Director
Sean Penn
Leading Actors/Actresses
Emile Hirsch, Marcia Gay Harden, and William Hurt
Supporting Actors/Actresses
Jena Malone, Catherine Keener, and Hal Holbrook
Genre
Biographical Survival/Drama
Language
English
Awards
Into the Wild was nominated for two Academy Awards: Best Supporting Actor for Hal Holbrook and Best Film Editing
Date of Release
September 21st. 2007
Producer
Sean Penn, Art Linson, and Bill Pohlad
Setting and Context
The film is set all across the United States
Narrator and Point of View
The film is told through the point of view of narrator Christopher McCandless
Tone and Mood
Sad, Revelatory, Adventurous, Solemn, Mysterious, Exploratory, Tense, Intense, Violent, Strange, and Naturalistic
Protagonist and Antagonist
Chris McCandless/Himself (and the animals/nature around him)
Major Conflict
The major conflict of the film involves Chris' struggle within himself to be happy and content with the world -- and people and things -- around him. Later, though, the films major conflict switches (but doesn't change) to Chris' struggle to survive in the harsh Alaskan wilderness with little food or water -- and no one around him.
Climax
When Chris tries to leave the bus he had been living in for the final time, cross the treacherous river, and leave Alaska for good
Foreshadowing
Chris' death is foreshadowed in some of the talks he has with Ron Franz
Understatement
Chris' struggles with materialism and mental health are understated in the film
Innovations in Filming or Lighting or Camera Techniques
Although undeniably well-shot and well-made, Into the Wild is not innovative in filming or lighting or camera techniques.
Allusions
Books (the film is based on the book of the same name by Jon Krakauer), geography (the places Chris visits across the country), history, philosophy, and cultural movements (minimalism, particularly).
Paradox
Chris has a loving family and everything going for him, yet he decides to live a minimalist and ultimately dies because of it.
Parallelism
There are no major instances of parallelism in Into the Wild.