Wild
A chronicle of one woman's 1,100-mile solo hike undertaken as a way to recover from a recent catastrophe.
Director:
Jean-Marc ValléeWriters:
Nick Hornby, Cheryl Strayed (memoir "Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail")Trailers
Stars:
Reese Witherspoon, Laura Dern, Gaby Hoffmann | See full cast and crew »Storyline
With the dissolution of her marriage and the death of her mother, Cheryl Strayed has lost all hope. After years of reckless, destructive behavior, she makes a rash decision. With absolutely no experience, driven only by sheer determination, Cheryl hikes more than a thousand miles of the Pacific Crest Trail, alone. Wild powerfully captures the terrors and pleasures of one young woman forging ahead against all odds on a journey that maddens, strengthen, and ultimately heals her.User Reviews
Wild
tells the story of Cheryl, a drug fueled binge drinker who lost her
mother and feels lost on the path to life so she decides to pick up and
walk the Pacific coast trail. Directed by Jean Marc Valèe of last year's
Dallas Buyers Club, I was going into this hoping for a brilliant film,
instead I came away with great cinematography, an unbelievable Reese
Witherspoon and misguided story that wants to be something more than "a
woman and the wilderness" movie. Well, unfortunately, its not. Valèe
seems to have exhausted his talents into last year's Dallas Buyers Club
rather than into Wild. My problems with this film exude my likes,
obviously but one thing about this film that I can't seem to shake is
Witherspoon. I don't buy her as this character, she can't pass as a
woman who is a drinker and a drug abuser because quite frankly, she
looks terrible on screen doing these things. I don't buy it for a
second, it is like watching a student film rehash of a better
performance and cringing at how bad the student screws it up. The role
of Cheryl was clearly meant for someone with a better range than
Witherspoon. I'm all for an actor to transform themselves to fit a film,
much like McCounaghey did for Dallas Buyers. But Witherspoon seems so
hesitant to do anything other than gain five pounds and not wear make-up
for the entire film. No, it doesn't make it look like she has a drug
and alcohol problem or is conflicted or is realistic, it just makes for a
lazy performance and it is one I couldn't commit to for a two hour
film. As far as the screenplay is concerned...well, what screenplay, it
is mostly Reese Witherspoon trekking across the Pacific trail while
reminiscing about past times and discovering dead end relationships
along the way. It is a bare bones script from a bare bones book that was
equally disappointing. However, the film may be boring and painfully
slow, but the cinematography here was fantastic. There are some truly
beautiful moments in this film regarding the way it looks. Outside
Witherspoon, the supporting cast features Gabby Hoffman and Laura Dern
and both of which deliver good performances. Overall, Wild features some
great cinematography and a truly shoddy performance from Witherspoon. I
can't begin to explain why she is being praised for taking off make up
and walking on a trail for a two hour film. It isn't a brave
performance, its a lazy one and an even lazier film. Wild is far from
Sean Penn's Into the Wild, which I'm sure will be the base of comparison
and feels more like a half baked version of it.

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