Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Garrett Hedlund. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Garrett Hedlund. Afficher tous les articles

Compte-rendu de la projection de SUR LA ROUTE à Los Angeles.


Compte-rendu de la session questions/réponses en présence de Walter Salles et Garrett Hedlund qui a suivi la projection du film à Los Angeles, ce mercredi 5 décembre.


On y apprend notamment que le documentaire tourné en préparation du film et qui retrace cinq années de recherches sur les traces de la Beat generation, 'Looking for On the road', devrait être fini au ''début de l'année prochaine'', selon Walter Salles. 


Walter Salles and Garrett Hedlund at TheWrap's screening of On The Road.

'On the Road' Director and Star Talk Kristen Stewart, Steve Buscemi Gay Sex Scene
By Tim Kenneally


Jack Kerouac's seminal Beat Generation novel "On the Road" might revolve around the spontaneity of youth, but the film that it spawned certainly had more than its fair share of preparation behind it. 
After TheWrap's screening of "On the Road" at the Landmark Theatre in Los Angeles on Wednesday night, director Walter Salles and star Garrett Hedlund -- who plays iconic Beat Generation figure Dean Moriarty in the film -- discussed the long journey that went into bringing Jack Kerouac's novel to the screen.

In Salles' case, that included five years of retracing Kerouac's steps and tracking down surviving Beat Generation figures such as poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti for information. (Those efforts eventually yielded a documentary, "Searching for 'On the Road,'" which Salles hopes will be in a finished state "at the beginning of next year.")
For Hedlund, it meant driving from Minnesota  to Los Angeles for his audition, capturing his thoughts in a road journal that would help cement his casting when he read it for Salles. (The journal "was so akin to Kerouac's vision, and it so echoed the spirit of the book," the director recalled during the Q&A after the screening.)

And for both of them, it meant a cross-country trip in a 1949 Hudson -- the same model driven by Moriarty in the novel -- to capture additional footage after principal photography had wrapped. 
"We broke down eight, nine times across the country. We drove with no brakes from Cincinnati to Lexington," Hedlund noted.  
Such are the perils of pursuing a labor of love. During the question-and-answer session, which was moderated by TheWrap's editor-in-chief Sharon Waxman, Salles and Hedlund repeatedly discussed their decades-long love for the source material. According to Hedlund, the respect for Kerouac's work extended throughout the cast, which includes Sam Riley as aspiring writer Sal Paradise; "Twilight" star Kristen Stewart, who plays Moriarty's libertine teenage bride Marylou; Tom Sturridge as Allen Ginsberg stand-in Carlo Marx; and Viggo Mortensen as Old Bull Lee, a character based on "Naked Lunch" author William Burroughs. 
"We all shared a similar passion for the book," Hedlund said. "There wasn't a single person on this project who didn't feel completely holy and honored to be there."
Stewart, of course, has become known to screaming teenagers everywhere as Bella Swan, the conflicted lead female character in a little vampire movie franchise called "Twilight." The actress actually came aboard "On the Road" before the "Twilight" film series became a reality, with Salles becoming drawn to the actress via her part in the 2007 film "Into the Wild." While her performance in that Sean Penn-directed movie might have opened the door, it was her knowledge of the novel and insight into the Marylou character that sealed the deal.  (Stewart was scheduled to attend the screening but canceled at the last minute due to illness.)
"I met her and found someone who knew the book inside-out, and also understood that Marylou was 20 years ahead of her time," Salles recalled. "I think that Kristen in her life, she drifts toward these characters who expand or investigate territories that are forbidden a number of times, and she was very drawn to this." 
Despite the unanimous reverence for Kerouac's book, Salles wasn't afraid to deviate from the novel. That included referencing the original, famously scroll-like manuscript that unspooled from Kerouac's typewriter. 
"The published version in 1957 was quite different and tamer than the original that Kerouac had written," Salles noted. "Even that first line was different. The 1957 book starts, 'I first met Dean not long after I divorced my first wife,' and the scroll starts, 'I first met Dean not long after my father died.'" (The film version employs the latter.)
"[We were] trying to be faithful to the very freeform, jazz-infused quality of the text, but at the same time, try to find a complexity in each of the characters," Sallas said of the film adaptation. 
Particularly challenging for the actors was the fact that "On the Road"'s characters are based on people who themselves became public figures. Separating the two could be particularly demanding, Hedlund noted. 
"That was probably the most difficult part of this, the stripping-away process," Hedlund said. "[T]here's so many videos of Kerouac, or there's videos of Neal Cassady when he's older ... It was Walter that said, 'Strip it all away, you're not playing Jack Kerouac, you're playing Sal Paradise,' and to me, 'You're not playing Neal Cassady, you're playing Dean Moriarty.' Because half of this was through life experience that Kerouac was writing, and half was through imagination." 
That wasn't the only stripping-away process that might have tested the cast's mettle. Befitting the free-wheeling spirit of its source material, "On the Road" is rife with sex scenes, particularly for Hedlund's sexually omnivorous Moriarty. A particularly jarring coupling in the film occurs when Moriarty, hard-up for cash, partners with Steve Buscemi, who plays a traveling salesman who gives Sal and Dean a ride -- and has a fondness for Dean. 
As it turns out, Buscemi was as devoted to his role as the rest of the cast.
"Steve was wearing underpants the color of skin. In the rehearsal, in the camera they can see Steve's skin-colored underwear popping into the frame and they're like 'Steve, can you just slide them down a little bit?'" Hedlund recalled. "And he's like, 'Oh, no; I'll just take them off. You don't mind, do you?'"



