Wednesday, September 09, 2015

A Walk in the Woods

A Walk in the Woods  (2015, 1 hour and 44 minutes)

With the storms we've been having, I decided to go to the movies on Labor Day.  Even though I haven’t heard too many good things about it, I decided on “A Walk in the Woods.”  After all, I’ve hiked the trail and read and laughed through the book.  Although I enjoyed the book, I always thought it was a shame that I received 200 bucks for an article about my experiences of hiking 2000 plus miles and Bill Bryson sold a ton of books for having only hiked a little over 800 miles of the trail.  But he’s a talented writer who can make most any mundane thing funny.  In the book and in the movie, Bryson decides to hike the trail after moving back to the United States from Great Britain.  In the book, if I remember correctly, he and his English wife decides to move back in other to allow their children a chance to experience both countries.  Bryson was in his 40s at the time.  In the movie, a much older Bryson (played by Redford at 79) has older children and grandchildren.  In both the book and the movie, he has a hard time finding a hiking partner.  In the movie, he calls a former acquaintance whom he discovers is dead.  His wife reminded him that his wife had shared that news in their Christmas card, which allows Redford the line that went something like: “I guess that’s why she seem miffed when I called him.”  Much of the humor in the movie were similar one-liners.

Sage on the trail
Bryson finds a partner in Katz (played by Nick Notle), whom he had traveled in Europe after high school.  He hadn’t seen Katz since and when he gets off the plane, Bryson can’t believe his eyes.  Katz is not only out-of-shape, but looks half-dead.  Katz is a gloomy but likeable character who tells Bryson's family some less than favorable stories about their dad, implying that he picked up a STD while they were traveling in Europe.  There is a sad scene while Katz is staying at Bryson’s home before they begin the hike.  Alone, Katz reviews all the various certificates and awards that his friend has received in his life.  It's evidence of a life-well lived, which stands in contrast to Katz's life of booze and drugs and women.  Later, on the trail, Katz seems surprised the Bryson has been faithfully married for forty years and then jokes that he’s been with more married women than Bryson.

On the trail, which seems like a freeway, the two of them are constantly passed by younger hikers who all seem in shape (and way too clean to be backpacking).  And then there is Mary Ellen, a bubbly woman who has an answer for everything and drives the two of them crazy.  I remember such characters on the trail and ways we tried to dump them by either hiking fast or taking a short day and allowing them to get ahead.  There were also the “gear Nazis” who scrutinized packs, boots and other equipment.   Bryson and Katz experiences a snow storm but no other inclement weather (they hiked the whole time with long pants and flannel shirts, which even in the month of May would have been too much clothing on most days for even then it can get hot in the Southern Appalachians).  There were no rain and thunder (and no sweating on hot days).  I remember hiking in thunderstorms and, when with other hikers, we'd spread out so that if one of us was struck, the other could to attempt to resuscitate.   It would have been nice to have had a thunderstorm on the screen, for about half way through the movie, I could hear the rumble of thunder from outside and for a few minutes the rain poured down so loud so that I heard it inside the theater.  I was reminded I was better off at the movies than on the water.

Sage on Mt. Katahdin
at the end of the trail...
The movie is rated R which is mostly for language which the two of them use frequently as a way to express frustration at their troubles.  The one bear scene was weird (there were many more bear stories in the book).   The movie picked up some of the hikers routines such as relieving oneself in the woods (which the book dealt with, too) and doing laundry in town (yes, I have done laundry wearing only rain gear).  At the laundromat, Katz encounters a flirty and very over-weight married woman, which necessitates the two of them slipping out of town before an angry husband kills Katz.  As Katz asks Bryson, “What is the chance that the only two people in the world who would go to bed with that woman be in the same town at the same time?” 

Although Katz is seen as a womanizer (a trait that seems to be in conflict with his looks), we learn that he has given up alcohol.  He admits how much he enjoys drinking (the smell, the taste, how it makes you feel) but that he knows if he takes a drink, it will be all over.  After a rough life, he is now living alone eating TV dinners.

