Dopo essersi laureato, il brillante studente ed atleta Christopher McCandless si libera di tutti i suoi beni materiali, offre tutti i suoi risparmi in beneficenza e gira per l'America incont... Leggi tuttoDopo essersi laureato, il brillante studente ed atleta Christopher McCandless si libera di tutti i suoi beni materiali, offre tutti i suoi risparmi in beneficenza e gira per l'America incontrando una varia gamma di persone, per finire a vivere a contatto con la natura in Alaska.Dopo essersi laureato, il brillante studente ed atleta Christopher McCandless si libera di tutti i suoi beni materiali, offre tutti i suoi risparmi in beneficenza e gira per l'America incontrando una varia gamma di persone, per finire a vivere a contatto con la natura in Alaska.
- Candidato a 2 Oscar
- 23 vittorie e 106 candidature totali
- Rainey
- (as Brian Dierker)
- Graduation Reader
- (as James J. O'Neill)
Riepilogo
Recensioni in evidenza
The story begins with Chris graduating from Emory University, a prestigious school in Georgia. Now you'd think he would be on the fast track to financial success...but instead he gives away nearly everything he has and heads into the wilderness to live a bit like a nomad. It seems Chris was tired of a life of acquiring things and wanted to live simply...and mostly alone. He also seemed to be running away from himself....or at least who he and his family were. Ultimately his life would take him from the American Southwest all the way to the wilds of Alaska. This tale is based on a true story, as told by Chris' sister in the film.
I think this is a movie where I enjoyed the style more than the story itself. I liked the simple style, the simple music and the mostly lesser-named stars in the picture. I also respect how much Emile Hirsch put himself out for the role...his weight loss throughout the movie was dramatic. As a trained therapist, however, I couldn't help but think the Chris would have benefited a lot from therapy before taking such a huge leap in his life. He was clearly, in an odd way, suicidal and I was concerned how the film seemed to romanticize this. Overall, an interesting but often unpleasant and overlong movie...worth seeing once but not a film I'd rush to recommend.
Sean Penn directed and Eddie Gautier was the Director Of Photography. I can't stand Penn as a person but fair-is-fair and I think he's great as a director, having seen his work in "The Pledge" and "The Crossing Guard." The main actor, Emile Hirsch, who plays "Chris McCandless" (a.k.a. "Alexander Supertramp" reminded me of Leonardo DiCaprio with his looks, build and voice inflection. He is very credible as the young guy who wants nothing to do with materialistic society and dreams of living in the wilds of Alaska. The problem was that he was unprepared and underestimated what he was up against.
Two people who fascinated me the most in here were two extremes, age-wise - Hal Holbrook and Kristen Stewart. It was really great to see the veteran Holbrook ("Ron France") again. He was about 82 when he made this film and hadn't acted in a film in a few years. He was terrific, too. He had some of the most memorable scenes in the story. Meanwhile, teenager Stewart was captivating as "Tracy Tatro," who had a crush on "Alex." This young woman is on her way to stardom.
Brian Dierker and Catherine Keener also were really, really interesting as the aging hippie couple, "Rainey" and "Jan." I kept thinking, I know this guy when listening to Dierker's voice, finally guessing it was Jeff Bridges underneath all the beard....but it Dierker, a guy who rarely acts in films.
Knowing the book, the only part of the film that caught be off-guard was the young Swedish couple. I don't remember them in the book but I'll never forget this in this film!! One could debate the pros and cons of Chris McCandless for hours, so no sense going into that here. I thought the film was pretty kind to him. You read more in the book about how he hurt a lot of people with his silence. Either way, it's a a fascinating story and a beautiful film.
I feel like everything he's ever done in his career so far, every tiny nuance, has been distilled into this incredible film. From start to finish it is beyond inspiring - by the end, it lifts right off the ground.
The first time the soundtrack really kicked in, I felt that Eddie Vedder's score seemed too loud. Then I realized that my only complaint was merely me resisting the full experience. The whole point of it all was to let go and not be afraid of going that one step too far.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizJim Gallien, the Alaskan who gave Chris the rubber boots in the opening scene, plays himself.
- BlooperAt one point, Chris burns his Social Security card, just like he burned paper money previously.
In real life, Chris didn't burn his Social Security Card. When his sister Carine flew to Alaska to pick up his remains and some of the possessions that were found with him, she did not receive his backpack. Years later, when she returned to Alaska to finally see the bus where Chris died, she met a man who had removed Chris's backpack from the bus shortly after he had died. The man kept the backpack at his home for years, and when he finally gave it back to Carine, she found that it still contained many of Chris's possessions, including his wallet and Social Security card.
- Citazioni
Christopher McCandless: [written into book] Happiness only real when shared.
- Curiosità sui creditiThe opening title is shown as part of Chris's journal's writings.
- Colonne sonoreHard Sun
Written by Gordon Peterson
Performed by Eddie Vedder & Corin Tucker
Courtesy of Monkeywrench, Inc./J Records
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- Camino salvaje
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 15.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 18.354.356 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 212.440 USD
- 23 set 2007
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 56.676.733 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione2 ore 28 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.39 : 1