Arts & Entertainment Renegade Artist In Howl, James Franco stars as a young Allen Ginsberg — the poet, counter-culture adventurer and chronicler of the Beat Generation. Michael Fox Special to the Jewish News T he picture most people have of the late Jewish poet Allen Ginsberg is of a bearded, hippie-ish intellectual with strong liberal views. They don't know the half of it. The young Ginsberg of the 1950s — an explicitly gay firebrand for whom candid confessional and political diatribe were inseparably intertwined — is brought to dynamic life in Academy Award-winning San Francisco filmmakers Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman's Howl. The film embraces Ginsberg's ground- breaking Beat poem from a variety of angles, from its recitation in its entirety through the course of the film, to the 1957 obscen- ity trial of publisher (and poet) Lawrence Ferlinghetti of City Lights (the publisher of Howl), to the re-creation of a vintage inter- view with a chain-smoking, hyper-articulate Ginsberg (James Franco, in a mesmerizing performance). The film reclaims the poet as a gay icon and a literary lion. Ginsberg's Jewishness isn't emphasized to the same degree, although Epstein confides that the co-directors guided Franco — whose mother is Jewish — to deliver some of his lines with a little more ethnic inflection. "There are certain turns of phrase that we discussed': Epstein says, "and it came back to kind of a Jewish humor, a Jewish outlook. So many of the elocutions come from that tradi- tion, so [Ginsberg's Jewishness] came up in that context — what the words meant and why they were phrased that way. It's sort of a Jewish joke!' Friedman likewise views Ginsberg as an unambiguously Jewish writer, but his refer- ence point is dramatically different. "His voice is a prophetic voice, and it's very influenced not only by [Walt] Whitman but by the Bible. The Old Testament, the real Bible, the original, not the sequel" — Friedman chuckles — "or the remake. And he comes from a very strong moral perspective, which I think is informed by his upbringing, which was a combination of Jewish and Communist and humanist:' "I never thought about this before': Epstein says, "but there is a kind of talmudic quality to Howl, in that it's so personal and it's also so all-knowing in its perspective." Epstein grew up in New Jersey, and vividly remembers Ginsberg from a teenage outing to see the Living Theater in the late '60s. "They were doing Paradise Now and somehow I ended up backstage before the performance chanting with the actors': Epstein recalls. "The chant was being led by this guy with a beard and a harmonium, and I sort of figured out at some point that it was Allen Ginsberg. He was the grandfather of the counterculture in my mind. And I was very much a child of the counterculture. So I felt there was a lineage there." Ginsberg's influence on the next genera- tion is underscored by the Bob Dylan song (from The Basement Tapes with the Band) that the filmmakers picked to play under the closing credits. Friedman, whose father was a writer, edi- tor and publisher of the Greenwich Village literary magazine Venture, first encountered Ginsberg on the page. "I grew up in New Nate Bloom Special to the Jewish News New Flicks Opening Friday, Nov. 5, is the comedy- drama Due Date. Robert Downey Jr. stars as an expect- ant first-time father whose wife is five Todd Phillips days away from her due date when he is forced to take a wild car ride with an aspiring actor (Zach Galifianakis). The director is Todd Phillips, 39, who had a huge hit with The Hangover. 36 November 4 • 2010 ,114 York, and it was all Jewish, and it was all radical': he says. Howl marks the duo's first foray into fiction after a long string of documen- Filmmakers Jeffrey Friedman and Rob tary successes. Epstein won his first Epstein on the set of Howl with James Oscar for the 1984 doc The Times of Franco, who portrays Allen Ginsberg. The Harvey Milk and took the statuette with actor, who just released a book of his short Friedman five years later for Common stories, titled Palo Alto, is working on a Ph.D. Threads: Stories From the Quilt (1989). in English at Yale University. Their other films include Paragraph 175, which documents the Nazi persecution of homosexuals. "The whole act of speaking frankly and The filmmakers started out in their non- creating art out of that is something that fiction comfort zone by closely basing Howl young people relate to',' Friedman notes. on actual interviews and trial transcripts. "They're used to the form of it as it's evolved Then they made the aggressive creative into poetry slams and rap music and hip- choices of adopting a fragmented structure hop. It's all become of the vernacular in a way and using animation to illustrate the poem. that makes the experience of Howl feel very "That was an overt goal, that the film be fresh and contemporary!' challenging in the way that the poem was At the same time, Epstein says, Ginsberg's and is challenging," Epstein says. "To do the global insights in the poem itself are as rel- poem justice we had to take risks and do evant as ever. something that would be perceived as new "The global has to do with the military- and different, because that's what the poem industrial complex that continues to hang was." over all of us, and consumerism, which is Their adaptation of Howl, consequently, addressing not buying into everything that connects with younger moviegoers who we're being sold. All these things play out might not be immediately drawn to a poet again and again and again. He was just so who died in 1997. prescient:' Opening Wednesday, Nov.10, is Morning Glory, a romantic com- edy starring Rachel McAdams as Becky, a TV producer at a network morn- Aline Brosh ing news program. McKenna The show's low ratings go up when Becky's boss (Jeff Goldblum) lets her hire Mike Pomeroy (Harrison Ford), a legend- ary network anchor. But Pomeroy is a handful and at odds with his former beauty queen co-host (Diane Keaton). The original screenplay Screening as part of the 2010 CAN/AM Grand Prix Of Cinema, Howl will be shown at 9:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 4, at the Detroit Film Theatre in the Detroit Institute of Arts (for tickets, at $7.50, to be held at the box office, call (313) 833-4005 or go to http://tickets.dia.org ) and at 9:50 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 6, at the Capitol Theatre,121 University Ave. W. in Windsor, Canada, as part of the Windsor International Film Festival. The WIFF run Nov. 4-7. For a complete festi- val schedule and to purchase advance tickets ($10 adults, $6 students) that will be held at the box office, go to www.wiff10.com . is by Aline Brosh McKenna (Devil Wears Prada, 27 Dresses), 42. Hoping to appeal to young mothers, CBS has replaced the long-running soap As the World Turns with a View- like women-oriented talk show called The On The Tube Gwyneth Paltrow will appear on the Country Music Awards 8 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 10, on ABC. She'll make her live sing- ing debut perform- ing the title number from her upcoming film, Country Strong, in which she plays a legendary country Gwyneth singer just out of Paltrow rehab. Sara Gilbert Talk. The series, airing weekdays at 2 p.m., is produced and co-hosted by actress Sara Gilbert, 35, who became famous playing the younger daughter on the hit TV sitcom Roseanne. Gilbert and her life partner, Allison Adler, have two young kids. ❑