Movie · 2000 · Adventure, Drama · 2h 23m · PG-13 · English
Curator score: 7.6/10 (1.5M ratings)
At the edge of the world, his journey begins.
Overview
Chuck Noland, a top international manager for FedEx, and Kelly, a Ph.D. student, are in love and heading towards marriage. Then Chuck's plane to Malaysia crashes at sea during a terrible storm. He's the only survivor, and finds himself marooned on a desolate island. With no way to escape, Chuck must find ways to survive in his new home.
Ratings
Curator score: 7.6/10
IMDb: 7.8/10
Letterboxd: 3.88/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 88%
Metacritic: 74
TMDB: 7.7/10
Director
Robert Zemeckis
Production
20th Century Fox, DreamWorks Pictures, ImageMovers, Playtone
Cast
Tom Hanks, Helen Hunt, Chris Noth, Paul Sanchez, Lari White, Leonid Citer, David Allen Brooks, Semion Sudarikov, Peter Von Berg, Dmitri S. Boudrine, Nick Searcy, François Duhamel, Michael Forest, Lauren Birkell, Yelena Popovic, Viveka Davis, Jennifer Choe, Nan Martin, Anne Bellamy, Dennis Letts
Where to watch
fuboTV, Philo
Curator Review
Verdict
A lean, high-concept survival drama that turns isolation into a study of endurance, grief, and human connection. Tom Hanks gives it emotional ballast, and the film’s visual storytelling makes the island feel both punishing and strangely intimate.
Best for
survival stories
emotionally restrained dramas
Tom Hanks fans
films about isolation and resilience
mainstream prestige adventure
Skip if
you want constant action
you dislike slow-burn character studies
you prefer ensemble-driven stories
you want a purely realistic survival film
Overview
Cast Away is one of the cleanest examples of a star-driven survival movie that becomes something more than a premise. The first act is all momentum and dread, then the film strips everything away until the drama is built from routine, pain, and tiny victories. It works because it treats survival as both physical labor and emotional accounting.
Worth noting
Hanks carries the film with a performance that is funny, exhausted, stubborn, and lonely in equal measure. The island material has a tactile, almost procedural quality, but the movie never loses sight of the life Chuck left behind. That balance gives the story its ache: every practical solution is also a reminder of what he has lost.
Bottom line
It is also a very Zemeckis movie in the way it uses spectacle to serve feeling. The pacing can feel deliberate, and some viewers may want more variation in the middle stretch, but the film’s discipline is part of its power. It’s a big studio survival drama that still feels personal and mournful.
Top Letterboxd reviews
shay (4★) · 6016 likes
wilson should've gotten at least a best supporting actor nomination i'm pissed
Holly-Beth (5★) · 4619 likes
"During a Q&A session at USC, Robert Zemeckis was asked what was in the unopened package. He replied that it was a waterproof, solar-powered satellite phone."
FUCK OFF
Patrick Willems (4★) · 3323 likes
Would've been fine with an extra hour about how he got so good at spearing fish
Quintin (4★) · 2907 likes
The craziest part of this film is when Tom Hanks returns home after surviving off of fish for five years and his friends decide his first meal back should be sushi and crab legs.🍣🦀
No wonder Tom Hanks became friends with a volleyball 🏐, his human friends suck! Give the man a steak or pizza! 🥩🍕