A Mirage Amid the Survivor Tale - Los Angeles Times
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A Mirage Amid the Survivor Tale

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TIMES FILM CRITIC

Just a single space separates “Cast Away” from “Castaway,” but there is a universe of difference in the implications of those words. In truth, that gap summarizes the disparity between the film director Robert Zemeckis, writer William Broyles Jr. and star Tom Hanks think they’ve made and what is actually on the screen.

“Cast Away” is the film’s actual title, and it implies philosophical questions about what’s thrown aside and what’s retained, what’s important in life and what isn’t. It’s the right title for a film that Zemeckis describes in the press notes as being about “the survival of the human spirit and an illustration of the idea that surviving is easy, it’s living that’s difficult.”

That high-minded picture, however, is only sporadically in front of us. Something unfortunate happened on the way to making it: The filmmakers got waylaid by what feels like a boyish enthusiasm for the survivalist aspects of a Robinson Crusoe tale of a man shipwrecked on an island, an enthusiasm that does not translate to the viewer.

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As a result, so much time is spent on a handsomely made, instructive but finally tedious blow-by-blow training film on island survival that it throws the entire venture out of balance, capsizing the enterprise and making it difficult to keep any kind of message afloat. Which is how “Cast Away” became “Castaway” in fact if not in name.

The film’s basic idea of a guy isolated on a speck of land originated with Hanks, and it’s not difficult to see why it intrigued him as a change of pace and why its self-imposed challenges of shooting on a remote Fiji locale over 16 months--including an unprecedented one-year hiatus for the actor to lose enough weight and grow enough hair to make his long island sojourn believable--appealed to Hanks’ “Forrest Gump” director Zemeckis.

As we’ve come to expect from Zemeckis, “Cast Away’s” level of filmmaking is top of the line. Sweeping camera movements and masterful visuals (courtesy of cinematographer Don Burgess) are plentiful, sound virtuoso Randy Thom’s work is especially in evidence, and so much prodigious care has been taken with details across the board that even the dirty snow of Moscow visible in early scenes has been rendered with complete authenticity. All this expertise, however, one has to ask, is in service of what?

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For despite all these good things, “Cast Away” comes off as convincing but never compelling. There’s a ponderous quality to it, as if it’s forever clearing its throat to say something of value that doesn’t quite get articulated. In truth, the film doesn’t even begin to get emotionally involving until its final 30 minutes, at which point it’s been running for nearly two hours, which is very late in the game indeed.

*

One of “Cast Away’s” odder aspects is that it plays like an extensive advertorial for the Federal Express shipping service. Hanks plays Chuck Noland, a FedEx systems engineer first glimpsed giving new employees in Moscow a spirited pep talk.

Chuck, it turns out, is the ultimate can-do company man who lives and dies by the clock. “We can never allow ourselves the sin of losing track of time,” he roars at befuddled Muscovites. No problem is unsolvable for a man who does whatever it takes to get a package delivered.

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Back home in Memphis, Tenn., Chuck has a loving girlfriend named Kelly Frears (Helen Hunt), who knows enough about her man not to be surprised when yet another emergency takes him away on Christmas Eve. The couple exchange presents in a Jeep Cherokee at the airport (she gives him a family heirloom watch with her picture in it) and he vows, “I’ll be here New Year’s Eve, I promise.” Not quite.

For the FedEx cargo plane Chuck is hitching a ride on goes down (in an unnervingly realistic storm and crash) over the Pacific, and Chuck washes up on a deserted island as pristine as the tropical locale Jodie Foster ended up in Zemeckis’ “Contact.” And, for at least an hour, “Cast Away,” which has already put a lot of minutes into marking time, comes to a halt.

Though it feels heretical to say so, given how much expense and trouble went into creating it, Chuck’s stretch on that spot comes off as boring and anticlimactic. The possibilities for a man alone on an island are not infinite, quite the opposite. Any situation Chuck might conceivably face has already been endlessly explored in other movies, so the conditions for surprise and interest are close to nonexistent. What we’re left with is a home movie of a trip we’re glad we weren’t on, a visual version of the current best-selling “The Worst Case Scenario Handbook.”

In theory, having Hanks, an excellent and well-loved performer, as our surrogate on the island should compensate for this, and it does, just not enough. He is an actor whose partisan we become without having to think about it, but because his character is alone he can’t resist overdoing the inevitable actorish touches until we’re watching a one-man stage show more than a movie performance.

Just when we’re ready to write “Cast Away” off, however, the locale shifts off the island and, almost immediately, like the flipping of a switch, things get more intriguing. The scenario goes from predictable to involving and the change from monologue to dialogue leads to Broyles’ best, most emotional writing. But by then the film is about 80% over, and this, its most interesting section, comes off as severely truncated and shortchanged. What “Cast Away” itself has squandered and cast aside in its pursuit of Boys’ Life heroics is its own potential for success.

* MPAA rating: PG-13, for some intense images and action sequences. Times guidelines: a truly frightening plane crash and storm.

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‘Cast Away’

Tom Hanks: Chuck Noland

Helen Hunt: Kelly Frears

Nick Searcy: Stan

Chris Noth: Jerry Lovett

Twentieth Century Fox and DreamWorks present an ImageMovers/Playtone production, released by Twentieth Century Fox. Director Robert Zemeckis. Producers Steve Starkey, Tom Hanks, Robert Zemeckis, Jack Rapke. Executive producer Joan Bradshaw. Screenplay by William Broyles Jr. Cinematographer Don Burgess. Editor Arthur Schmidt. Costume designer Joanna Johnston. Music Alan Silvestri. Production designer Rick Carter. Art directors Jim Teegarden, Stefan Dechant, Elizabeth Lapp. Set decorators Rosemary Brandenburg, Karen O’Hara. Running time: 2 hours, 23 minutes.

In general release.

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