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Cast Away

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Cast Away
File:Cast Away film.jpg
Directed byRobert Zemeckis
Written byWilliam Broyles Jr.
Produced byJack Rapke
Robert Zemeckis
Steve Starkey
Tom Hanks
StarringTom Hanks
Helen Hunt
Distributed by- USA -
Twentieth Century Fox
- non-USA -
DreamWorks
Release dates
December 22, 2000
Running time
2 hrs. 23 min.
LanguageEnglish
Budget$ 90.000.000

Cast Away is a 2000 film by 20th Century Fox and DreamWorks about a FedEx employee who is stranded on a deserted island after his plane crashes "somewhere in the South Pacific." The plot is very loosely based on the novel Robinson Crusoe.

Plot synopsis

Template:Spoiler

Chuck Noland (Tom Hanks), a perpetually hurried FedEx executive, is the sole survivor of a harrowing plane crash. He is stranded alone on a deserted tropical island. After he lands on the island, Chuck's most immediate need is drinking water, which he satisfies by drinking coconut water and later by storing rain water in the discarded husks. His second immediate need is food. He attempts to fish, but is wholly unsuccessful at the start. As time progresses, his fishing skills steadily increase. Shortly after his first fishing attempt, he finds a compelling need to produce fire, which after great effort, many attempts, and some injury he succeeds in doing. Chuck takes shelter in a small cave for the majority of his stay on the island.

Luckily for Chuck, a few FedEx packages from the plane and the body of one of the pilots wash up on the shore shortly after he lands on the island. After some refitting, Chuck dons the pilot's shoes and improvises some tools from items he salvages from the washed-up packages. But his attempts to escape are thwarted by the high surf.

Four years later, a piece of a port-a-john appears on the shore. Chuck, now with a beard, long hair and wearing a loincloth, uses this fragment as a sail for the raft he makes to leave the island. It is revealed that in previous years he has considered suicide as an alternative to escape from the island. After construction of the raft, Chuck sets off into the ocean, desperately hoping for rescue. After sailing for an unknown period of time—when he is on the verge of death—he is rescued by a passing ship.

On returning home, Chuck must then come to terms with the fact that almost everyone he knew has irrevocably changed, including his fiancée who has since married and had a child with another man.

The film ends with Chuck at a crossroads, after delivering the one unopened package from the island.

Wilson

File:Wilsoncastaway.jpg
"Wilson" the Volleyball

One of Cast Away's notable "characters" is "Wilson," a volleyball from Wilson Sporting Goods (in real life, the dominant manufacturer of volleyballs). The volleyball is found in one of the FedEx boxes, and when Chuck tries to make a fire and hurts his hands, he angrily seizes the volleyball and throws it away. This makes the hand-shaped mark that forms the ball's "face". Then he bandages his hands and makes Wilson. This volleyball plays the role of a mute, infinitely patient, non-living listener in the movie, providing Chuck with a companion for the 1,500 days he spends on the island. From a theatrical standpoint, Wilson also serves to realistically simulate dialogue in a one-person only situation. Tragically, Chuck loses Wilson after the volleyball washes off the raft and drifts too far out to sea for Chuck to be able to retrieve it.


Product placement

Cast Away is well-known for its prominent product placement marketing. In this case the movie benefited two major brands: Wilson and FedEx.

At the time of the movie's release, Wilson Sporting Goods launched its own joint promotion centered around the fact that one of its products was "co-starring" with Tom Hanks.

Despite the fact that the plot revolves around the tragic crash of a FedEx plane, the company correctly guessed that the movie would not damage its reputation. FedEx cooperated closely with the filmmakers to ensure that all FedEx materials seen in the movie were authentic. Chuck's "coming-home" scene was filmed on location at FedEx's home facilities in Memphis, Tennessee. According to an interview on the DVD release of the film, FedEx Corporation did not pay for product-placement rights. However, the extensive support that the company provided to the film can be considered a form of payment for the placement.

Some commentators claim that the use of the FedEx brand and logo in its present form is an anachronism, since the first half of the film was set in 1995 while FedEx Corporation was officially titled FDX Corp. at the time. (FedEx Corporation changed to its present name in 2000, when Noland returned) However, the brand "FedEx" began to be used by the overnight-courier division of the company in 1994. The complete absence of references in the film to the old names that had been recently in use could still be considered a flaw.

Themes

Isolation

Isolation is a prominent theme in the movie, as Hanks's character is trapped on a deserted island for over four years. To cope with his isolation, he creates Wilson out of a Wilson volleyball that he finds in a package that was supposed to be delivered. It is left ambiguous as to whether Chuck created Wilson so that he would have someone to talk to in order to keep from going insane, or whether he has gone insane and thinks that Wilson can talk, or whether this perceived "insanity" was a necessary tactic against complete mental breakdown.

Return from death

Another theme is return from death. Chuck was trapped on the island for four years, and was assumed dead by everyone. As such, the world has moved on in his absence . When Chuck is rescued by the passing ship, he is near death. When he returns, it is almost as if he has come back from the dead.

Trivia

  • The producers made up a list of seemingly-useless items that would be in the packages that Noland recovered: party dress, ice skates, divorce papers, video tapes, etc. They turned this over to a group of survival experts, who decided what the protagonist might be able to do with them: fish net, axe, etc.
  • A FedEx advertisement in the United States features Noland returning some of the unopened packages to their owners. The ad suggests that they contain "simple things" such as a GPS Receiver, satellite phone, seeds, and a water purifier.
  • After the movie's release, NASCAR stock car driver Dale Earnhardt, Jr. drove several races with a volleyball in his car, whom he called "Wilson".
  • The CEO at the end of the movie is actually Frederick Smith, the real-life CEO of FedEx.
  • In the 2006 videogame Far Cry Instincts; Evolution, set in a tropical south Pacific location, there is a hidden island containing an easter egg: a small wrecked boat, two corpses, rocks laid out to spell "HELP!", and a volleyball resembling Wilson (except in the game, instead of a bloody handprint on the ball, it is a footprint)
  • The movie was spoofed in Family Guy. It shows Peter on the raft with Wilson (the ball). Peter keeps yelling, "Wilson! Wilson! What are we gonna do now? Wilson! Wil-" At that moment the ball interrupts saying, "My name is Voit dumbass!"
  • Castaway was spoofed in the movie Behind Enemy Lines, when Owen Wilson's Character, Chris Burnett, lost a football out to sea. Chris then yells "Wilson!"
  • In a panel discussing the movie, Director Robert Zemeckis said that the final unopened package at the end contained a waterproof, solar-powered satellite phone. However opening it would have destroyed the premise of the movie (a man being stranded in the island).
  • Chuck tells Wilson that his dentist's name was Dr. Spalding after he said that he wished Wilson was a dentist. Spalding is a company best known for its basketballs.
  • The Jeep Cherokee shared by Tom Hanks and Helen Hunt's characters in the movie is a 1997+ model year. This is an error considering that the film's opening section is set in 1995.

Movie score

  • Alan Silvestri. He subsequently won a Grammy in 2002 for the End Credit Sequence.
  • Note: This movie is most notable for its lack of score. Once Chuck crashes on the island, there is no music at all until he escapes from the island, at which point the dramatic main theme of the score is revealed.

Cast

Notable Award nominations

  • 73rd Academy Awards: Best Actor in a Leading Role (Tom Hanks), Best Sound
  • BAFTA Awards: Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role (Tom Hanks)
  • Golden Globes: Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture - Drama: For which he won (Tom Hanks)
  • Screen Actors Guild: Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Leading Role (Tom Hanks)