Spread the Word ...
del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit StumbleUpon Help
With a movie spurring a resurgence, “Into the Wild” (originally published in 1996) has climbed atop bestseller lists. The book is currently No. 4 on Amazon’s bestseller list. The story is taken from the journals of Christopher McCandless, who feeling disenfranchised, and inspired by the works of Jack London, Leo Tolstoy and Henry David Thoreau, donates his entire savings of $24,000 to charity, destroys his identification cards,
and cuts all ties to family and friends…and walks away into the wilds of Alaska. Four months later, he turned up dead.
Publishers Weekly summarizes more of Into the Wild’s plot: “His diary, letters and two notes found at a remote campsite tell of his desperate effort to survive, apparently stranded by an injury and slowly starving. They also reflect the posturing of a confused young man, raised in affluent Annandale, Va., who self-consciously adopted a Tolstoyan renunciation of wealth and return to nature. Krakauer, a contributing editor to Outside and Men’s Journal, retraces McCandless’s ill-fated antagonism toward his father, Walt, an eminent aerospace engineer. Krakauer also draws parallels to his own reckless youthful exploit in 1977 when he climbed Devils Thumb, a mountain on the Alaska-British Columbia border, partly as a symbolic act of rebellion against his autocratic father. In a moving narrative, Krakauer probes the mystery of McCandless’s death, which he attributes to logistical blunders and to accidental poisoning from eating toxic seed pods.”
The film, whose screenplay was written by Sean Penn, stars stars Marcia Gay Harden, William Hurt, Jena Malone, Catherine Keener, Hal Halbrook, and Vince Vaughn and was released this week. The following is a trailer for the film based on Into the Wild:
The actors talk about turning “Into the Wild” into the film:
…It took Penn a decade to realize the film after first reading the book, which made “such an impression on me,” Penn said at a press conference.
“This was a very raw, fresh wound for the family when the book first came out,” he explained.
“They felt very appreciative to Jon Krakauer for tracing steps that they weren’t capable of tracing at that time and answering a lot of questions.
“But they also felt that lightning may only strike once in terms of allowing someone into their tragedy.”
“I think they needed some more time,” he said.
The cast and crew met with the family and went to Alaska on four occasions in preparation for shooting the film, visiting the “magic bus” where McCandless’s body in a sleeping bag was found by hunters about two weeks after his death from starvation.
McCandless had lost his car in a flash flood, went kayaking alone down remote rivers, and eventually made camp at the abandoned bus along Alaska’s overgrown Stampede Trail Denali National Park.
With only a bag of rice, a hunting rifle, minimal equipment and a book of local plant life, he had hoped to live off the land, according to his journal entries covering 113 separate days.
Actor Emile Hirsch, who plays McCandless in the film, said he had first heard of his epic adventure while watching a US television news magazine when he was a child.
“I was flipping through the channels and was struck by the story of a guy with the courage to go into the wild, which for a young child was unthinkable.”
While researching the role, he said he spent a lot of time alone “to see what it was like.”
“I found that a lot of times when I was alone, a lot of the negativity that society can somehow filter down to you … really went away and I found a moral core that I think is within us all that had some of the dirt wiped off it,” Hirsch said…
N.Y. Times Book Reviews
The New Yorker Book Reviews
- Thomas Mallon: Abraham Lincoln and the politics of memory.
- Goings on About Town: Readings and Talks
- Books: "The Snowball"
- Books: "The Beautiful Soul of John Woolman, Apostle of Abolition"
- Books: "Red State, Blue State, Rich State, Poor State"
- Books: "Capitol Men"
- Books: "Unpacking the Boxes"
- Books: "The Good Thief"
- Books: "The Given Day"
- Books: "Bacardi and the Long Fight for Cuba"
Publishers Weekly Book Reviews
USA Today Book Reviews
- Historians ponder Lincoln's legacy, lessons we can learn
- Kenya deporting U.S. author of anti-Obama book
- 'Most Wanted Man': Be on the lookout for John le Carre's latest
- Marlo Thomas: 'Free to Be' for you and me, 35 years later
- Eco-friendly books run the gamut of green
- Youth lit used as weight-loss tool
- Nobel literature prize to be announced on Oct. 9
- Publisher speeds up release of Muhammad book
- Amanda Tapping finds her comfort zone in 'Sanctuary'
- Spiegelman's 'Breakdowns' out from underground
Amazon Daily
- Nobel Week: It's Europe vs. the USA Already
- Red-Blue Roundtable: Bill Bishop
- Red-Blue Roundtable: Andrew Gelman
- Red-Blue Roundtable: John Zogby
- Election 2008: Red-Blue Roundtable
- The Books of the States: Vermont (3 electoral votes)
- Nobel Update: Next European Winner Due Thursday
- Economic Collapse Imminent? Brian Francis Slattery is Here to Liberate You
- The Books of the States: Rhode Island (4 electoral votes)
- Graphic Novel Friday: Flight Volume Five
Bookseller Links:
RSS FEEDS
Recent Posts
- Book Review: Dead Heat by Joel C. Rosenberg
- From Oregon to DC: Bookish Bed and Breakfasts Provide Novel Vacations
- Book Review: Messiah - The First Judgement: The Chronicles of Brothers by Wendy Alec
- Book Review: Eat This Not That! by David Zinczenko with Matt Goulding
- Book Review: Mountain Top by Robert Whitlow
- Book Review: The 12 Second Sequence by Jorge Cruise
- Book Review: The Shack by William P. Young
- Book Review: Deceptively Delicious by Jessica Seinfeld
- Book Review: How Not To Look Old by Charla Krupp
- Reading Into Presidential Hopefuls
SF Gate Book Reviews
- 'Our Lady of the Artichokes' - Vaz's stories
- 'Exact Replica of a Figment of My Imagination'
- 'Lulu in Marrakech' - worldly comic thriller
- 'An Imperfect Offering,' by James Orbinski
- 'The Graveyard Book'
- Nobel panelist rips U.S. writers
- Fiction review: 'The Silver Linings Playbook'
- Siddharth Shanghvi writes on AIDS in India
- Fiction review: 'The China Lover'
- Hemingway cats can stay put
Author/Book Review Podcasts from NPR
Seattle Times Book Reviews
L.A. Times Book Reviews
Powell's
- The Solitude of Nathaniel Hawthorne
- Read It Before They Screen It: News of a Kidnapping, Scattershot
- Book News for Monday, October 6, 2008
- Irony!
- Is Your Furniture Radioactive?
- You Can’t Take It with You
- Attractions and Dangers of Nostalgia
- Mock the Vote
- Read It Before They Screen It: Red Mars and Moon Called
- Book News for Friday, October 3, 2008




One Reply
[…] not sure about this movie either. It’s based on the book Into the Wild by John Krakauer, and it’s about […]
Leave a Comment
trackback address