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One Fast Move Or I'm Gone: Kerouac's Big Sur

One Fast Move

He was called the vibrant new voice of his generation — the avatar of the Beat movement. In 1957, on the heels of the triumphant debut of his groundbreaking novel, On The Road, Jack Kerouac was a literary rock star, lionized by his fans and devotees. But along with sudden fame and media hype came his unraveling, and, by 1960, Kerouac was a jaded cynic, disaffected from the Beat culture he helped create and tortured by self-doubt, addiction and depression.

Desperate for spiritual salvation and solitude, as well as a place to dry out, he secretly retreats to Lawrence Ferlinghetti's rustic cabin in the Big Sur woods. But his plan is foiled by his own inner demons, and what ensues that summer becomes the basis for Kerouac's gritty, yet lyrically told, semi-autobiographical novel, Big Sur.

One Fast Move or I'm Gone: Kerouac's Big Sur, takes the viewer back to Ferlinghetti's cabin and to the Beat haunts of San Francisco and New York City for an unflinching, cinematic look at the compelling events the book is based on. (...)

Filed under  //   books   film   literature   music   poetry   video  
Posted November 6, 2009
// 1 Comment

Peacemeal 1967

Albert Alotta
Peacemeal, 1967
Film still

via art tattler

Filed under  //   art   film   photography  
Posted November 1, 2009
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Sylvia Plath Reads Lady Lazarus

via Paula Mendoza-Hanna

Filed under  //   film   poetry   video  
Posted October 27, 2009
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Procrastination by John Kelly

From Stash, the monthly DVD magazine:  Short Films 1

via booooooom!

Filed under  //   animation   art   film   video  
Posted October 27, 2009
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Salvador Dali's Dream

New York World's Fair, 1939-40

via @jessebdylan

 

Filed under  //   art   film   video  
Posted October 27, 2009
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Monk, Hitchcock, Magritte

Reckon

Filed under  //   apparel   art   film   jazz   music   reckon   silkscreen  
Posted October 26, 2009
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Limousine Eyelash

Delusion Angel by David Jewell

from Before Sunrise

via 9000

Filed under  //   film   poetry  
Posted October 23, 2009
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Hush Little Robot

Bruce Haack - Word Game

Hush Little Robot

Bruce Haack (May 4, 1931–September 26, 1988) was a musician and composer, and is considered a pioneer within the realm of electronic music. He was born in Alberta, Canada.

Haack Movie

Word Game by Haack, Bruce  
(download)

Filed under  //   art   art   film   film   music   music   video   video  
Posted October 19, 2009
// 0 Comments

Hush Little Robot

Bruce Haack - Word Game

Hush Little Robot

Bruce Haack (May 4, 1931–September 26, 1988) was a musician and composer, and is considered a pioneer within the realm of electronic music. He was born in Alberta, Canada.

Haack Movie

Word Game by Haack, Bruce  
(download)

Filed under  //   art   art   film   film   music   music   video   video  
Posted October 19, 2009
// 0 Comments

The Beat Hotel

The Beat Hotel, a new film by Documentary Arts, goes deep into the legacy of the American Beats in Paris during the heady years between 1957 and 1963, when Allen Ginsberg, Peter Orlovsky and Gregory Corso fled the obscenity trials in the United States surrounding the publication of Ginsberg’s poem Howl. They took refuge in a cheap no-name hotel they had heard about at 9, Rue Git le Coeur and were soon joined by William Burroughs, Ian Somerville, Brion Gysin, and others from England and elsewhere in Europe, seeking out the “freedom” that the Latin Quarter of Paris might provide.

The Beat Hotel, as it came to be called, was a sanctuary of creativity, but was also, as British photographer Harold Chapman recalls, “an entire community of complete oddballs, bizarre, strange people, poets, writers, artists, musicians, pimps, prostitutes, policemen, and everybody you could imagine.” And in this environment, Burroughs finished his controversial book Naked Lunch; Ian Somerville and Brion Gysin invented the Dream Machine; Corso wrote some of his greatest poems; and Harold Norse, in his own cut-up experiments, wrote the novella, aptly called The Beat Hotel.

The film tracks down Harold Chapman in the small seaside town of Deal in Kent England. Chapman’s photographs are iconic of a time and place when Ginsberg, Orlovsky, Corso, Burroughs, Gysin, Somerville and Norse were just beginning to establish themselves on the international scene. Chapman lived in the attic of the hotel, and according to Ginsberg “didn’t say a word for two years” because he wanted to be “invisible” and to document the scene as it actually happened.

The Beat Hotel - a forthcoming documentary film

Documentary Arts

Filed under  //   art   film   literature   poetry   video  
Posted October 16, 2009
// 1 Comment