Walking, as much as it hurts, go as far as

Summer 2022-03-21 09:01:51

It feels like the whole thing about hiking is how far you can go as much as it hurts.

Make a wish here and be sure to try a hard hike in your life.

Relatively slow pace, but just right and not boring. Give the audience enough time to be in a daze, but not miss a single episode.

How much the heroine loves her mother, eating her mother's ashes so much.

What is it that makes people think about it years later and still vomit? The heroine experienced this.

Better than Wilderness Survival. A difficult solo hike should be all about redemption. In this film, it is better to understand what the heroine wants to redeem herself, which is clearer than "Wild Survival". "The Wilderness Survival" is distracted from the art, weak in the plot, and not worth it. "Into the Wild" is more of an exploration, while "Survival in the Wild" is just like a poem.

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Extended Reading
  • Roman 2021-12-01 08:01:26

    The director used fragmented memories to reproduce a woman's self-salvation, which made the story seem very complete, and in the case of severely insufficient drama tension, only relying on uninterrupted lyrical music to complete the smooth narration and editing. There are no obvious signs of exertion in this film. Its story will even make travel friends feel hypocritical and run-down, but the enlightenment and human touch behind it is very lethal, not to mention the scenery along the way. ★★★

  • Brenda 2022-03-23 09:01:51

    It's a very good film, I grew up on the journey

Wild quotes

  • [last lines]

    Cheryl: [voiceover] It took me years to be the woman my mother raised. It took me 4 years, 7 months and 3 days to do it, without her. After I lost myself in the wilderness of my grief, I found my own way out of the woods.

    [pause]

    Cheryl: And I didn't even know where I was going until I got there, on the last day of my hike. Thankyou, I thought over and over again, for everything the trail had taught me and everything I couldn't yet know.

    [pause]

    Cheryl: Now in 4 years, I'd cross this very bridge. I'll marry a man in a spot almost visible from where I was standing. Now in 9 years, that man and I would have a son named Carver and a year later, a daughter named after my mother, Bobbi. I knew only that I didn't need to eat with my bare hands anymore. That seeing the fish beneath the surface of the water would be enough, that it was everything. My life, like all lives, mysterious, irrevocable, sacred, so very close, so very present, so very belonging to me. How wild it was, to let it be?

  • Bobbi: I always wanted a room with a view.