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On the Road e Dintorni

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miky181
CAT_IMG Posted on 20/12/2012, 22:00





@KstewAngel)
Posted Thursday 20th December 2012 from Twitlonger

#OTR Costume Designer Danny Glicker on Kristen - Glicker says each woman “had a very specific piece of the puzzle. Kristen and I worked super closely together — she was so committed to the role,” he shares. “And to see her intelligence and awareness of how clothing can inform every aspect of her understanding of a character … that was pure pleasure.”





Kristen Stewart and Garrett Hedlund Chat About the Film Version of On the Road
By Jeff Weiss Thursday, Dec 20 2012

There's traffic from Silver Lake. That's why Kristen Stewart and Garrett Hedlund, the stars of On the Road, are late to the Benedict Room of the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills. We're as psychically far from Jack Kerouac's Beat gospel as you can get: fidgeting under crystal chandeliers in a $400-per-night hotel, with guests in comfy white robes riding gilded elevators and maids pushing breakfast trays of eggs Hollandaise and medicine ball-size avocados.

The journey from scroll to screen has been an equally strange odyssey. Since Kerouac published his sex-, drugs- and satori-searching novel in 1957, false starts and "unfilmable" rumors have lengthened its odds of adaptation. The author once sought Marlon Brando to play Dean Moriarty, the book's infamous thief/wildman and Kerouac's trim-hipped "Western Kinsman of the Sun" (Kerouac assured he could handle the narrator/protagonist Sal Paradise, based on himself). Two decades later, Francis Ford Coppola acquired the rights and famously struggled to bring the book to life, with actors Colin Farrell, Ethan Hawke, Brad Pitt, and Billy Crudup variously attached as male leads. We were one German investment group away from On the Road as proto-slacker parable.

A decade later, aided by several European and Latin American co-financiers and Walter Salles, director of The Motorcycle Diaries, the $25 million adaptation premièred to mixed reviews at May's Cannes Film Festival. The local unveiling occurred during November's AFI Fest at Grauman's Chinese Theatre with an after-party at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. There was an electro-funk mash-up DJ, a shadow light projection for Shellback Caribbean Rum, and the dull iridescence of a thousand iPhones and bald agent scalps. No whiskey was served.

It's two days after that Hollywood night on a weatherless Southern California Monday morning. Early November. 9:17 a.m. With silver eyes and wine-dark hair, Kristen Stewart is sitting in front of me and we're not talking because Hedlund still hasn't shown up and what small talk can you make with the 22-year-old, tabloid-tormented star of Twilight. In person, she's pretty but severe, as though her face is all elbows.

When her co-star finally arrives, Stewart offers a sisterly hug with a sense of relief that suggests she's acutely aware of how awkward it is to be interviewed by people who know every uncomfortable (and possibly spurious) facet of your existence.

Hedlund is her opposite. If Stewart is shy and pallid and balsamic salad-thin, Hedlund is broad-shouldered, farmer-tanned, and blond. The 28-year-old Midwesterner has the loquacious confidence and aw-shucks ambition of a young congressional chief of staff. As a movie star, he is in the Armie Hammer-as-Winklevii mold. She is an L.A.-born goth locker pin-up for kids who define old-school as before Instagram arrived on Droid phones.

The question before them is: What is On the Road even supposed to mean when you can Google Earth and Yelp your way across the heartland?

"I think [the Internet] gives people the urge to travel to further and more remote locations to get their kicks . . . to find lands that are untouched by human hand," Hedlund says, with slang indicative of the time he spent researching the Beat muse Neil Cassady, Kerouac's model for Moriarty.

There was the cast's three-week Beat boot camp that included Skype tutorials from an old Kerouac colleague about the proper way to break Benzedrine capsules with beer bottles. In order to get into the spirit of the book, Hedlund estimates that he filled up 100 notepads on multiple treks across the country's surviving backroads.

Stewart was originally cast at 17 to play Mary Lou, née Luanne Henderson, the sexualized child bride worshipped and scorned by Moriarty and Paradise.

"I'm 100 percent nostalgic for times that I haven't lived in . . . when there was less insignificant stimulation," Stewart says, tapping her foot with nervous energy, jangling the copper bangles around her wrists, folding her T-shirt with her hands, and mostly looking down. "If you're not watching a TV show or downloading something, you're bored. Back in the day, there was less to do, people had to use their minds."

