[On The Road] became the defining document of the so-called Beat Generation of young hipsters in postwar America.
“As a sensitive girl of this time who is maybe a bit more
conventional – ha ha – I kind of was curious about how you could have
the strength to do the things she did,” Stewart said…. “And it’s not that at all. It takes a lot of strength to be super-vulnerable. She was so so so open to the world.”
….
“If you approach it as a completion of the process, there are things
that would never occur to you if you weren’t asked the question,” Stewart said about the interviews. “Sit down and have 10-minute conversations with 15 different people; if you don’t take something from that, you’re a sociopath.”
Hedlund added, “At the end of the day we both know it’s the end of a long road we’ve been on.”
….
Marylou, Stewart’s character…. was really a teenager named Luanne
Henderson, but Stewart said she left behind a long record of her
thoughts about that era.
“I have what was possibly the easiest job,” she said. “I would
have done anything to be part of this movie. I would have played
(peripheral character) Chad King. So that’s how I approached it. I loved
the book so much, I wanted to be around Walter, I wanted to be around
the people interested in it. I just wanted to do anything.”
Together they’ve made a world that seems freer, in some ways, than
today’s culture: for instance, Dean and Marylou are shown taking part in
group sex with friends, and no blame is assigned. Hedlund says that
while the highways are more polluted now, with billboards and telephone
lines, it’s still possible to hit the road.
“It’s a level of your ambition and drive,” he says. “It’s a matter of
where you want to aim your arrow. The things that have changed in time
are the highways and the road. It’s not as free. There’s not as many
hitchhikers, not on the main roads. To get where you want to get faster,
you have to take the back roads. There’s wonderful experiences to be
had. When you’re young you think you can achieve anything. The world’s
at your fingertips. And then reality starts to hit you. But I think it’s
always possible: we all want to get out of our parents’ homes and not
go to school and not have curfew. Some people fail. Some people succeed.
some people have wonderful stories and some people have tales of
sadness. It’s all relative.”
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