Source : vrvm.com
Via : @charlegillibert
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Interview de Garrett Hedlund pour Interview Magazine.





'' It's funny that I got to do On the Road. I was very inspired by the book and this spirit of Dean Moriarty and how envious we all are of somebody who can be that carefree. ''

BRIDGES: So tell me about On the Road. That was kicking around for a while and went through some directors, didn't it?
HEDLUND: Yeah. I remember, at first, looking it up and seeing that Francis Ford Coppola was attached to the film, and I was like, "Shit. I'll never get a chance at this." But then, like, eight years later, I was on set doing it. I remember all of us kind of pinching each other and saying, "Man, we're filming On the Road." But I think there were a number of different incarnations of what the movie was gonna be, from Jean-Luc Godard filming it, to Gus Van Sant doing it, to all these other directors who were rumored to be involved—I think Roman Coppola was even going to direct it at one point. There were also a bunch of different versions of the script: one that Barry Gifford had written and one that Roman was planning to write. But I think it was after Sundance, the year that Walter [Salles] was there with The Motorcycle Diaries [2004], that he was approached about possibly doing the film. Obviously, Walter had just come from doing a road film, so I think he was like, "Well, if I'm gonna do this"—which he was unsure of at the time—"then I'm going to have to immerse myself in it." So he ended up going across the country for five or six years doing research before they'd even completed a script, which José Rivera, who worked with Walter on The Motorcycle Diaries, eventually wrote. So it was a long time in the making. I also think that since Walter is Brazilian, he maybe didn't feel like he was the right person to make this movie unless he'd really absorbed it all. I mean, he'd read the book at a young age himself and was very inspired by it. 
 
BRIDGES: Were you familiar with the book before you did the movie? 
HEDLUND: Yeah. I'd read it in high school. It's funny that I got to do On the Road because the thing that had the biggest impact on me growing up was reading books. I was very inspired by the book and this spirit of Dean Moriarty and how envious we all are of somebody who can be that carefree. I also always thought of myself as more like the Sal Paradise character—you know, being a listener and writing about a conversation more than being the one that others listened to. So it was interesting that I got to play Dean. I actually signed on to do On the Road before we started on Tron, but we were in flux for a while, just sort of playing the waiting game, trying to get the right budget and the right cast. I think I first met with Walter in March of 2007. But I told Walter that I wouldn't do another film until we did On the Road, so I had a lot of time to do my own research—to go up to San Francisco to City Lights bookstore, to watch video interviews of Neal Cassady with Allen Ginsberg, to sit in Vesuvio [Cafe] and visit Jack Kerouac Alley, to go to the Beat Museum and things. We had time, so Walter and I also did road trips and talked to people, be it family members of some of the people who were around the Beats or other writers. But it was really just about finding something that we could add to the story beyond what was on the page, even if only from life experience. I mean, I grew up around country roads, but this was a different route that these guys took. Eventually, though, it all came to fruition.