The movie ends with the two of them deciding to give up their quest and go back home.  They realize they don’t have to walk the entire trail for they have nothing to prove to anyone.   I agree with most of the critics that the movie doesn’t do justice to Bill Bryson’s book.  However, there is a value in the movie version.  We see the rewards of Bryson’s faithfulness and well-lived life.  Also, even though we understand that Katz’s wasted much of his life, we can cheer him on that he’s finally gotten it somewhat together (at least the alcohol, he still can't help hitting on any woman who happens by).   The two help each other (Bryson, at one point, decides not to have a drink in front of Katz as not to tempt him).  The two lives create a classic “morality-play” showing the value of virtue. 

I’ve written a lot about my experiences on the Appalachian Trail in this blog.  To get started in reading my experiences, click here.

23 comments:

  1. I read the book, but will not see the movie as movies are always a pale comparison. It must be interesting to compare your experiences on the trail with Bryson's. We have the Buckeye Trail here and I often see people hiking it in long pants and shirts, probably because of the deer ticks.

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    1. I think the Buckeye Trail is part of the North Country Trail (which goes from North Dakota to Eastern New York (I've hiked parts of it in MI, PA and NY). I thought Redford did a great job with Norman MacLean's story, "A River Runs Through It" but then he didn't change much of the story and was only the unseen narrator, not the star actor.

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  2. Loved the book and it is one of the ones in my library that I have a hard time keeping around because it tends to disappear to whomever I loan it too. When I first heard the movie was going to be made I wasn't planning on seeing it. However, I'm a Redford fan and when I learned he was going to play Bryson, I changed my mind. I did compromise though and it is on my Netflix list when it come available so it won't cost me $40 to see it with my family with snacks!

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    1. I did go to the matinee and went out for lunch right before hand so I didn't buy any overpriced popcorn and the tickets were a couple bucks off the full price. I would recommend Netflix

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  3. (Thanks for stopping by!)

    I read Bryson's book, too, and haven't decided about the movie, so I will probably wait for Netflix. I had given some thought to hiking the AT along with my son, but things changed, he moved to the West Coast, married, and hiking the AT with Ma wasn't in the cards, so it stayed a "possibility for a future date" for me. It's still there! :)

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    1. Your name did catch my attention. As for the AT, go for it! I

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  4. I want to see this movie so I'm bookmarking this review so I can check it out afterwards.

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  5. What a thorough and interesting review. I haven't seen the movie or read the book, but now I'm adding the book to my list of things to read. Thanks, Sage!

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  6. I didn't think about different groups of hikers on a trail befriending each other like that. I always thought it was a solitary sort of activity. I don't think I'd like instant companions like that. I'd try to dump them, too.

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    1. There is safety in knowing other hikers and often, because of either shelters or water sources, people tend to camp close to one another. I actually enjoyed meeting people and have kept up with some of the folks I met on the trail for 25 years.

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    1. Have you watched "The Way" with Martin Sheen, about a man who follows his deceased son's dream to walk the Camino de Santiago?

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  8. It goes to my list. Thank you for the review :)

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    1. Let us know what you think of the movie or the book (which is best).

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  9. I seem to be one of the rare people who disliked the book. That hasn't given me a lot of enthusiasm for the movie, though the cast seems it would probably be worthwhile. May watch it as a rental someday.

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  10. I've put off going to see this film because I couldn't imagine it would do justice to Bryson's book and it sounds as if it doesn't. And Robert Redford (as much as I like him) is just not the right age to portray Bryson at the time of his walk.

    Your adventures are so much better! And my blog friend Leonora's daughter chronicled her walk on the trail here: http://chelseawalking.blogspot.com/ - the best reading I had all last summer.

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    1. I looked at Chelsea's blog--it brought back memories.

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  11. Sounds like an interesting book. And the protagonist seems like quite a character. It almost is like there's a subculture in the hiking world that non-hikers know nothing about.

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    1. It is an interesting subculture--There is a book coming out this fall by a sociologist that sounds as if it might be enlightening: "Walking on the Wild-side: Long Distant Hiking on the Appalachian Trail"

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  12. I would like to see this movie. I recently watched a movie about a woman who hikes more than a 1000 miles called "Wild" starring Reese Witherspoon. It convinced me to read the book which is based on a true story, perhaps you knew this already, but I loved it.

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