Off The Road With On
The Road- A Film Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
DVD Review
On The Road, starring, Sam Riley, Garret Hedlund, Kristie
Stewart, based on the be-bop Beat Generation novel by Jeanbon Kerouac, IFC
Film, 2012
Well, we will always have memories of blasted out Frisco town
in the late 1940s ready to take refugees, car-borne refugees, coming in from
the cold war red scare Denver/Chi Town/Jersey Shore/Village/Lowell/Hullsville American
dreaded night. We will always have Jack Kerouac’s novel, On The Road, that sent one, maybe two generations, on the road, on
the road to some mystical discovery thing, some search for language to explain
our short existence, to make sense of thing in the modern world that has no
time for reflection on the big cosmic questions.
We will always have Kerouac’s finely wrought be-bop word
plays jumping off the page out in the desolate 1950s a chicken in every pot and
two cars (if not three) cars in every garage, in every suburban ranch house
sub-division garage. We will always have Sal (a.k.a Jeanbon Kerouac) and Dean,
Dean Moriarty (a.k.a. Neal Cassady), the father we did not know, could not know,
while we were sitting on those Jersey shores, sweating out in those Ames cornfields,
hell, even sitting on the seawall down in those old Hullsville beach fronts looking
for the great blue-pink great Amercian West night.
We will always have Charlie, Sonny, Slim, Big Red, the Duke,
blowing out, trying to reach and sometimes making it, that high white, after
hours, after the paying customers, the carriage trade, went home to bed and
they blew to heaven, or tried to, with the boys, with the guys who knew when
that note floated out some funky cellar bar door winding its way down to the
harbor.
We will always have Sal, Carlos, Bull, Dean and an ever changing
assortment of , well, women, women, mainly, at their beck and call, riding,
car-riding, riding hard over the hill and dale of this continent searching,
well, just searching okay. We will always have the lost brothers, Sal and Dean,
playing off of each other’s strengths (and weaknesses) as they try to make
sense of their world, or if not sense then to keep high, keep moving, and keep
listening. And we will always have a great American novel to pass on to the
next wanderlust generation, if there is another wanderlust generation.
And that is exactly what is wrong with this long time in the
making film adaptation of Kerouac’s cultural coming- of- age novel. I looked
forward with great anticipation to the film, and came away with fair- sized disappointment.
Not with the main actors, Sam Riley, Garret Hedlund and Kristie Stewart since
they were confined by the constricts of the way the director (and screen-writers)
wanted to play the novel. Take away the drugs, sex, rock and roll (oops, be-bop
jazz), and, oh yah, driving at high speed and/or hitchhiking, and there is no
glue holding this thing together.
Now no one can complain, or such complaints will go for naught
after watching this film, that Kerouac was, frankly very oblique in his sexual
references, and certainly in the amount of time he spent on discussing the ins
and out of sex in the novel so it was quite disconcerting to find so much time
spent on the sex scenes. Moreover, let’s face it women for the men, and it was
mainly men, of the Beat generation women were ornaments, or drudges and while
it does no good to project today’s mores backward they were kept around because
as Dean/Neal shouted out one time “I love women.” End of story.
While Road is not
strictly a buddy film I came out of the watching the film thinking that maybe, just,
maybe it is impossible to put the novel in cinematic form, there is perhaps too
much stream of consciousness, too much introspection, too much angst to corral
on film. We will however always have the novel, praise be.
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