![]() ![]() Adults concerned about this language can turn the volume down for three or four seconds during this scene. Most of the gross language is uttered by the hippie Rainey in brief comments while McCandless is doing sit-ups. ![]() Two reasons are given for the R rating: gross language and nudity. TWM advises using this movie despite its R rating because the benefits of the film far outweigh any negatives. ![]() McCandless is shown slowly wasting away and then dying. Squirrels and a moose are killed for food, and the audience is shown a squirrel being roasted and the moose being cut-up and dismembered. McCandless is badly beaten by a railroad bull. There is some profanity and crude language. There are brief scenes referring to lovemaking that has just occurred or in which we can only hear murmuring and laughter or see people after lovemaking. There is nothing sensual about the scenes of nudity. There are short scenes of nudity including brief glimpses of people in a nudist colony and a short scene in which a young Scandinavian woman appears without her top and without embarrassment. See Teaching Students to Read Nonfiction: How Movies Can Help.Ĭlick Here for the specific College and Career Readiness Anchor Standards, set out in the 2010 Common Core State Standards, which are served by this Learning Guide. This Guide provides discussion questions and writing assignments for the study of the book. The book, Into the Wild, by John Krakauer, is an excellent nonfiction text for students in grades 10 – 12. In addition to Jack London, the Guide offers the opportunity to briefly introduce students to Lord Byron, Leo Tolstoy, and Henry David Thoreau. The Guide contains multiple assignments of formal and informal writing and an introduction to the history of American adventurism. With respect to the ELA curriculum, this Learning Guide assists teachers in using the movie to provide context for the study of Jack London and particularly for his short story “To Build a Fire.” It contains opportunities for students to explore the ideas in the movie and its use of literary allusion. FICTION (SOAPS, DRAMAS, AND REALITY/SURVIVAL SHOW)Įmbedded in beautiful scenery and rich in the kind of music that has special appeal to young people, Into The Wild provides important life-lessons that: (1) risky behavior can have fatal consequences (2) parents need to be careful in raising their children (3) there are times when children need to forgive their parents (4) happiness and beauty must be shared to be fully enjoyed and (5) relationships with people are an essential part of life.FILM ADAPTATIONS OF NOVELS, SHORT STORIES, OR PLAYS.TALKING AND PLAYING WITH MOVIES: AGES 3-8. ![]()
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