Over fifty years after it was published, Walter Salles is bringing Jack
Kerouac’s book On the Road to the big screen. It was a novel that many
filmmakers believed could not be made into a movie.
On the Road tells the story of Sal Paradise (Sam Riley), a young writer
whose life is redefined by the arrival of Dean Moriarty (Garrett
Hedlund), a free-spirited, fast talking Westerner, and his girlfriend,
Marylou (Kristen Stewart).
Kristen and Garrett spoke with us about the iconic book, and the movie, at the press day for the film.
When doing press junkets, is there a different feel for a film like
this, as opposed to Twilight, where you have to get the word out?
Kristen: I’ve been on many a Twilight tour, and this one obviously feels
pointedly different. You can place yourself in your body a little bit
more when you know there’s not another one coming up.
I’m really letting it all sink in and affect me now, which is fun and
quite different. But [with this movie] it’s the same feeling, wanting
people to know what you’ve got going on.
With the love scenes in this, your fans will certainly see a lot more of you.
Kristen: You try to expose yourself in different ways in every film you do. I’m not really worried about them.
Were you a fan of the book?
Garrett: I was such a fan of the novel, and was in disbelief that an
opportunity like this would ever come my way. I thought it was the most
unbelievable thing to ever happen to me.
You and Walter traveled 60,000 miles during the course of making the
film. How much value was there in going to the real locations?
Garrett: In order to have it be useful for the film, we had to take back
roads everywhere, because the sides of the roads aren’t polluted with
billboards, power lines and cars of this age.
In order to get from Nashville to Memphis took us 8 hours on back roads.
From Phoenix to Los Angeles took us 18 hours, but with us not being in
such a rush we got to see some of the most beautiful lands that all the
impatient people don’t get to see these days, and that was a benefit for
us.
I read you attended a boot camp before shooting began. What did you actually do?
Garrett: I always get a kick out of it, because it sounds like we were
going off to film Saving Private Ryan with books. (Kristen laughs) It
was a beatnik boot camp.
We only got four weeks together in Montreal before we started to shoot. We didn’t have any time to waste.
We would gather every morning surrounded by books, and a lot of films
that Walter had had that gave him a sense of this time. But really it
was us rehearsing, sharing material that we found that nobody else had
seen.
It was very collaborative.
Kristen: Even one little line out of a letter, you’d go, ‘Oh my God,
that’s how it really was.’ Sometimes you miss things and it was nice to
be able to do it together, because you are always going to pick
different moments that are really treasured out of the book.
Having the information we had on the real lives was an unprecedented resource.
I’m guessing that you read One and Only: The Untold Story of On the
Road, which was co-written by Anne Marie Santos, the daughter of the
character your role is based upon?
Kristen: One and Only actually came out after we did the movie, but we
had transcribed interviews that were given to us before the book
existed.
That book is so important, I cannot believe that it only exists now,
just because of the way that people talk about the women in the story.
They can be difficult to understand if you don’t know what’s going on in
their head and in their hearts, and having gotten to know the person
behind the character, it’s so much fun to read the book.
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