farmer so they can get his money is taken from Creator/HenryJames' ''The Wings of the Dove''.
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Addition of Steel Mill trope.

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* SteelMill: The opening scene of the film takes place in a Chicago steel mill (and surrounding slums).
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* DownOnTheFarm: Rural Texas can have adultery, betrayal, and murder just as well as big cities can.


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* LoveTriangle: Abby falls in love with the farmer for real but can't shake Billy. Tragedy ensues.
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* BedsheetLadder: How Linda and another girl escape the apparently unpleasant boarding school where Abby deposited her, towards the end of the movie.
* BladeOfGrassCut: A hallmark of Terrence Malick's career. Here there are loving closeups of stalks of wheat, crickets on stalks of wheat, frogs, shoots of wheat sprouting in time-lapse, etc.


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* EstablishingCharacterMoment: In the opening scene Billy hits a foreman at the factory, accidentally killing him. Billy is established as hot-headed and impulsive.


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* FaceFramedInShadow: Billy is framed this way when he's peering into Abby and the farmer's bedroom, before he sneaks in and lures Abby out.


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* ShoutOut: The family watched Creator/CharlieChaplin's ''Film/TheImmigrant'' on a home projector.
* YourDaysAreNumbered: Nothing's visibly wrong with the farmer, but a doctor tells him he has maybe a year to live.
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Set in 1916, a steelworker named Billy (Richard Gere) kills a foreman out of anger. Fearing reprisals, he runs away with his sister Linda (Linda Manz) and girlfriend Abby (Brooke Adams). Pretending that Abby is his sister so as to avoid gossip, Billy and his crew hitch a train to the Texas panhandle, where they find work in the wheat fields of a rich but sick farmer (Music/SamShepard). When the farmer falls in love with Abby, Billy convinces her to marry him, thinking that he will die within the year and they can inherit his money. Of course, things don't work out quite so well...

to:

Set in 1916, a steelworker named Billy (Richard Gere) (Creator/RichardGere) kills a foreman out of anger. Fearing reprisals, he runs away with his sister Linda (Linda Manz) and girlfriend Abby (Brooke Adams). Pretending that Abby is his sister so as to avoid gossip, Billy and his crew hitch a train to the Texas panhandle, where they find work in the wheat fields of a rich but sick farmer (Music/SamShepard). When the farmer falls in love with Abby, Billy convinces her to marry him, thinking that he will die within the year and they can inherit his money. Of course, things don't work out quite so well...
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

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* TheKenBurnsEffect: Used throughout the opening credits, as the camera pans and zooms over old-timey 1920s pictures.

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Most of the entries on this page are Trivia. Moving them to appropriate subpage.



* CreatorBreakdown: Supposedly because of the stresses of making this movie, Malick took a twenty-year hiatus from films until returning for ''Film/TheThinRedLine''.
* TheDanza: Linda, played by Linda Manz.
* DoingItForTheArt: Malick, to the extreme. All in all the film took ''five years'' to complete.



* OohMeAccentsSlipping: Happens a few times, particularly with Brooke's Chicagoan accent
* SceneryPorn: Many arguments could be made that this is THE most beautiful film ever shot
* SensitiveGuyAndManlyMan: The farmer vs. Billy
* TroubledProduction: From ThatOtherWiki:
-->The production was not "rigidly prepared", allowing for improvisation. Daily call sheets were not very detailed and the schedule changed to suit the weather. This upset some of the Hollywood crew members not used to working in such a spontaneous way...Some crew members said that [cinematographer] Almendros and Malick did not know what they were doing. Some of the crew quit the production...the rest of the production was difficult from the start. The actors and crew reportedly viewed Malick as cold and distant. After two weeks of shooting, Malick was so disappointed with the dailies, he "decided to toss the script, go Leo Tolstoy instead of Fyodor Dostoevsky, wide instead of deep [and] shoot miles of film with the hope of solving the problems in the editing room." In addition, the harvesting machines constantly broke down, which resulted in shooting beginning late in the afternoon, allowing for only a few hours of daylight before it was too dark to go on. One day, two helicopters were scheduled to drop peanut shells that were to simulate locusts on film; however, Malick decided to shoot period cars instead. He kept the helicopters on hold at great cost. Production was lagging behind, with costs exceeding the budget by about $800,000, and Schneider had already mortgaged his home in order to cover the overages. The production ran so late that both Almendros and camera operator John Bailey had to leave due to a prior commitment on Creator/FrancoisTruffaut's ''Film/TheManWhoLovedWomen''. Almendros approached his friend and renowned cinematographer Haskell Wexler to complete the film. They worked together for a week so that Wexler could get familiar with the film's visual style. Wexler was careful to match Almendros' work, but he did make some exceptions. Though half the finished picture was footage shot by Wexler, he received only credit for "additional photography", much to his chagrin.
* WhatCouldHaveBeen: Malick originally wanted Creator/JohnTravolta for the role of Billy.

to:

