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Have
you ever thought about what you would want with you if you were stuck
on a deserted island? As for me, I would want the entire Beatles catalog
on CD, every episode of the original Star Trek on DVD, and,
of course, the most beautiful woman you could possibly imagine (in
this case, Denise Richards). Oh, and a solar-powered entertainment
system would come in pretty handy, too!
In Cast
Away, two-time Oscar-winner Tom Hanks is afforded none of these
luxuries. In fact, his situation makes Gilligan's Island seem like
Beverly Hills by comparison. After he miraculously survives a harrowing
plane crash, he finds himself stranded--alone--on a remote island.
The film, which re-teams Hanks with his Forrest Gump director
Robert Zemeckis, may fall short in some areas, but this tale of
a modern-day Robinson Crusoe more than fits the bill as one of the
most sublime, absorbing, and touching cinematic experiences of the
year.
Chuck Noland
(Tom Hanks) is a workaholic Federal Express troubleshooter who's
more dedicated to his stressful job than he is to his way-too-understanding
girlfriend (Helen Hunt). When a work emergency calls him away from
their Christmas dinner, little do both of them realize that it will
be four years before they see each other again. After the perfect
storm downs Noland's plane in the south Pacific, he washes up on
a tiny deserted island, grateful to be alive. Or is he? What might
have seemed like the perfect getaway for some turns out to be a
nightmare for Noland. Now stripped of his everyday amenities, he
is forced to battle starvation, and even worse, isolation, if he
is going to take the crown away from Richard Hatch and become the
ultimate survivor (sorry, I couldn't resist!).
It goes without
saying that Tom Hanks is one of the most accomplished and respected
actors of the last 50 years. His unique and approachable everyman
quality easily sets him apart from his most popular contemporaries
(including Tom Cruise, Harrison Ford, and Bruce Willis), and every
time he releases a movie, it has the words "Oscar Buzz" written
all over it.
Cast Away
is no exception. Director Robert Zemeckis shut down production for
over 8 months (during which time he filmed last summer's ode-to-Hitchcock
"What Lies Beneath") so that Hanks could lose the weight (around
60 pounds) needed to show the effects of a man trapped in solitude.
The physical,
mental, and emotional transformation that Hanks goes through during
this virtual one-man show is nothing short of spectacular. His performance
runs a gamut of emotions, including shock, fear, despair, insanity,
and finally, desperation. His predicament is captured in the most
realistic and painful way possible, and he effectively conveys the
isolation and despondency that would consume anyone in this situation.
Despite this, he still manages to develop a meaningful relationship
with--of all things--a volleyball (named Wilson--get it?) and, not
surprisingly, he pulls it off.
Helen Hunt
fleshes out what is an otherwise brief role with such credibility
that you feel like she was there the whole time (and in a way, she
was. Hanks uses her picture to ease his crippling loneliness). When
she is finally reunited with Hanks after 4 years apart, she handles
the inner conflict in a heartfelt and heartbreaking way.
With Cast
Away, Robert Zemeckis once again proves that he can take chances
and still deliver the commercial goods just like the best of them.
The film contains what is easily the most terrifying plane crash
ever committed to celluloid, and even though you're waiting for
it to happen, Zemeckis still manages to catch you completely off
guard. Also, after Hanks washes up on shore, there are long stretches
of time without any music or dialogue to accompany the film (after
all, who's he going to talk too?). It's a bold approach, and like
the recently-released Unbreakable, you either go with it
or you don't.
Cast Away
is not a perfect film, and it misses the boat (if you'll pardon
the expression) in two key places. Despite seeing Hanks master the
skills he needs on order to survive, the film is missing that crucial
scene where he loses hope and surrenders to his circumstances. Also,
when he finally returns home, the ease with which he settles back
into civilization is lacking the difficulty that would have invariably
resulted after so much time alone (although there are some subtle
touches).
These are
minor squabbles, since the film is so convincing, moving, and thought-provoking.
It's so easy to get wrapped up in our everyday lives, and too often
we forget to stop and smell the roses. In Cast Away, Hanks
gets the time (and plenty of it) to re-evaluate his priorities,
and he miraculously gets a second chance at life. Cast Away
may not be the film that I would want with me if I was stuck on
a deserted island (that honor would go to The Empire Strikes
Back), but it still fits the bill as a cinematic paradise that
celebrates the triumph of the human spirit.
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