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11/29/2015

On the Road (2012) - Salles' near-perfect adaptation



+ Best Road Movie of the Year

This poster for Walter Salles' On the Road looks like a really good book


Aspiring author Sal spends the years from 1948-50 with his best, but very selfish friend Dean, on the roads of America, devoted to their experiences and his writings.

On the Road is the grand-scaled, very impressive adaptation of great American author Jack Kerouac's (Big Sur (1962)) same-titled 1957 novel, adapted by Jose Rivera (The Motorcycle Diaries/Diarios de Motocicleta (2004)) and directed by Brazilian master filmmaker Walter Salles (The Motorcycle Diaries).
The film features a killer ensemble cast: Amy Adams (The Master (2012)), Viggo Mortensen (Eastern Promises (2007)) and Steve Buscemi (Fargo (1996)) and more appear in minor parts; and both Sam Riley (Control (2007)) and a very erotically charged Garrett Hedlund (Pan (2015)) lead with strength and conviction. Kirsten Dunst (Melancholia (2011)) is outstanding in raging despair, and Kristen Stewart (Twilight (2008)) is a vivid sex kitten.
The film is terrifically shot by Eric Gautier (Into the Wild (2007)) and successfully recreates the feeling of being on the road, being young and free, a fluid traveler moving ahead without a clear destination, which is its greatest feat. The protagonist is an observer who writes a lot, and this may put some audiences off due to its apparent passivity, but the film doesn't focus on Sal's texts, and I find that it only gets better on a second watch.

Related posts:

2012 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED V]
2012 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED IV]
2012 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED III]
2012 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II]




Watch the trailer for the film here

Cost: 25 mil. $
Box office: 8.7 mil. $
= Mega-flop
[Kerouac wrote a letter to Marlon Brando in 1957, because he wanted him to portray Sal in a movie version of On the Road. This never happened, and several other movie versions of the book were prepared and fell through in the decades until Salles' film. Since 1979, master filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola bought the rights to the novel and has fruitlessly been attempting to adapt it. Salles did extensive research on Kerouac, the period and artists in preparation, and Rivera reportedly completed 20 drafts of the script before shooting. The cast were sent on 'beatnik bootcamp' for three weeks before filming, getting taught in the works, artists and the period, and watching inspirational movies like Breathless/À Bout de Souffle (1960) and Shadows (1959). Shooting took from August 2010 to some time in the coming winter in Canada, the US, Mexico, Argentina and Chile. The film premiered in competition in Cannes, but received mixed reviews and only grossed 0.7 mil. $ (8 % of the total gross) in North America. The 2nd and 3rd biggest markets were France (2.7 mil./31 %) and Brazil (1.5 mil. $/17.2 %). On the Road is rotten at 43 % with a 5.6 critical average on Rotten Tomatoes.]

What do you think of On the Road?

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