Stewart speaks infrequently and with caution, cognizant that even her most banal sentences are parsed with vice presidential scrutiny. After all, most basketball franchises can't sell merchandise like Team Edward. Hedlund, whose previous big credit was Tron: Legacy, handles most of the talking — staying true to the dynamic of the film.

"I've always romanticized the late '40s and '50s — the cars, jazz, the open roads, and lack of pollution," Hedlund says, business-casual in a navy blue dress shirt, the top button unbuttoned; his chest is nearly hairless. "Now there are more vehicles, less hitchhikers, more billboards and power lines and stuff. People wrote wonderful long letters that took months to receive and now everything is e-mail."

Both reiterate the idea that the book's timelessness is immutable. Even though a contemporary Kerouac could have seen Cassady's conquests on Facebook, the actors point out that young people will always be hypnotized by the amphetamine prose and intoxicating ideas of freedom and rebellion.

"Anybody that wants to walk out that door and leave home for a few months and rely on themselves instead of fate might have some interesting stories to tell," Hedlund says.
 
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miky181
CAT_IMG Posted on 20/12/2012, 22:52




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Edited by miky181 - 20/12/2012, 23:08
 
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CAT_IMG Posted on 7/1/2013, 14:04

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Full Transcript of Kristen and Garrett’s Appearance at ‘On the Road’ Screening in Santa Barbara Dec. 9

We previously posted about Kristen’s Q&A appearance in Santa Barbara, CA to promote ‘On the Road’ with Garrett Hedlund here, but here is the full transcript! See what Kristen has to say about her character, Marylou, and the Beatnik generation – she has some really adorable quotes!

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“On The Road”. Roger Durling with Actors Garrett Hedlund and Kristen Stewart

Durling: And Kristen, you’ve also been involved with this project for a very long time, since, Into The Wild with Sean Penn?

Kristen Stewart:
It was a little after that. I think it was in 2007, I was seventeen.

Durling: What was it that attracted you to this role?

Stewart:
On The Road was my first favorite book. I read it as a freshman in high school. And then when I heard Walter was directing it I would have done anything to be involved. I would have been his assistant on it. I would have done craft service. The reason you love something, it’s so clear. I don’t even really remember the details of the initial conversation; I think I just drove away shaking. I mean I was fairly certain. Not necessarily that I would get the part, because it could have been decades and we still would have had to wait fifty years for it to begin, but that I wanted to commit to something like that. Which is obviously, at least the way I remember, so irresponsible of me. I wasn’t ready for that part yet, at all. I got involved when Garrett did, and if fifty years had gone by and we’d missed out then it would have been a really painful experience.

Durling: Kristen, in the book the women, especially Mary Lou, are shall I say, underwritten. Were you involved in the process of expanding the character of Mary Lou?

Stewart:
Yeah, she’s definitely on the periphery of the story. I think some of the people behind the characters thought it would be easier to not change the story necessarily and never add anything really. It was always just sort of felt. I think a really common idea in the book is that the women are treated as sort of playthings like they’re ambience or sexy wild things

Durling: Which seems like misogyny to some people.

Stewart:
Yeah, which is interesting to me because I always hear men say that like, “So hey, don’t you think there’s a chauvinist feeling to the use of women in the story?” and I think that’s a kind of simplistic way of looking at it. They’re not on the forefront of the story so you don’t know where their hearts or where their minds are. But at the same time, getting to know Luanne especially, I don’t think anyone could have taken from her. She was so generous and giving and what she was getting in return was not leaving her empty. The same goes for Dean. She was an incredibly formidable partner and talk about a girl who doesn’t know fear. She was just a teenager and it’s not a very typical quality for a teenager to have. That like, really hungry and unselfconscious and self-aware thing. It’s not common. As soon as I met her daughter, she went into great detail; she’s got a killer memory as well, and everything just made sense. I think we were able to feel them instead of having to have to illustrate it. It sort of just came across as we got to know them and how we loved the people.

Hedlund: She’s wise beyond her years, this character. I mean, she’s the one who left me in New York at the beginning. I just thought Dean and MaryLou were so parallel because she was wise beyond her years, he was as well, and they were kind of just great travelling companions. She was kind of the mirror image of him in a way, because just like that she left him to go back to Denver when she reveals that she has a husband to return to.

Stewart: They kind of helped to raise each other.

