New Jersey Stage January 2015 | Page 68

Bruce Greenwood is excellent as a widower traveling across Alaska who wants to be alone but bonds with the young girl. As a man without any kids and a girl without a father, the two fill voids for each other. Greenwood’s familiar voice provides a certain degree of calm and safety — something MacKenzie needs — and his personal background as an outdoorsman shines through. He looks comfortable traveling through the wilderness, which adds an extra dose of realism to the film. Green says he wishes he could see the film with the fresh eyes of the audience, but he’s been to Alaska so often that he’s rather immune to its beauty. “I know it’s fantastic,” said Green. “I’ve been there in person and was wowed by it for the first time, but when we shot the movie I didn’t see any of Alaska. New Jersey Stage I only saw the five inches in front of my face. And then in the editing room and with the finished product, I see a movie and the parts of the film that I judge for better or worse. But recently I saw The Sound of Music on television and I had forgotten the opening scene when they go over the Swiss Alps in an airplane and they have these fantastic aerial shots. I realized this is what people are experiencing when they watch parts of Wildlike and see Alaska.” The film is beautifully shot and truly captures the size and remoteness of Alaska. Green says they wanted to put the two main characters in a particular place and in a particular frame of mind which allowed for their relationship to come about where it couldn’t anywhere else. They got it right. -- Gary Wien January 2015 pg 68