Robbie Fimmano
Karl Templer




Source 
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Interview de Garrett Hedlund par le magazine HUCK.




Article written by Matt Bochenski for the HUCK Magazine (Issue #35)  

Plus d'infos sur le magazine et comment se le procurer. 
( NB : dispo en français!)

 Garrett Hedlund The Man and The Muse 
He’s the Dean Moriarty of Walter Salles’ adapation of Jack Kerouac’s On The Road. Which makes him a caricature of a caricature of Neal Cassady, America’s most fabled rebel muse. But Garrett Hedlund is still his own man.


Garrett Hedlund is not the same kid who grew up on a cattle farm in the remote outerlands of Wannaska, Minnesota. At twenty-eight, he’s found his footing in Hollywood with the easy confidence of a child superstar born and bred for life on the Hills. His bio glistens with big-screen hits, from Troy and Tron: Legacy to Friday Night Lights. He can share a spotlight with Brad Pitt without fading off into the shadows. And now, as rugged, rebel muse Dean Moriarty – the larger-than-life caricature of the already larger-than-life Neal Cassady - he’s taken Walter Salles’ adaptation of Jack Kerouac’s On The Road and made damn sure that all eyes are on him.
But groomed for this life, he was not. At fourteen, Hedlund found himself in Arizona with his divorcee mom, busking tables after school, knocking on every talent agent’s door, and hitching rides to LA auditions, 800 miles away. He studied hard, graduated early, and, with a breakout part in Wolfgang Petersen’s Troy, landed in Hollywood on both farmer-boy feet. But there are hints of Wannaska in that Hollywood smile – least not when he’s quoting Tennessee Williams on the fly.
HUCK caught up with Hedlund during the red-carpeted globe-trot that was always bound to follow in Cassady’s wake, and found the gooey-eyed optimism that keeps a kid from Minnesota a kid from Minnesota for life. 

Kerouac is said to have wanted Marlon Brando to play the role of Dean Moriarty. And Dean, meanwhile, is a caricature of Neal Cassady. That’s a lot of personality, right there. How do you channel the influence of icons like that when approaching a role like this? 
Between Walter [Salles] and I, it was about finding the voice of the man who said it for the first time and not the repeated soul. Unfortunately, the only video footage we really have of Cassady, which is when he was older, are YouTube clips when he’s driving the bus for The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test [with the Merry Pranksters]: he’s a motor mouth and super high on acid. At first glance, you’re like, ‘Man, I can’t wait to play this character.’ But really it’s about finding that soul which is experiencing it, verbalising it for the first time, what he really felt about this and that, and not the motor mouth that was the last figure at the museum. He was the one on display. He was the one voicing the inspiration and wonderment. He was the one saying, ‘Wow, Sal, look at that. Man, everything that I see is so whole and complete and we have to get some of this…’ It was about playing someone experiencing something for the first time with such electricity and such amusement and wonderment at life and the world that it was infectious to Kerouac and Marylou and Ginsberg.


How did you develop the chemistry with Sam, who plays Jack Kerouac’s alter-ego Sal Paradise, and Kristen Stewart, who plays your teen wife Marylou? 
Sam I feel is, in a way, my brother, my life. And Kristen is, I don’t know if it’d be unfair to say, like, my sister in a way. She’s very much that close. We would punch each other in the shoulder and say, ‘I can’t believe we’re fucking working on On the Road! It’s insane!’ Then we’d snap back and get back to our priorities and our obligations creatively. But, I mean, the wonderful thing about Kristen is that she was so devoted to playing this character. It was as important to her as it was to all of us. And Sal was as important to Sam as it was to each of us. […] Everybody had the same level of devotion no matter if you were in four scenes or forty. It was such a wonderful family to be part of creatively because nobody was going to come to work late. It’s such a rarity.


Did you have any doubts? Was there a little voice in the back of your mind questioning whether an adaptation could really work? 
No, not at all because when I read the script I thought it was so wonderfully done. What Jose [Rivera] had done in terms of capturing some of the most pertinent moments of the story, from the most influential to the most inspirational bits were all in there. And then you’d see other bits of the book that you thought were great and we’d get all those down. I mean, from what we shot in comparison to what’s in the film, there could easily be a six-hour film out there. And the Beat enthusiasts like myself or like a lot of the other people involved on the film, or like a lot of people ranging from San Francisco to all around the world, they would be happy to watch that six-hour film. I think a lot of people that haven’t read the book or have no idea about On the Road are just gonna, you know… I think hopefully they’ll watch it and get the inspiration to get out and drive, the way the book enthused a lot of Beat enthusiasts. 


