Nature Into the Wild (Read 804 times)

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I just saw this and I don't think there was a topic about this film here and I feel totally compelled to make one so here it is.

"Into the Wild", currently #126 on the Top 250 on imdb, has its summary written on its site as,

"After graduating from Emory University, top student and athlete Christopher McCandless abandons his possessions, gives his entire $24,000 savings account to charity and hitchhikes to Alaska to live in the wilderness. Along the way, Christopher encounters a series of characters that shape his life."

It is directed by Sean Penn and the cast includes Emile Hirsch (The Girl Next Door) as Christopher McCandless, William Hurt (A History of Violence) as his father, Marcia Gay Harden (Pollock) as his mother, Jena Malone (Donnie Darko) as his sister who provides the narration for the film, Catherine Keener (Being John Malkovich) as an aging hippie he encounters, Hal Holbrook (All the President's Men) as an old man he befriends and Vince Vaughn (Wedding Crashers) as wheat farmer he befriends, as well as other actors. It is based on a true story.

When I first heard about Into the Wild, I wasn't crazy about it so I didn't see it in the cinema (and I try to see a lot of movies in the cinema) and I really feel I missed out after getting the DVD and watching it on my small screen. Emile Hirsch as the principle character shines in this film. Though his character appeared silly and arrogant at times, Hirsch portrayed McCandless in his bliss. It made me want to be there with him - this fleeting character who drops into people's lives unannounced and leaves this remarkable impression. The shots in this movie are beautiful. I've been into forests and they don't look as stunning as they do in this film and that made it feel unreal for me. But this isn't how I see the forest, it's how Christopher sees the forest and the shots in this movie depict it in all its glory to him.

There are many other remarkable shots of the Alaskan wilderness, a flurry of birds flapping across a beach landscape, shots of turbulent rapids. I'm not gonna lie - I'm a nature lover. I'm a sucker for it and for it to be photographed so beautifully, it just... warmed the cockles of my heart. But we're not watching a nature documentary here, we're watching a movie! So how's bout that story! Well, I've always been fond of road trip movies, mobile stories, where everyone is moving from place to place. I loved Jack Kerouac's "On the Road". I loved the film version of The Motorcycle Diaries (haven't read the book). This film felt much like The Motorcycle Diaries to me with McCandless being his own Che Guevara with a mission and a goal and the determination to get to that goal. But let's leave Che out of this from now on.

I connected with McCandless' personal conflict, not that I've experienced it but because I thought the story was related so well and I related with many of the characters. If I had to pick a favourite performance in this movie, it would be Hal Holbrook's as Ron Franz. His scenes were my favourite scenes in the movie. His character just seemed to click with the McCandless character and they both had a wonderful friendship going - McCandless' boisterousness and adventurousness and Franz's humility and stability.

I thought this was a beautiful movie. It has definitely had an effect on me. Has anyone else seen it? And what do you think of it?

Oh, did I mention it has a killer Eddie Vedder soundtrack.. (love Eddie Vedder...)

Additional Information
imdb page
movie trailer
Last Edit: April 19, 2008, 05:42:20 am by Strangeluv
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Yeah, this movie was great! It reminded me a lot of Motorcycle Diaries. I'd probably put both of them on a top ten list!

I think this movie is definitely a little more stylized than Motorcycle Diaries though. So people might be more interested in this one. So yeah, definitely recommend it.
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this movie is really good i enjoyed it, the opening post summed it all up really
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I should totally check this one out...
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I loved this book and watching the movie really did it and the actual story justice. Pretty much summed up in the first post, but yeah, I really felt a connection to the characters and coming out of I really felt a little impacted by it. It was a very good movie!

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I've been meaning to pick up the Jon Krakauer book but haven't had the opportunity.

The movie isn't for everyone, though. Though quite a bit happens during the movie, it's all sort of underplayed and slow-paced. That's exactly why I liked it, though - because I felt I could just lie back and take it all in, McCandless' epic journey.

There have been criticisms that McCandless was a very arrogant and a very selfish boy. And I guess all of that comes with youth. I don't counter these criticisms because I thought it was a bit overboard to just leave his parents (and come on, a lot of people have shitty parents and dislike the Government but we're not all going to go live in the Alaskan wilderness because of it) and do what he did. But we're all selfish and self-centred in a way. I don't think he was more selfish than the average person, actually.

He wasn't perfect. He had some deep flaws and that's what made him stand out so much for me and why I could relate to him so much.
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oh yeah i wanted to see this a while ago but i missed it.
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yeah I've read a couple Krakauer books, my favorite is definitely 'Under the Banner of Heaven' about the Fundamentalist sects of Mormons and their craziness, as well as the one about Mount Everest... Into Thin Air maybe? Anyway yeah havent read this one or seen the movie... probably will want to read the book first heh.