Durling: You talked about the research you did for the roles. I read somewhere that Walter did a “Beat Camp” for you guys. Can you describe it? Was that sort of rehearsals or improvisation before?

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Hedlund:
All of the above. On this film, it went kind of fast. We only had six weeks of pre-production before going on the road for six months to shoot. And four of those weeks we spent in Montreal. We started in the middle of the summer and kind of camped out in this apartment where Sam Riley, Kristen, Walter, and I would all go to and we would have the family members come. John Cassady, Anne-Marie Santos (LouAnne’s daughter), and Gerald Nicosia who wrote Memory Babe, a Jack Kerouac biography, who also shared with us hundreds of hours of audiotape of MaryLou speaking of Jack and Neal, which was incredibly powerful. We watched old films that Walter would share with us, Shadows, John Cassavettes, and a film that just saw the light of day, The Exiles, which had been in archival footage for up until maybe five years ago, and it was shot in the fifties. All of the walls surrounding were filled with photos of the characters, the locations of the houses, the locations where we were gonna go, what it looked like then, what it’s going to look like now. Jazz was constantly playing. Dexter Gordon, Slim, Jack McQueen, Miles – playing all day along. And all the reading that we had to do. There was hundreds and hundreds of letters that all of these characters wrote to each other. More particularly, Neal Cassady wrote to Jack. They’re very personal and uncensored, and from then we got to sort of realize the thought processes and what made everyone tick.

Durling: Kristen, the Hudson is another character in the movie and you obviously spent a lot of time inside this car. What was that experience like, it seemed awfully claustrophobic.

Stewart:
Really?

Hedlund: Remember Argentina?

Stewart: Yeah, that got old.

Hedlund: After Montreal we needed snow in August. So we went all the way down to Patagonia in Chile and shot for three days. I remember there was a banana on the backseat floor and that’s how you could tell how long the day was by the current state of the banana. Obviously the banana was getting squished on the backseat floor, and whoever was in the backseat would be you know…

Stewart: Making disgusting jokes about the state of the banana that don’t need to be repeated here.

Hedlund: They only made the Hudson for about six years; I think the last Hudson was made in ‘54. It’s a wonderful, wonderful car. I bought a ‘53 Hudson before we started shooting and this was a ‘49 Hudson but I just wanted to get used to the three on the tree and driving it. All these shots where everybody’s in the car, you had to know how to handle this thing. Like when we were shooting the blizzard scenes with my head out the window I was actually driving the car. The camera’s just out there, nobody’s around so we just did the scene driving down a blizzard road. Walter would be walking and say, “There’s a snowplow coming! Do you see the snowplow?” It was like, “I can’t fucking see anything just tell him to watch out for me.”

Durling: You know, you mentioned Argentina. A lot of these landscapes have disappeared in the United States because of the commercial sprawl and so you had to travel to other parts of the world. Can you tell us about that?

Hedlund:
Yeah, after we started in Montreal for about three weeks, went down to Argentina. Flew over to Chile; shot there for three days. Flew up to New Orleans; shot for two weeks. Flew over to Arizona; shot for two weeks. Down to Mexico City, for another three weeks, and after we finished that they said, “We’re halfway!” Then there was Calgary for three weeks, Montreal for another month, and then we finished in San Francisco for the last four days of shooting, which were mostly either the interiors with Dean and Camille or driving through Russian Hill. Then, Walter and I went on a three week journey with a five man crew where we took the Hudson from New York to Los Angeles, because with the principal photography we couldn’t possibly get all the lands of America throughout the schedule we had. So Walter and I shot the Harlem rooftop scenes there then went out to the Adirondacks to get more snow shots, broke down in Utica, drove through a blizzard to Erie, Pennsylvania, with my head out the window. We didn’t have a speedometer or windshield wipers, and our gas can was in the trunk of the car so obviously there was some gasoline high going on as well. We drove with no brakes from Cincinnati to Lexington, Kentucky, then over to Nashville where we tried to find brakes on a Sunday in the Bible belt. We were driving only on back roads too, so it took us eight hours to get to Memphis where it would have taken two hours by freeway. Broke down in Texarkana, Arkansas. Broke down in Lubbock, Texas. Broke down in Las Vegas, New Mexico for three days. Then up through Arizona, down to Phoenix and then where it would have taken five hours by freeway, it took us eighteen hours to get from Phoenix to Los Angeles and that’s where we found that railroad that you see in the end credits between California and Arizona. We just stopped to take a photograph and we saw this wonderful railroad track over there. And if anybody knows Neal Cassady or his life, he had died, or was found dead walking from Temple Town, New Mexico on the railroad tracks. And was found between towns where he had gone to revisit the ties that him and Kerouac had had in the city when he was down there for a wedding. So, it was very special that we at least got to have that footage. I didn’t even know it had made the cut.

