This reviewer is a member of the Best Buy Tech Insider Network Program. This invitation-only program provides BestBuy.com reviewers with manufacturer-supplied products for the purpose of writing honest, unbiased and usage-based reviews. Outside of receiving products to test and review, Best Buy Tech Insider Network Reviewers are not compensated in any other way.
Seriously disappointing movie. The first half of the film can be watched without to much pain but beyond that it becomes a chore. There was some nice camera work and the "mood" was right but most of the characters were empty and dull. I really wanted to like this movie during the first half which seemed to be going along good but then it fizzles out and your waiting for it to end and when it does, you want your 2 hours back.
This reviewer is a member of the Best Buy Tech Insider Network Program. This invitation-only program provides BestBuy.com reviewers with manufacturer-supplied products for the purpose of writing honest, unbiased and usage-based reviews. Outside of receiving products to test and review, Best Buy Tech Insider Network Reviewers are not compensated in any other way.
This is a fun movie to watch but getting past the first 15 minutes is key. The "camcorder" camera work takes some adjusting but ultimately works in the end. This movie pulls you into the experience like no other. The Blair Witch Project used a similar technique but this is executed much better and the story is much more interesting and characters more likable. Keep a close eye out in the last scene of the movie, watch it in slow motion if you need to and you’ll know where the monster came from.
What's great about it: Nicely executed, cool concept
What's not so great: Camera work takes getting used too, a little short
Into the Wild is writer/director Sean Penn's adaptation of the popular book by Jon Krakauer, a nonfiction account of the post-collegiate wanderings of a young Virginia man, who divorces himself from his friends, family, and possessions in search of a greater spiritual knowledge and communion with nature. Upon his 1990 graduation from Emory University in Atlanta, Christopher McCandless (Emile Hirsch) walks away from a loving if dysfunctional family and sends his nearly 25,000-dollar life savings to Oxfam International. Instead of the normal life his parents planned for him, Chris rechristens himself "Alexander Supertramp" and heads west in his beaten-up automobile until it no longer runs, at which point he takes up hitchhiking. The goal on the horizon? Alaska. By hook or by crook -- but without his limited cash, which he symbolically sets aflame -- Chris/Alexander determines to make it to his personal promised land, with stops along the way to experience America and its people. These adventures include a kayak trip down dangerous rapids, a gig working in a grain mill, extended stays with a hippie couple and a kindly old widower -- and enough cold, hunger, and exhaustion to leave him emotionally defeated more than once. Meanwhile, his parents (William Hurt and Marcia Gay Harden) and sister (Jena Malone) haven't received so much as a postcard from him, and begin to fear the worst. Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder composed the contemplative soundtrack.
This reviewer is a member of the Best Buy Tech Insider Network Program. This invitation-only program provides BestBuy.com reviewers with manufacturer-supplied products for the purpose of writing honest, unbiased and usage-based reviews. Outside of receiving products to test and review, Best Buy Tech Insider Network Reviewers are not compensated in any other way.
Amazing movie about a young mans journey out of main stream society in search of spiritual enlightenment. This movie will affect you on many levels; there are laughs, tears, and thought provoking moments throughout the movie. Sean Penn directed this masterpiece and did this true story the justice it deserves. I cannot recommend this movie enough, even if it is outside your normal genre of films, don’t miss this one.
What's great about it: Great story, brilliantly told