* OohMeAccentsSlipping: Happens a few times, particularly with Brooke's Chicagoan accent
accent.
* SceneryPorn: Many arguments could be made that this is THE most beautiful film ever shot
shot.
* SensitiveGuyAndManlyMan: The farmer vs. Billy
* TroubledProduction: From ThatOtherWiki:
-->The production was not "rigidly prepared", allowing for improvisation. Daily call sheets were not very detailed and the schedule changed to suit the weather. This upset some of the Hollywood crew members not used to working in such a spontaneous way...Some crew members said that [cinematographer] Almendros and Malick did not know what they were doing. Some of the crew quit the production...the rest of the production was difficult from the start. The actors and crew reportedly viewed Malick as cold and distant. After two weeks of shooting, Malick was so disappointed with the dailies, he "decided to toss the script, go Leo Tolstoy instead of Fyodor Dostoevsky, wide instead of deep [and] shoot miles of film with the hope of solving the problems in the editing room." In addition, the harvesting machines constantly broke down, which resulted in shooting beginning late in the afternoon, allowing for only a few hours of daylight before it was too dark to go on. One day, two helicopters were scheduled to drop peanut shells that were to simulate locusts on film; however, Malick decided to shoot period cars instead. He kept the helicopters on hold at great cost. Production was lagging behind, with costs exceeding the budget by about $800,000, and Schneider had already mortgaged his home in order to cover the overages. The production ran so late that both Almendros and camera operator John Bailey had to leave due to a prior commitment on Creator/FrancoisTruffaut's ''Film/TheManWhoLovedWomen''. Almendros approached his friend and renowned cinematographer Haskell Wexler to complete the film. They worked together for a week so that Wexler could get familiar with the film's visual style. Wexler was careful to match Almendros' work, but he did make some exceptions. Though half the finished picture was footage shot by Wexler, he received only credit for "additional photography", much to his chagrin.
* WhatCouldHaveBeen: Malick originally wanted Creator/JohnTravolta for the role of
Billy.

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no critical reception on the main page


A 1978 Creator/TerrenceMalick film considered by many to be his MagnumOpus, at least until ''Film/TheTreeOfLife''.

to:

A 1978 Creator/TerrenceMalick film considered by many to be his MagnumOpus, at least until ''Film/TheTreeOfLife''.
film.




While critics were unable to figure it out when it was released, it has [[VindicatedByHistory gone on to be considered one of the greatest films of all time,]] praised for its lush cinematography and meditative, haunting tone.
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Set in 1916, a steelworker named Billy (Richard Gere) kills a foreman out of anger. Fearing reprisals, he runs away with his sister Linda (Linda Manz) and girlfriend Abby (Brooke Adams). Pretending that Abby is his sister so as to avoid gossip, Billy and his crew hitch a train to the Texas panhandle, where they find work in the wheat fields of a rich but sick farmer (Creator/SamShepard). When the farmer falls in love with Abby, Billy convinces her to marry him, thinking that he will die within the year and they can inherit his money. Of course, things don't work out quite so well...

to:

Set in 1916, a steelworker named Billy (Richard Gere) kills a foreman out of anger. Fearing reprisals, he runs away with his sister Linda (Linda Manz) and girlfriend Abby (Brooke Adams). Pretending that Abby is his sister so as to avoid gossip, Billy and his crew hitch a train to the Texas panhandle, where they find work in the wheat fields of a rich but sick farmer (Creator/SamShepard).(Music/SamShepard). When the farmer falls in love with Abby, Billy convinces her to marry him, thinking that he will die within the year and they can inherit his money. Of course, things don't work out quite so well...
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Namespacing, formatting


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

to:

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



* CreatorBreakdown: Supposedly because of the stresses of making this movie, Malick took a twenty-year hiatus from films until returning for TheThinRedLine.
* TheDanza: Linda, played by Linda Manz
* DoingItForTheArt: Malick, to the extreme. All in all the film took '''five years''' to complete.

to:

* CreatorBreakdown: Supposedly because of the stresses of making this movie, Malick took a twenty-year hiatus from films until returning for TheThinRedLine.
''Film/TheThinRedLine''.
* TheDanza: Linda, played by Linda Manz
Manz.
* DoingItForTheArt: Malick, to the extreme. All in all the film took '''five years''' ''five years'' to complete.



-->The production was not "rigidly prepared", allowing for improvisation. Daily call sheets were not very detailed and the schedule changed to suit the weather. This upset some of the Hollywood crew members not used to working in such a spontaneous way...Some crew members said that [cinematographer] Almendros and Malick did not know what they were doing. Some of the crew quit the production...the rest of the production was difficult from the start. The actors and crew reportedly viewed Malick as cold and distant. After two weeks of shooting, Malick was so disappointed with the dailies, he "decided to toss the script, go Leo Tolstoy instead of Fyodor Dostoevsky, wide instead of deep [and] shoot miles of film with the hope of solving the problems in the editing room." In addition, the harvesting machines constantly broke down, which resulted in shooting beginning late in the afternoon, allowing for only a few hours of daylight before it was too dark to go on. One day, two helicopters were scheduled to drop peanut shells that were to simulate locusts on film; however, Malick decided to shoot period cars instead. He kept the helicopters on hold at great cost. Production was lagging behind, with costs exceeding the budget by about $800,000, and Schneider had already mortgaged his home in order to cover the overages. The production ran so late that both Almendros and camera operator John Bailey had to leave due to a prior commitment on François [[FrancoisTruffaut Truffaut's]] TheManWhoLovedWomen. Almendros approached his friend and renowned cinematographer Haskell Wexler to complete the film. They worked together for a week so that Wexler could get familiar with the film's visual style. Wexler was careful to match Almendros' work, but he did make some exceptions. Though half the finished picture was footage shot by Wexler, he received only credit for "additional photography", much to his chagrin.
* WhatCouldHaveBeen: Malick originally wanted JohnTravolta for the role of Billy