Durling: Kristen, you mentioned MaryLou’s daughter…Has the family seen the film? And what was their reaction?

Stewart:
Yeah, I think Anne Marie saw it a few weeks ago, we were in San Francisco and she attended a screening with her husband and daughter. I think she’s really happy with it. The thing that Luanne always did with her daughter, and probably with many other aspects of her life as well, was that she really kept things separate. Which is why I got a really interesting perspective through her daughter. Her values, and desires, and ideals were pretty varying. And yet she was able to provide herself with the life she wanted to live. I mean afterwards, she was just smiling a lot. Her mother had just passed away right before we were about to get this thing going. Out of a lot of characters in the book, she would have been one of the ones that would have been really enthusiastic and into it and would have loved to talk to us, and it’s too bad that it was timed badly. But yeah, I think she’s happy with it. She said that she’s always really shocked and surprised by that aspect of her mom’s life because she came right after. She would tell us stories about people coming back to the house and her mom would never explain to her who they were, so one day she was sitting there, she was sixteen years old and she answered the door to Neal Cassady. He looked at her and–he could always never accept the fact that she wasn’t his daughter. So he was always like, “Oh look! She’s got my eyes!” when she was a little baby, and Luanne would be like, “Uh, no, she doesn’t.” Which is crazy, it’s always insane to me that they never had a child together after all that. But anyway, Neal looked at her and said, “Oh, you’re not as pretty as Jack said you were. Where’s your mom?” and she was like, “Who are you?” Then she found out years later who he was, and he had shown up on the bus actually.

Hedlund: Oh yeah, the bus from the Electric Kool-Aid Acid test days. But it’s also special, Anne Marie the other night had given each of us a vinyl from her mom’s personal collection. Her mom, appreciated her vinyl so much that all of these had her initials on the back in the top right corner so…

Stewart: Yeah, there’s a little “Lu” and it’s really cute.

Durling: So the jazz, I wanted to ask Walter about the music but one of my favorite moments in the movie is your dance sequence. Was that choreographed, or could you explain how that scene was shot?

Hedlund:
Yeah, it was maybe choreographed in the way of memorizing your lines and knowing what to say but having the freedom to improvise. Because at that point, and I know that later we found out that Luanne’s favorite dance was the jitterbug but that would have been a little too cliché for this moment, and at that period we couldn’t find any reference of dance because they were coming out of swing and moving into be-bop. So we just interpreted that and learned a few interesting steps and what to do, and it was much more on the seductive side. Really we just learned a few steps and Walter would film ten minutes without calling cut. So of course we had to use a song that was cut to ten minutes so those were some of the most exhausting days of the shoot. We were just being maniacal on the dance floor and a big sort of bash was going on but after ten minutes, cut. Then we’d run outside to catch our breath.

Stewart: There was no air in the room either. It was totally like a vacuum. It was hot.

Source

 
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miky181
CAT_IMG Posted on 7/1/2013, 21:16




On The Road: Screenig al TIFF Bell LightBox il 18 Gennaio

Anche On The Road parteciperà al TIFF Bell Lightbox il 18 Gennaio. Al momento non ci sono conferme sulle presenze. Guardate la clip qui:

Clicca sul Link

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@TIFF_NET
Just confirmed: @OnTheRoadFilm will open at TIFF Bell Lightbox on Jan 18.


Edited by Lady Alexandra Borgia - 7/1/2013, 22:18
 
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miky181
CAT_IMG Posted on 15/1/2013, 21:16




On the Road Dvd: Disponibile per l'Acquisto dal 21 Febbraio!

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Clicca QUI per Acquistare

Tratto dal celebre romanzo di Kerouac, lavoro letterario che ha segnato un' epoca, il film ripercorre il viaggio esistenziale attraverso l' America del nord dei due amici Sal e Dean che, battendo le strade meno frequentate degli States, vanno in cerca delle avventure
più assurce tentando un contatto con il propio io più recondito.
137 Minuti di adrenalina pura.
Il Dvd comprende anche le scene tagliate in fase di montaggio.

