Walter Salles "On The Road"

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I can't find the thread for this so hopefully this is not a double post. This is one of my most anticipated for the year! :hrt:

They just released the poster, synopsis and some pics.

http://blogs.indiewire.com/theplayl...with-sam-riley-garret-hedlund-kristen-stewart

"Just after his father’s death, Sal Paradise, an aspiring New York writer, meets Dean Moriarty, a devastatingly charming ex-con, married to the very liberated and seductive Marylou. Sal and Dean bond instantly. Determined not to get locked in to a constricted life, the two friends cut their ties and take to the road with Marylou. Thirsting for liberty, the three young people head off in search of the world, of other encounters, and of themselves."

on-the-road-poster.jpg


on-the-road-riley-hedlund.jpg


on-the-road-riley-railway.jpg


on-the-road-riley-typewriter.jpg
 
Been looking forward to this for quite some time now. Haven't read the book yet (it's on my reading list) but Salles is a great director and paired it together with the strong ensemble, this film has tremendous promise.
 
Only a 25 mil budget? That is a little worrying.
I haven't seen this actor Garrett Hedlund in anything really(I saw Troy a while back, but don't recall him, not a good comparison role anyway i should think), but I really hope he does not f up the role of Neal Cassidy/Dean Moriarty, I will be pissed if that character is not done justice on film.

Another fear is that it gets a little too slow and ponderous, and lacks the quick fire excitement of the book's prose. That was the problem I felt the movie adaptation of Bukowski's 'Factotum' had, it was a pretty faithful adaptation, but lacked the actual physical sense of barreling about in adventures the book had, and the two books are kind of similar in that way.
So, aye, I worry it will be worthy to the point of being a little dull, instead of going for it with all guns blazing, the way Gilliam did with 'Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas'. But, y'know, he had a big budget for that one, so could cut loose more freely i guess.
 
At long last, a trailer. And it looks promising.
 
Could go either way. One hell of a supporting cast.
 
Looks beautiful, casting is excellent, Salles knows how to do a road movie and the source material is amazing. How can it go wrong?
 
The long-awaited first feature film adaptation of Jack Kerouac’s novel On the Road is finally hitting theaters later this year, and two clips have landed online. One clip features a scene between Garrett Hedlund’s Dean and Kirsten Dunst’s Camille, while the other clip centers on Kristen Stewart’s character. As you may or may not have heard, Stewart tackles the sexually charged character of Marylou head-on with more than one nude scene, and it’s clear from the first reactions to the film that some of her young Twilight fans may be a bit shocked to see their beloved Bella promiscuously taking part in three-ways—if they’re old enough to get into the R-rated film in the first place, that is.

On the Road premiered yesterday at the Cannes Film Festival, and we’ve rounded up some choice quotes from the first reviews. Hit the jump to check out the clips and to see how director Walter Salles’ adaptation was received at Cannes.

Here are the clips:





Drew McWheeny at Hitfix singled out the performances of Hedlund and Sam Riley in his positive review of the film:

“On The Road does not feel like a dry history lesson, nor is it overly reverent toward its subjects. Instead, Salles, working with screenwriter Jose Rivera, managed to make something that has a pulse of its own, and that’s due in no small part to the casting of Garrett Hedlund and Sam Riley as Dean Moriarty and Sal Paradise. They have a strong, easy chemistry that pays off over the course of the film, and it provides a solid base upon which the rest of the film is built.”

James Rocchi noted in his review for The Playlist how refreshing it was to see Stewart free from the restraints of her Bella character in the Twilight series:

“Kristen Stewart is Dean’s paramour Marylou, and seeing her liberated from the silly straitjacket of servile moping she has to perform in the Twilight films is a huge relief.”

Rocchi adds that a weakness of the film is the audience’s disconnect with the actions of the characters:

“If there’s one thing that wounds On the Road, it’s that the film is full of things — having sex, doing drugs, being free — that are far more enjoyably experienced by one’s self as opposed to watching other people enjoy them on screen; even when the free-living, debauched events on screen are at their highest… you still feel pressed against the glass on the other side of the shop window from the goodies.”

Owen Gelibermann echoed Rocchi’s comments in his EW review:

“The strange thing about the movie, which takes place over several years in the late ’40s and early ’50s, is that even as we’re observing all of these activities, they’re a little hard to connect to. Music and wild dancing, unbridled sex, poetic streams of language: These are all good things, but in On the Road they’re staged with a resoundingly earnest, museum-piece diligence. And so it’s a little hard to experience what the movie wants to give you, which is a contact high.”

Eric Kohn addressed the difficulty of translating Kerouac’s source material to the screen in his review for IndieWire:

“By its end, On the Road has made a case for how it can work as a movie and why certain aspects of it never can. In essence, the movie is about the book rather than a fleshed-out realization of it.”

Kohn notes that Riley is a standout as Sal, but gives notice to Stewart’s all-in performance:

“Riley’s true counterpoint in the story comes from Stewart’s achievement as the giddy, pleasure-seeking Marylou, a credible performance made particularly noteworthy for her current fame in the Twilight franchise; frequently going nude, speaking up and dominating most of her scenes, she buries her movie stardom with this refreshingly non-commercial gig.”

All in all, the reviews are surprisingly positive given that many thought Kerouac’s novel was utterly unfilmable. Certainly when pulling from prose-like source material the feature adaptation will have narrative issues, but On the Road looks to benefit from some truly impressive lead performances and a ballsy detour for superstar Kristen Stewart.
http://collider.com/on-the-road-reviews-clips/168192/
Sounding good
 
Was perusing IMDB on Viggo Mortenson's page and stumbled across this. Saw the trailer and I gotta say it looks pretty good. I'm also really wanting Kristen Stewart to prove she's more than just "that chick from Twilight". Any word on when the US release date is?
 
Hedlund has been getting nothing but praise from Cannes in this.
 
I havent read all the reviews. Is he getting Oscar buzz?
 
The reviews I've seen for this movie has been mixed to negative. They feel like the movie lacked the spark of the novel. But I've seen critics giving high marks to the cast, especially Hedlund and Stewart. However, I don't see the movie getting any Oscar nominations, apart from cinematography and maybe adapted screenplay.
 
Was perusing IMDB on Viggo Mortenson's page and stumbled across this. Saw the trailer and I gotta say it looks pretty good. I'm also really wanting Kristen Stewart to prove she's more than just "that chick from Twilight". Any word on when the US release date is?

Translation: I really want to see Kristen Stewart's bewbs.

:oldrazz:
 
I saw this yesterday.

I have not read the book but critics were not lying when they said this movie was 2 hours of drinking, drug taking and sex. Its like a late 40s early 50s skins episode.

It was ok. Sam Riley and Viggo Mortenson were solid as usual.

Kristen Stewart was her usual dead eyed self. Her character was a bit of a nymphomanic so I'm sure guys into Stewart will enjoy this flick.

I was most impressed with Tom Sturridge and Garrett Hedlund. Sturridge nailed it. The accent, personality was all on point.

Hedlund gave the most charismatic performance I've ever seen from him. Hedlund went a little method hitchhiking around the U.S himself in real life and you can tell he has a real passion for the character as it comes though in his perfomance. More performances like this and he could be the new Brad Pitt.
 

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