Out of the twilight, on the road - By Jay Stone
They were young and wild and free, and they took to the road in a
whirlwind of talk and sex and good times. They were looking for a new
way of life, and they inspired a generation of young people to look
along with them.
And those are just the actors. Kristen Stewart, the 22 year old star who
has been hounded into what looks like exhaustion by the tabloid press,
emerged in public this week for the first time in two months. The
occasion was the North American premiere of On the Road, Walter Selles's
jazzy interpretation of the Jack Kerouac book about a group of young
people driving down the existential highways of 1950s America.
Stewart plays Marylou, a freespirited teenager who marries the animating
spirit of the long and jazzy road trip - a charismatic excon named Dean
Moriarty and played by rising Garrett Hedlund - for a life of drugs and
open sexuality and a search for a new kind of life. The book became the
defining document of the so-called Beat Generation of young hipsters in
postwar America.
"As a sensitive girl of this time who is maybe a bit more
conventional - ha ha - I kind of was curious about how you could have
the strength to do the things she did," Stewart said the day after On the Road had its public premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival. "And it's not that at all. It takes a lot of strength to be super-vulnerable. She was so so so open to the world."
Stewart, though, seemed guarded and tired. There was an unspoken subtext
about her Toronto appearance: the revelation of, and apology for, an
affair she had with the married director of her previous film Snow White
and the Huntsman. It resulted in the breakup of her relationship with
Twilight co-star Robert Pattinson.
No one was talking about it at the festival, but it hung in the air
during interviews, in which Stewart was paired with Hedlund, who did
most of the talking. She seemed tired, but she was game, partly because
of the passion the film's actors feel toward Kerouac's book and the
five-year process of making the film.
"If you approach it as a completion of the process, there are things
that would never occur to you if you weren't asked the question," Stewart said about the interviews. "Sit down and have 10-minute conversations with 15 different people; if you don't take something from that, you're a sociopath."
Hedlund added, "At the end of the day we both know it's the end of a long road we've been on."
It's a road that has, in some way, been going on since Kerouac published
the book in 1957, disguising himself (his character, played by Sam
Riley, is called Sal Paradise) and his friends (Dean Moriarty is
actually proto-hipster Neal Cassady) as they roared down the two-lane
blacktop of a simpler, less-crowded country, looking for kicks and for
truth.
"It's the expression of youth," Hedlund said. "Wanting to grasp everything and have it at the same time. Live long and never die."
Hedlund visited San Francisco to hang out in the spots where Cassady was
raised: a museum to his memory, the City Lights bookstore that
published many early Beat Generation poets, the restaurants where
Kerouac, Cassady and Alan Ginsberg and the rest would hang out. He said
he was coming out of a bar when a bum asked him for $20, and so he asked
the man - who turned out to be a former football player just recently
released from San Quentin prison - what the beats meant to the city.
"Ah the beat generation is all dead and gone now," Hedlund quotes the man as telling him. "Back
then it was social consciousness. Now you've got rich kids coming out
at 21 or 22, driving their parents' BMWs, trying to live this life, but
it's a hoax."
"It's not a style, it's a feeling, it's a how you express yourself
out of your innermost honesty and truth and how you are as a whole
completely and uncensored and not caring. It's everything you are and if
you live in this manner you might qualify to be somebody that somebody
says re-semble the Beat Generation."
Hedlund read all the literature and met with members of Cassady's
family, and he discovered a man who wanted to experience everything in
life. "Things were happening and he wanted to be there. Someone said
parties exist without you being there, don't worry about it, get your
rest at night. He wasn't that. He wanted to be at that party."
Marylou, Stewart's character, isn't as well known.
She was really a teenager named Luanne Henderson, but Stewart said she left behind a long record of her thoughts about that era.
"I have what was possibly the easiest job," she said. "I would
have done anything to be part of this movie. I would have played
(peripheral character) Chad King. So that's how I approached it. I loved
the book so much, I wanted to be around Walter, I wanted to be around
the people interested in it. I just wanted to do anything."
Together they've made a world that seems freer, in some ways, than
today's culture: for instance, Dean and Marylou are shown taking part in
group sex with friends, and no blame is assigned. Hedlund says that
while the highways are more polluted now, with billboards and telephone
lines, it's still possible to hit the road.
"It's a level of your ambition and drive," he says. "It's a
matter of where you want to aim your arrow. The things that have changed
in time are the highways and the road. It's not as free. There's not as
many hitchhikers, not on the main roads. To get where you want to get
faster, you have to take the back roads. There's wonderful experiences
to be had. When you're young you think you can achieve anything. The
world's at your fingertips. And then reality starts to hit you. But I
think it's always possible: we all want to get out of our parents' homes
and not go to school and not have curfew. Some people fail. Some people
succeed. some people have wonderful stories and some people have tales
of sadness. It's all relative."
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