Robsten Love Forever




@london_robsten
OTR DVD In italy :DDD RT @TomStu_ita Disponibile dal 21 febbraio in Italia? ..... pronte a rivedervi Tom in uno dei suoi ruoli migliori?
http://fb.me/UC5jNTGq


Edited by Lady Alexandra Borgia - 15/1/2013, 21:21
 
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CAT_IMG Posted on 15/1/2013, 21:21

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Grazie, Miky. Stavo giusto per metterla. Ho invaso il tuo post con alcuni dettagli.^^
 
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miky181
CAT_IMG Posted on 15/1/2013, 21:35




Grazieeee mille, io non posso entrare in Facebook e stavo per avvisarti nel live !!!
 
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miky181
CAT_IMG Posted on 20/1/2013, 20:25





@KstewAngel
(Audio) Interview Clips of Kristen and Garrett from TIFF for #OTR http://t.co/UMLgvFyf
 
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miky181
CAT_IMG Posted on 23/1/2013, 22:06




'On the Road' nella lista del 'The Best Independent International Film 2012

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Continuano a fioccare le classifiche. E quale modo migliore di iniziare la giornata se non quello di annunciarvi che "On The Road" si è piazzato all'8°posto del "The Best Independet International Film 2012"?
Complimenti a tutto il team e alla nostra Kristen per la sua superba interpretazione!

@KstewAngel
The Best Independent / International Films of 2012 (via @PopMatters) #OTR #8 on the list


Robsten Love Forever - Fonte



Edited by Lady Alexandra Borgia - 25/1/2013, 14:16
 
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CAT_IMG Posted on 25/1/2013, 14:19

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<b>

On The Road: Nomination ai Davis Awards

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Clicca QUI per andare sul sito

Ebbene, per buona pace di questo silenzio assordante, giungono i fiati del mondo a far rumore. Kristen, Garrett e Josè Rivera hanno ricevuto delle importanti nomination per i 'Davis Circuit Awards'

- 1. Kristen Stewart: Categoria "Best performance by an actress in a supporting role" (migliore attrice non protagonista). "Stewart torna finalmente alle sue radici, con la promessa che ha fatto a noi anni fa in Into the Wild siamo finalmente soddisfatti. Complimenti Ms Stewart, sono molto orgoglioso."

"Stewart goes back to her roots, having that promise she made to us years ago in Into the Wild become utterly fulfilled. Congratulations Ms. Stewart, I’m very proud"


- 2.Garrett Hedlund : Categoria "Best performance by an actor in a supporting role": "Come Dean Moriarty, il carisma di Hedlund e le sue abilità come attore trabottano nei modi più speciali. Riesce a esaminare un personaggio auto-distruttivo mostrandoci la sua anima nel modo più efficace."

"As Dean Moriarty, Hedlund’s charisma and abilities as an actor overflows in the most special ways. Examining a character full of self-destruction wears on his soul in the most effective manner."

- 3. Josè Rivera: Categoria "Best Adapted ScreenPlay" per On The Road:
" Forse la migliore interpretazione potevamo avere da uno dei pezzi più belli della letteratura."

"Perhaps the best interpretation we could get from one of the finest pieces of literature."

Stew Addicted



Edited by Lady Alexandra Borgia - 25/1/2013, 15:00
 
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brianne
CAT_IMG Posted on 25/1/2013, 14:55




Bellissima notizia Kristen merita un riconoscimento, speriamo che si aggiudichi il premio oltre la candidatura.
 
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CAT_IMG Posted on 25/1/2013, 15:07

Libraia, Scrittrice e Promoter Culturale

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Ho aggiunto le traduzioni delle motivazioni.
 
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*Camille*
CAT_IMG Posted on 25/1/2013, 21:32




si, decisamente questo premio mi piace...vorrei saperne di più, conoscerlo meglio....
 
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Lorelai Lò
CAT_IMG Posted on 25/1/2013, 21:49




Pur non conoscendo questo premio sono contenta...
è pur sempre un bene quando il lavoro viene apprezzato e premiato... non contano solo le "grandi premiazioni"...
quindi spero che sarà una valida occasione per dar luce al film e all'interpretazione di kris, lo merita.
 
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miky181
CAT_IMG Posted on 26/1/2013, 17:37




Sono contenta per Kris e per chi ha lavorato ad un film così difficile !
 
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