Why do you think now is the right time to do this adaptation? When Jean-Luc Godard was asked to do it, he left a message for Kerouac saying, ‘There are no new routes in America.’ This is a book about freedom and opportunity, but it feels like those things are curtailed now more than ever. So what can On the Road tell us today? 
I guess for Walter Salles there’s an optimism that says, ‘There are plenty of new routes in America.’ Walter has driven across country twice, interviewing people – film legends like Wim Wenders and all these other cats, family members, Al Hinkle and other guys who were on these journeys, all the wonderful people involved. I think he was so inspired by the book, what it said about American culture, the freedom coming off - not necessarily the freedom, but the ambition of these characters coming off the back of a World War, the way that jazz influenced the story. I think Walter was so inspired by this project that he wanted to share that feeling, that ambition with everyone. It takes someone that’s actually affected by it rather than someone who’s just trying to push for a film to be made. Walter’s been involved with this for over five years, you know? He’s already made a documentary about trying to find this project, where he interviewed everybody I mentioned plus the likes of Sean Penn and Johnny Depp and guys that were potentially going to be involved in the project. He asked them at the end of the day, what they expected from the finished product. The stuff ranged from, ‘I don’t want it to be black-and-white’, ‘I don’t want it to feel like a period piece’, ‘I don’t want it to feel contemporary’, all the way to Sean Penn saying, ‘I would like it to be well acted.’


Do you think that the Beat spirit lives on or has an analogue today? 
No. [But] I think the spirit of freedom and yearning to journey and wanting to get out and breathe and see lands that no other man has seen is such an ongoing compulsion within everybody ranging from the youth all the way to parents that are dealing with work in the morning and kids going to school. Everybody just wants to get up and leave sometimes. I think, within the expression of this, when you’re in your early twenties, everything in life is possible and also, later on, depending on how your mind formulates or depending on what obligations drag you down to slow that. But as long as you’re always motivated and you never lose touch with your wonderment, there’s always going to be something to drive you. And these were guys that, just coming off swing into the jazz era, just coming off wonderful writers like Wolfe and Twain, got into this wonderful Beat feeling. Almost like reading to be heard not to be read, in a way. That’s how much to the beat it was. There was a rhyme to it, there was a rhythm. It was kind of new and now they want to extend those boundaries but there’s no way to extend them but to go out and experience life and to live it to where you could shed that gained knowledge into your work. That’s what this was. It was all about pushing your own ability further. The experience of drugs and sex and music was only to lengthen your own self-encyclopedia of life; to know about not just the world but the solar system, not just the heart but the whole body itself. That’s what I thought was most wonderful. It wasn’t to destroy or to suppress or sedate yourself because of what you were internally going through; it was to expand what you were internally going through. That was the wonderful thing about it, I think. 


Is this how you imagined movie stardom would be when you were nine years old? 
Ha. Fuck. No because, you know, when I was on the farm, none of this ever seemed fathomable; none of it ever seemed reachable. I always think about it in terms of if my parents had stayed together. My parents divorced when I was under a year old, my mom took off. Now, if they were together I probably would have never left the town, everything would have been right there and all right and hunky-dory. But in terms of, the nine or fifteen-year-old me I guess I would have to have that same sense of wanting to achieve my ambitions. I think a lot of people can be driven by what you don’t have and then when you have it, your ambition is sort of redirected in terms of what’s next, instead of, ‘How can I start?’[…] Now, the ambition is redirected towards, ‘How can I enhance? Or how can I go bigger or deeper or more powerful?’ Rather than, ‘How can I start?’ So yeah, I’m sure… I wouldn’t really be able to fathom it if you’d told a nine-year-old me that one day, in about seven years time you’ll read a book called On the Road and the 27-year-old you will have just finished filming the movie adaptation to it, I’d say, maybe, ‘Bullshit, but try me.’ 


What do you love about movies? 

