"I read somewhere of how important it is in life not necessarily to be strong but to feel strong, to measure yourself at least once..."~Alexander Supertramp
While the book was a comprehensive exploration of Christopher McCandless's experience, as well as the adventures of others who similarly sought solitude in nature, the movie is more like a poem. Christopher, who is "reborn" as Alexander Supertramp, stands in for those of us who seek to go deeper, farther and longer, in pursuit if some connection. The film depicts the mistakes he makes, and the losses he suffers without even realizing it until too late, but in the end it stands as a piece of powerful truly American film-making. A rare feat now-a-days.
Starring Emile Hirsch, written and directer by Sean Penn, with music by Eddie Vedder, I cannot recommend this film highly enough. It shares an organic, spiritual energy with another favorite of mine, Easy Rider (1969), as both deal with the road and the American soul.
Like many movies that don not feature superheroes or giant robots this film appears to be in limited release. Anne and I hunted it down and found it playing on one independent theater here in river city. Seek it out.
Breathe in, breathe out... YOU AND I ARE ALIVE!
* The post was previously published on this blog. Given my recent technical difficulties it has been hard publishing new content too regularly, so I thought I'd re-share this!
1 comment:
I loved Into the Wild too even though i also knew the outcome before seeing it. It was just an interesting journey, and it felt so different from so many of the other movies i'd seen recently.
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