Producer Terrence Malick doesn't strike one as the sort to activity in continuations and spinoffs, particularly for his little-seen Ben Affleck/Rachel McAdams/Olga Kurylenko show To the Wonder, however that is precisely what's occurring. A trailer for a short film called Thy Kingdom Come has landed on the web, which viably fills in as a spinoff of the 2012 film and is comprised of unused film. Per The New Yorker (by means of The Playlist), photojournalist Eugene Richards was contracted by Malick to go along with him on the Bartlesville, Oklahoma set of To the Wonder, where Richards was entrusted with recording scenes in which Javier Bardem's cleric character would meet real inhabitants of the town.
To some degree shockingly, the occupants went about as though Bardem was a genuine minister (despite the fact that they knew he wasn't), and opened up, uncovering difficult and enthusiastic genuine stories. That recording never made it into To the Wonder, however it's been cut together for a 43-minute short film called Thy Kingdom Come which will make a big appearance at the SXSW Film Festival one month from now. Richards got consent from Malick to utilize the recording, and keeping in mind that it's indistinct how or when this may get a discharge, a trailer features some extremely dazzling and passionate stuff.
To the Wonder was a piece of a shockingly productive period for Malick, who broke out with Badlands and Days of Heaven in the 1970s at that point vanished until 1998's The Thin Red Line. After 2011's The Tree of Life, Malick went on a tear and shot three new movies consecutive: To the Wonder, Knight of Cups, and Song to Song. Given his long altering process these movies saw a stunned discharge plan, yet the recording for them was caught in short request.
To the Wonder is a bit underrated, and keeping in mind that I can see a few people's dissatisfaction with the idyllic idea of the film—including from Affleck, who was amazed to discover every one of his lines had been removed—I believe it's a successful and moving picture of affection and a disintegrating marriage. Be that as it may, once more, it's not a film for everybody, and if people thought To the Wonder was undefined they had no clue what was accompanying Knight of Cups and Song to Song.
Be that as it may, this To the Wonder spinoff Thy Kingdom Come looks sort of dynamite, and I'm interested to check whether it'll get a more extensive discharge. Look at the trailer underneath.