to:

-->The production was not "rigidly prepared", allowing for improvisation. Daily call sheets were not very detailed and the schedule changed to suit the weather. This upset some of the Hollywood crew members not used to working in such a spontaneous way...Some crew members said that [cinematographer] Almendros and Malick did not know what they were doing. Some of the crew quit the production...the rest of the production was difficult from the start. The actors and crew reportedly viewed Malick as cold and distant. After two weeks of shooting, Malick was so disappointed with the dailies, he "decided to toss the script, go Leo Tolstoy instead of Fyodor Dostoevsky, wide instead of deep [and] shoot miles of film with the hope of solving the problems in the editing room." In addition, the harvesting machines constantly broke down, which resulted in shooting beginning late in the afternoon, allowing for only a few hours of daylight before it was too dark to go on. One day, two helicopters were scheduled to drop peanut shells that were to simulate locusts on film; however, Malick decided to shoot period cars instead. He kept the helicopters on hold at great cost. Production was lagging behind, with costs exceeding the budget by about $800,000, and Schneider had already mortgaged his home in order to cover the overages. The production ran so late that both Almendros and camera operator John Bailey had to leave due to a prior commitment on François [[FrancoisTruffaut Truffaut's]] TheManWhoLovedWomen.Creator/FrancoisTruffaut's ''Film/TheManWhoLovedWomen''. Almendros approached his friend and renowned cinematographer Haskell Wexler to complete the film. They worked together for a week so that Wexler could get familiar with the film's visual style. Wexler was careful to match Almendros' work, but he did make some exceptions. Though half the finished picture was footage shot by Wexler, he received only credit for "additional photography", much to his chagrin.
* WhatCouldHaveBeen: Malick originally wanted JohnTravolta Creator/JohnTravolta for the role of BillyBilly.

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Image to the right; YMMV stuff to tab.


[[quoteright:350:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Days_of_Heaven_3601.jpg]]



http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Days_of_Heaven_3601.jpg

A 1978 TerrenceMalick film considered by many to be his MagnumOpus (at least until TheTreeOfLife)

Set in 1916, a steelworker named Billy (Richard Gere) kills a foreman out of anger. Fearing reprisals, he runs away with his sister Linda (Linda Manz) and girlfriend Abby (Brooke Adams). Pretending that Abby is his sister so as to avoid gossip, Billy and his crew hitch a train to the Texas panhandle, where they find work in the wheat fields of a rich but sick farmer (SamShepard). When the farmer falls in love with Abby, Billy convinces her to marry him, thinking that he will die within the year and they can inherit his money. Of course, things don't work out quite so well...

to:

http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Days_of_Heaven_3601.jpg

A 1978 TerrenceMalick Creator/TerrenceMalick film considered by many to be his MagnumOpus (at MagnumOpus, at least until TheTreeOfLife)

''Film/TheTreeOfLife''.

Set in 1916, a steelworker named Billy (Richard Gere) kills a foreman out of anger. Fearing reprisals, he runs away with his sister Linda (Linda Manz) and girlfriend Abby (Brooke Adams). Pretending that Abby is his sister so as to avoid gossip, Billy and his crew hitch a train to the Texas panhandle, where they find work in the wheat fields of a rich but sick farmer (SamShepard).(Creator/SamShepard). When the farmer falls in love with Abby, Billy convinces her to marry him, thinking that he will die within the year and they can inherit his money. Of course, things don't work out quite so well...






* WhatDoYouMeanItsNotSymbolic: There are the obvious Biblical references (lovers pretending to be brother and sister to avoid trouble, [[spoiler: locusts and fire wiping out fields]]), as well as the seemingly random cuts to shots of animals and plants.
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* ExcusePlot: Why do they pretend to be siblings? So we can have a movie.
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* FauxlosophicNarration: For lack of a better term. Linda's voiceovers both comment on what's happening storywise and veer off into philosophical rambles

to:

* FauxlosophicNarration: For lack of a better term. Linda's voiceovers both comment on what's happening storywise and veer off into philosophical ramblesrambles. Reportedly, Malick didn't script the narration. He showed Manz the film and had her speak (in character) into a microphone whatever came to mind as she watched it.
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http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Days_of_Heaven_3601.jpg

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