After a massive power outage, two sisters learn to survive on their own in their isolated woodland home.After a massive power outage, two sisters learn to survive on their own in their isolated woodland home.After a massive power outage, two sisters learn to survive on their own in their isolated woodland home.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 2 wins & 3 nominations total
Elliot Page
- Nell
- (as Ellen Page)
Bethany Brown
- Gabs
- (uncredited)
Jordana Largy
- Margot
- (uncredited)
Simon Longmore
- Biker
- (uncredited)
Brittany Willacy
- Gigi
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This film is not a survival thriller. It is a deep and profound symbological tale that can only be understood allergorically. Except that some of the ideas underlying the film are kind of obscure and confusing (on an allegorical level.) The best stories work by being universally understood on a subconscious level. So the film is really only partially successful as allegory.
If Teen Vogue made a remake of Temps Du Loup, this is what it would look like. It's not bad but for an connaisseur of dystopian & post apocalyptic fiction I tell you this will not be a classic. For a film about two sisters, one Lycra clad and fashionable, the other boyish living in a glass house in a forest in the midst of a disaster of world wide proportions the film is lacking the sense of emergency and impending doom you would expect in this scenario. When disaster hits one has major issues to solve (like bickering about music, ballet audits and mold) before even finding out what kind of disaster has occurred. After fighting off intruders, living on rations for months you know what will finally drive you out? Mold!
This realistic end-of-the-world story unfolds as it likely really would. Ellen Page and Evan Rachel Wood play sisters living with their widowed father in the forest when an unexplained power outage occurs that leads to a breakdown in civil order. There are rumors as to what happened or how widespread it is, but it's never fully explained and that is not the focus of the film. The story instead focuses on Page and Woods' characters and how they face the many challenges of living in this new world, which includes grocery store clerks now carrying shotguns, rationing gasoline, and an increasing wariness of people who used to be friends and neighbors (or even relatives). I don't want to spoil any plot points, but what unfolds is what would likely really happen. You'd have to contend with a world without lights, internet, or music. You'd no longer know what's happening outside your village. You'd have to get used to the idea that the world is forever changed and is not going back to how things were before. In many ways, this film felt like the 1983 film "The Testament," which depicted a typical family after a nuclear warhead fell on the United States. Completely unsensational but the ordinariness of the characters and situations make the film far more identifiable of an experience when compared to "Mad Max" or "A Boy and His Dog," and consequently more impactful. However, on the downside, the ordinariness of the film also leads to some slow pacing and not always compelling of situations. Still, within the context of this film, it does work and is what makes this end-of-the-world story unique and all the more engaging. FUN FACT! The pig butchering scene was real. Ellen Page learned the process specifically to include in this film.
Without getting into all of the other hot topics that this film engenders, as an Alaskan I can say that from a purely survival aspect they wouldn't make it a winter. And in fact if this was supposed to be anywhere in Canada where was winter? It always seemed green. There are few berries in winter. Unless they lived in a fairly substantial house they would freeze to death. And there is very little food apart from hunting in the winter. And they certainly did not learn enough to survive simply from books. They would run out of ammo soon. They showed no skill at creating tools or salvaging them. And certainly none at basic house repair. In fact I would say they were just about the unhandiest women I've seen in the woods. Essentially this was just an emotionally acted fantasy without much basis in the real world. Kind of a shame. I had hoped for more.
80% of the plot is Eva! Eva! Eva? Eva?? I don't even remember the name of the other girl, cause she is always calling her sister for at least 50% of the movie. Logic is nowhere to be found. If you have nothing else to watch, go for Fox News or the last YouTube Top #5 instead.
Did you know
- TriviaEvan Rachel Wood broke the capillaries around her eyes while filming an intensely emotional scene.
- GoofsAt about 1:24:30,when Nell and Eva are eating and talking and Nell says something about "magical, mystery, imaginary smells?," something is moving to Nell's left side. It looks to be in a "corner" where nothing should be moving and doesn't look like flickering firelight. In fact, in resembles a crew person's arm where the crew person is dressed mostly in black, out of focus and in a poorly lit area.
- ConnectionsFeatures Thirty Two Short Films About Glenn Gould (1993)
- SoundtracksWild Is The Wind
Performed by Cat Power
Written by Dimitri Tiomkin and Ned Washington
Published by Warner/Chappell Music Canada (SOCAN) o/b/o
Chappell & Co., Inc. (ASCAP) / Patti Washington Music
Used by Permission of Shapiro, Bernstein & Co., Inc. on behalf of Catherine Hinen Music (ASCAP)
Courtesy Of Beggars Banquet Recordings
- How long is Into the Forest?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- En el bosque
- Filming locations
- Campbell River, British Columbia, Canada(location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $9,995
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $6,438
- Jul 31, 2016
- Gross worldwide
- $92,166
- Runtime
- 1h 41m(101 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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