Jesus. Um. What do I love about movies? Right off the top, it’d be the ability to escape. I think Tennessee Williams in The Glass Menagerie captured it the best with Tom Wingfield being able to leave his job at the factory, his mother and his insecure sister to go to the movies and to get away from his own reality. That’s what I’ve found myself doing and I constantly find myself doing. When I want to escape present time troubles and tribulations and trials and joys and vicissitudes, you go to the movies and you get to be away from your present problems.


Source : Huck Magazine.
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Numéro spécial ON THE ROAD par le Magazine HUCK.



HUCK, magazine bi-mensuel spécialisé dans le surf, skate et snowboard a consacré son 35ème numéro à SUR LA ROUTE, ce qui n'est pas sans nous rappeler l'excellente édition spéciale de Little White Lies. Avec sa présentation travaillée, il se situe dans la catégorie magazine de collection pour ceux qui suivent le film Sur la route et s'intéressent à la Beat Generation.





Au programme :

'The Big Beat Debate
Is beat culture still relevant today?
Merry Pranksters
Ken Kesey and the acid tests
Garrett Hedlund
Being Dean Moriarty 
Anywhere Road
Girl skate photo documentary special
Plus...
Underground Vegas
Eric Koston
Forest Sun
Ben Gibbard
Band of Horses





Infos pratiques :

Vous pouvez commander le magazine pour un total de 8.25€ (frais de port compris). Et gros plus pour les moins bilingues d'entre vous : le magazine est également disponible en français.


Via @HUCKmagazine
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Les fans ont du talent ! Montage vidéo inspiré de Sur La Route.

Ce très beau montage vidéo a été réalisé le 26 juin 2011...
Plus d'un an avant la sortie du film.
Plus de six mois avant la sortie de la première bande-annonce...

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TIFF 2012 - L’évènement.

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TIFF 2012 - Le tapis rouge.




Le tapis rouge : 

Les photos :


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Retrouvez toutes les photos individuelles des acteurs :


Kristen Stewart 
Kirsten Dunst

Les vidéos :


Read More at: http://movieline.com/2012/09/07/kristen-stewart-on-the-road-toronto-film-festival/#utm_source=copypaste&utm_campaign=referral
Ambiance :
 
Walter Salles :
Kristen Stewart :
Garrett Hedlund : 

Kirsten Dunst :
_____

Interviews : 

ET :

Access Hollywood :

The Canadian Press :

City TV : 

Intérieur de la salle (Q/A) :






Articles : 

  • Par MovieLine :    ''The performances by Stewart, Garret Hedlund, who plays Cassady doppelganger, Dean Moriarty, and Sam Riley, who essentially plays Kerouac, are strong. Stewart doesn't have a lot of lines, but she brings a sultry radiance to the screen that is impossible to ignore.'' (More)
  • Par HitFix : "She revealed that knowing the real woman behind Marylou (Luanne Henderson) lived a fruitful life after the events in the book helped her get through the character's sad arc."     (More)

Pour toutes les réactions de journalistes, fans etc., suivez nos tweets sur @OnTheRoadTheMov!


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TIFF 2012 - Couverture presse écrite/en ligne.



Articles : 

  • Par MovieLine :    ''The performances by Stewart, Garret Hedlund, who plays Cassady doppelganger, Dean Moriarty, and Sam Riley, who essentially plays Kerouac, are strong. Stewart doesn't have a lot of lines, but she brings a sultry radiance to the screen that is impossible to ignore.'' (More)

  • Par HitFix : "She revealed that knowing the real woman behind Marylou (Luanne Henderson) lived a fruitful life after the events in the book helped her get through the character's sad arc."     (More)

Pour toutes les réactions de journalistes, fans etc., suivez nos tweets sur @OnTheRoadTheMov!




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TIFF 2012 - Les interviews vidéos.



Interviews : 

ET :

Access Hollywood :

The Canadian Press :
City TV : 

MAJ : Screenslam :

Intérieur de la salle (Q/A) :







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SUR LA ROUTE dans le magazine Marie-Claire (US) - Septembre 2012.



Photos qui annoncent un article consacré à SUR LA ROUTE dans le magazine
Marie-Claire de Septembre aux Etats-Unis.

Scans et traduction à venir.




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