Analysis and Review: Where The Wild Things Are

Spike Jonze Film Demonstrates Wild Imagination

In a world where emotions run wild, Max faces his greatest challenge and Jonze delivers a cinematic punch.

Based on the belove picture book by Maurice Sendak, Where the Wild Things Are (2009) hit theatres this October. Co-writer and Director Spike Jonze takes the short story and transforms it into a full-fledged internal conflict of young wolf-clad Max, (Max Records) complete with copious amounts of symbolism and subconsciousness.

In the midst of a power-struggle with his mother (Catherine Keener), Max is angered and runs off in a volatile state. From this traumatic conflict scene, Max is transported to another world where “the wild things” are.

On "Wild Thing" Island

Upon arrival to this world with Max, the viewer begins to see the allusions to his life in reality; a ball of twine in Max’s room becomes a wild thing fort, a model city made of paper towel rolls becomes a stick-built fortress, and a snowball fight becomes a dirt-clod war.

As the story on the wild things’ island develops, it becomes clear that each wild thing represents the feelings of Max’s family members and pieces of his own personality. Named king over the tribe of wild things, Max is faced with the difficult task of governing over his own emotions, in a world where they are represented by beasts that could very easily hurt one another and even “eat” him.

In this struggle to affirm and relate to his emotional beasts, Max learns more about the feelings of his sister through the beast KW (voiced by Lauren Ambrose) and understands feelings of his mother through the beast Judith (voiced by Catherine O’Hara). Max also begins to learn about his own strengths in giving love, kindness and encouragement in his relationships with all his “wild things.” Probably most importantly, Max reaches out in friendship to the most threatening wild thing, Carol (James Gandolfini). Carol represents Max’s irascible nature and the main challenge Max faces through the story is how to comfort the emotion and wild thing that he most identifies within reality and on the island.

Max leaves the island in peaceful waters, in contrast to the way he arrived. He departs in good standing with all the wild things, having successfully appealed to them and ruled over them. With this confidence, Max returns to a world of equally real, but less threatening circumstances of an estranged maturing sister and a lonely mother. Max learns through his time on the island that his emotions can be controlled and trained to be used for positive pursuits rather than destruction.

Wild Things Emotional Success

Spike Jonze successful weaves this story with masterful cinematic techniques. Through digital enhancement and camera movement, Jonze captures the wild things but still keeps them noxious. The writing and screenplay create the dream-like subconscious world of Max’s imagination and make it as real as emotion. The viewer is given a glimpse into the complex life of a child, where circumstances and personalities clash in a deteriorating island of political strife and seclusion. Although the movie is sometimes very intense, characterizing wild things with border-line personality disorders, the depth of emotional tension it dives to makes Max’s concluding triumph all the more joyful.

Self Portrait, CJ Dates

Carl Dates - "Write to be understood, speak to be heard, read to grow." -Lawrence Clark Powell Carl Dates is a recent graduate from Roberts Wesleyan ...

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Dec 25, 2009 3:34 AM
Guest :
This was a terrific article, a real gem for me to discover since it pays tribute to Jonze's masterful synthesis of the tumultuous process of growing up and Maurice Sendak's timeless classic, Where the Wild Things Are.
I completely agree that "each wild thing represents the feelings of Max's family and pieces of his own personality." With regards to Carol representing Max's temperamental nature, I posit that Carol also represent Max's father. Although we never meet Max's father in the film, you can't help but sense that Max's connection with Carol reveals the young boy's longing for a male father-figure he can depend on to protect and inspire him.
It is obvious enough when we find reflections of Max's home life in the wild things' world. Carol and KW's relationship, however, represents a major aspect of Max's life that is left missing from the film's brief peek into Max's reality - his separated parents.
Feb 23, 2010 8:28 AM
Guest :
Carl Dates is right, but the very possibility of this article is what keeps Wild Things from approaching perfection for me. This movie stirs the inner child because despite it ssurrealism it's saturated with honesty and genuinity. I though Jonze wasn't telling a story; he was sketching a portrait of something in the world he found beautiful, nothing else.

I found Maurice Sendak's book so great because it was completely deprived of resolution, moral or progress. Max is frustrated and angry at his mom. He feels powerless so escapes into a world where he can be king, until his empty stomach brings him back to his room and that's the end. No maturing experiences, no wise lessons learned. To simply observe what you love and frame it so that you can share it with the rest of the world: it's humble, disarming, honest and it fills me with gratitude.

This in contrast to stories, bildungsromans and maturing experiences, where the writer inevitably at some point must play God.

The movie WTWTA is astonishing in most facets, but my enthusiasm blinded me from seeing that even the great Spike Jonze failed to resist the innate human urge to make himself king of his world. Until this article opened my eyes.
Mar 24, 2010 2:57 PM
Guest :
This was the absolute best analysis of this movie that I have come across.
Jun 1, 2010 2:54 PM
Guest :
I really like this movie, because I do like the scenes that has to do with Carol and Max, because they both act like father and son figures to each other, while KW is acting like a mother-figure. And I also like the designs on where the movie takes place, the designs for the characters, and the actors, author; Maurice Sendak, and director; Spike Jonze did wonderful jobs on this movie.
I also wish that there could be a sequel for this movie someday, I hope. What do you think for a sequel of Where The Wild Things Are?
Jun 8, 2010 5:41 PM
Guest :
Thank you so much for your analysis of the movie. After watching it I found myself unexpectedly connecting my own childhood and I could not figure out why. It moved me in a way that, until I had read your article, I wasn’t able to understand. Your points are exactly as I had thought and it was nice to read another person having the same connections as me.
Aug 3, 2010 4:31 AM
Guest :
Along with these pivotal characters in understanding Max's psyche, it is just as important to look at the other characters in what they provide. Here's what I've gathered from watching this wondrous film:

Judith: At many points throughout the film, especially when she is arguing with Max about 'favourites' she uses the same condescending tone that Max's mother uses in the reality sequences. Judith is then supported to be the 'Mother' figure through Ira's blatant biting her on the shoulder, just as Max had done.

Ira: Ira would represent the man that is dating Max's mother in the beginning. Not much is known about him, and Ira is made to be just as obscure in his relationship with Max. Possibly the great holes that he makes in the trees represents the division he is causing in Max's family.

Alexander: Showing that Carol is not the only representation of Max, Alexander is Max's timid and vulnerable side. Max's need for connection with his mother is emphasized in the close-up shot of Alexander and Judith hugging as Max leaves the island.

Bob and Terry: These are the friends of Clara that destroyed Max's igloo at the start of the film. Max feels no sense of belonging with them, their ability to fly and strange language makes them inaccessible to him.

Mystery Minator Man?: I'm not sure if he is ever given a name, but he is the most confusing thing about the whole film. I gather that he may be Max's maturity and coming of age, as he only speaks at the end of the film once Max's emotional journey is over, which differs greatly from the brutish grunts he supplies at the beginning of the island adventures.

I hope this aids the article somewhat, I just finished watching this great film and plan to use it in an english essay =)
Nov 9, 2010 11:26 PM
Guest :
first off all great article! One of the things that spoke to me from the film was when max found a need to have a small door where he could hide. It represented an attempt to avoid all of his emotions and family that the monsters represented. He made the special point of wanting a place that the big things could not reach him, even the carole who he most identified with. The response from carole made a disserning point, that you shouldn't try to hide from family or emotion but have a bigger door where they could still reside.
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