Iconoclasts Takes Sean Penn into the Wild

By: MediaVillage (View Profile)

When was the last time you left a theater wishing you could sit up all night with the filmmaker and discuss the movie you had just seen?

It happened to me recently after a matinee of Into the Wild, the true-life drama written and directed by Sean Penn about the doomed journey of self-discovery undertaken by a young man named Chris McCandless at the dawn of the nineties.

I’ll likely never have the chance to talk at length with Penn, but thanks to the Sundance Channel and Grey Goose Entertainment I was able to learn more about his interest in McCandless’ story. That’s because when I returned home, DVD screeners from the third season of Iconoclasts were waiting, including tomorrow night’s opener featuring Penn and Jon Krakauer, the author of the best-selling book about McCandless on which Penn based his movie.

Iconoclasts pairs innovators from different fields for stimulating, wide-ranging conversations that go much deeper than the standard television talk show. Each episode is shot in a different locale and structured in its own way. For example, in this episode Penn and Krakauer spend most of their time together in the remote region of the Alaskan wilderness where McCandless spent the final months of his life. This particular pairing is a bit different from the norm, in that Penn and Krakauer already have a close bond that was forged while working together on the same passion project.

For the record, I haven’t read Krakauer’s account of McCandless’ travels, and I am not particularly impressed with what I learned in the film about McCandless himself. Perhaps the book paints him in a more sympathetic light than Penn’s film, which depicts McCandless as a smug, spoiled, young man from a well-off east coast family, who cruelly severed all ties with his loved ones (this after receiving an education at Emory University, an offer of a new car at graduation, and a generous trust fund that still had $24,000 in it when he completed school). He then sets off in 1990 on a cross-country journey to prove that he could live without societal conventions, everyday comforts, and survive on his own. He died in 1992 at age twenty-four after surviving 113 days in a remote region of Alaska, living in an abandoned bus. The cause of death was the ingestion of poisonous berries he thought were safe to eat.

1 reader liked this story.
share
bookmarks
Comments
posted: 11.09.2007
Rebecca Brown
I have not seen the film yet (am dying to), but I was mesmerized by the book when I read it. I'm only one year younger than Chris McCandless would be if he were alive, which I think is what kept me turning pages at the time that I read it - I just couldn't understand his frame of mind. I think your perspective is an interesting one, but it seems to me that the advent of technology might be what would actually drive someone like McCandless into seclusion today. It's been a while since I read the book, but the way Krakauer depicts his personality, I'm not sure McCandless would've been someone who would've turned to a Blackberry for help had it been available to him. It is interesting to think about how things might've been different for him had he taken his journey just a few years later.
posted: 11.05.2007
Amanda Coggin
After watching Sean Penn and Eddie Vedder on Charlie Rose one night, I was drawn to see this film, which was tremendous film. Sean Penn did a fantastic job. I disagree with you above though, in the sense that McCandless would have found the connections he was looking for the internet. Nothing beats the wide open road to meet strangers, not texting, not Facebook, not social networking. Not that I knew the guy, but how we was illustrated made me believe that McCandless was trying to get back to something we all miss, the simplicity of life. Technology hasn't made our lives simpler, more interesting, yes, but a substitute for human connection, no. Having dated a man that was similar to McCandless in his quest for outdoor adventures, I wonder if McCandless didn't throw in the towel knowing his culture had failed him in some way, knowing that he would never get what he desired by sticking to the status quo...that only a bus in Alaska might bring him.
Tell us a Story.

You know you've got something to share. Maybe it's something funny, touching, inspirational or informative. Whatever it is, your circle of friends here at DivineCaroline would love to hear from you.

Btn_articletour
most liked
Loader_buff
Other topics you might appreciate
Relationships Career & Money Neighborhood & World Parenting