AP 'On the Road' Article + Interview

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  APNews Kristen Stewart understands the lure of the open road. So do her “On The Road” co-stars, Garrett Hedlund and Sam Riley.
The three young actors play the central love triangle in Walter Salles’ adaptation of Jack Kerouac’s Beat Generation novel, an experience that has helped them appreciate why the book is considered a classic.
The tale of wannabe writer (and Kerouac surrogate) Sal Paradise and his friend Dean Moriarty crisscrossing the United States in search of freedom and the elusive “it” was published in 1957. But Stewart said the way it captures the heady feeling of young adulthood is timeless.

“You’re so filled with something that is hard to identify at this age,” said the “Twilight” star, who plays Dean’s teenage bride Marylou, a free spirit torn between the lure of adventure and desire for a more settled life.
“You’re just bursting, and (the characters) value that so much,” said Stewart, who is just 22 herself.


“They don’t ignore it. That celebration of youth and exploration is just something that you envy.
“I read it right at the point when I was about to get my (driver’s) license, and I thought, wow, I want to meet people who push me the way people push each other. I wanted to be more like them.”




Minnesota-born Hedlund (“Troy,” ”Tron: Legacy”) plays the carnal, vital Moriarty, a character modeled on Kerouac’s friend Neal Cassady. He said some things have changed since Kerouac wrote his freewheeling, impressionistic story,

“Back then a car was 100 bucks and all you had to choose between was a radio and a heater, and things seemed a little freer,” said the 27-year-old actor. “The roads seemed more open than they are today, but a young person’s ambitions are still the same. Everybody between the ages of 17 and 21 or 22 still feels that they can achieve anything they want in life if they are ambitious enough.”

“On the Road,” which premiered this week at the Cannes Film Festival, has been a long time coming. Kerouac, who died in 1969, hoped to see his book filmed, and actors linked to an adaptation over the decades range from Marlon Brando to Brad Pitt.

Brazilian director Salles, who made the Che Guevara road movie “The Motorcycle Diaries,” has been involved since 2004, spending years interviewing surviving Beat Generation figures for an unreleased documentary on the book.

He finally got the go-ahead, with Francis Ford Coppola’s son Roman Coppola producing, to shoot a film whose fourth main character is the American landscape – though Salles had to travel far and wide to recreate the 1940s U.S. setting. The movie was shot in Canada, Chile and Mexico as well as the United States.

The film opened in France this week and is due for a fall release in the U.S.
The actors felt the weight of expectation from the book’s millions of fans, but say it helped them form a bond – albeit one less erotically entangled than that of their characters.

“We were the only people there who really know and understand what it feels like to be gifted, or burdened, with the responsibility of playing these characters,” said Riley, whose breakthrough role was as Joy Division singer Ian Curtis in “Control.” ”So we really did have that sort of feeling that we’re separate from the others.
“Garrett and I particularly spent six months in one another’s pockets,” said the 32-year-old British actor. “I have friends where I don’t know if I could spend that much time with them. And for a Yorkshireman and a lad from Minnesota – two young actors who both have their own ambitions – it could have been an absolute disaster, a clash of egos. But Garrett was always there for me to lean on, and vice versa.”

Salles had firm ideas about the actors he wanted for the film. The cast includes Kirsten Dunst, “Mad Men’s Elisabeth Moss, Amy Adams, Tom Sturridge and Viggo Mortensen as characters inspired by real-life Beat generation figures.

“I felt like it was cheating or something, that we had the best cast, in my mind, that’s ever been assembled,” Hedlund said. “Maybe there was something about each and every one of us that was similar to him in a way, to (explain) why we got along the way he did. There was no rotten egg within the bunch, and that’s so rare.”

The director said he was determined to cast Stewart even before “Twilight” made her a star, after he heard raves about her performance in the Sean Penn’s 2007 Alaskan drama “Into The Wild.”
“I remember writing down the name,” Salles said, “so I wouldn’t forget it.”
This article will appear in multiple publications as it is published by the Associated Press (AP)

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