Monday, April 8, 2013 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 'Road' self-indulges Reminiscing on records of teenage nostalgia Cinematography drives otherwise meaningless film By NATALIE GADBOIS DailyArts Writer "With the coming of Dean Moriarty began the part of my life you could call my life 'on the road."'" With those B iconic words, spoken in a On the Road scratchy drawl At the by protagonist Sal Paradise, Michigan director Wal- IFC ter Salles ("The Motorcycle Diaries") begins his reverently faithful adaptation of Jack Ker- ouac's 1957 beatnik novel, "On the Road." Starring Garrett Hed- lund ("TRON: Legacy") as the enigmatic Moriarty and British newcomer Sam Riley ("Woman in Love") as Paradise, his quietly rebellious counterpart, the film deftly encapsulates the anar- chy and crippling freedom that defined the Beat generation, but falters asit becomes tangled in its own mystique. Paradise is a student living in Queens who, after meeting wild and mercurial Moriarty and his pouty, over-sexed child bride Marylou (Kristen Stewart, "Snow White and the Huntsman"), decides on a whim to hitchhike across the country. A high-mind- ed writer, bored and lonely in his static life, he imparts on a search for self-awareness or, at least, meaning behind his discontent. Though Riley's attempt at a smoke-addled New York accent is often distracting, his pilgrim- age is where the film excels: Salles has already proven his talent IFC "It's OK, we got a babysitter for Renesmee." for portraying landscapes, and Paradise's journey - both literal and metaphorical - exudes the beauty of a United States that was more trusting and naive; a United States in which drifters like Para- dise formed their own hyper- connected culture. The imagery of the unending landscape of the midwestis breathtaking and helps relate the yearningthese men felt, caught between a war and an unknown future. Moriarty and Paradise reunite in Denver before once again set- ting off on some scheme for love and drugs, and here is where Hedlund shines. He seamlessly renders Moriarty's manic energy, overt sexuality and selfish dis- regard for the lives he affects. Originally basedon real-life ren- egade Neal Cassady, Moriarty is a complex figure, and Hedlund stands up to the task of playing an inscrutable man. Similarly, Stewart is at last inher element as his whiny and unhinged partner. Their chemistry is palpable as the two speed fatalistically toward their futures. The film is studded with a parade of periphery characters with big names (Kirsten Dunst, Amy Adams, Viggo Mortensen and Steve Buscemi, to name a few), all meant to provide dif- fering lenses on this generation. However, they overwhelm an already disjointed story, and as the names build up, this beautiful homage to a generation crumbles. Salles self-indulges, stuffing the film with discordant sex scenes and overdone symbol- ism. His stark landscapes and arresting main characters lose focus. Any meaning is lost in the (multiple) threesomes and Ben- zedrine trips. These characters become canvasses for tropes of thV Beat generation, rather than members themselves. It's as if the film lowers in esteem every time we see Moriarty's bare ass or Marylou proposes a wild sex- ual escapade. Ratherthen definethese char- acters and show their progres- sion (or regression) as humans in a world increasingly at odds with their lifestyle, the final third of the movie is spent show- ing their idiosyncrasies, prov- ing just how "crazy" and "free" this time was. The film becomes the endless journey they are on, with no real plan or end in sight. By JAKE OFFENHARTZ DailyArts Writer Today is one of those days when I'm 15 again, ignoring a beautiful day and a mountain of work while listeningto the sem- inal records of my early teenage years. These are the albums that I pretend to havk outgrown, to have traded in for the superior musicianship of Radiohead or Arcade Fire. These are the albums that inspire a simplistic angst that, for reasons unclear, I some- times yearn for. They are albums written by melodramat- ic pretty boys who evoke within me a slightly embarrassing adu- lation, a form of hero worship that I, for better or worse, can no longer summon. And oddly enough, a surprising amount of these albums turn 10 in 2013. So, as I am in a perpetual state of sentimentality, allow me the indulgerice of some semi-fabri- cated nostalgia. The year 2003 saw the release of Fall Out Boy's Take This to Your Grave, Branfd New's Deja Entendu, The Format's Inter- ventions and Lullabies, Death Cab for Cutie's Transatlanticism and Bright Eyes's Lifted or the Story Is in the Soil. While I was struggling to multiply improper fractions and heavily immersed in a surprisingly raunchy rap phase, America's tender-souled- youth were having a pretty remarkable year. I was an aspiring thug at 11 years old, hiding my Naughty By Nature tapes in a hollowed out "Harry Potter" book, steal- ing candy bars from the local pharmacy and dreaming about escaping my upper-middle class suburb for the ghetto - to up you wish it was 2003?" Even at my street cred, naturally. This the age of 15, I harbored illu- delinquent infatuation contin- sions of a grandertime and delu- ued more or less for the next two sions of what that time actually years, until one day in seventh meant. I moved backward as I grade when, without warning, grew older, eventually immers- I quit the rap game altogether. ing myself in the work of '90s This transformation may emo pioneers like Jawbreaker have happened overnight - and Sunny Day Real Estate, but though I admit I have little I could never feign generational memory of the exact circum- ownership of these records. The stances involved. What I do first year in music that I could know is that, against all odds, truly - if not accurately - rem- Take This to Your Grave found inisce upon was 2003, and for its way into my boom box, and that reason alone 2003 is a tre- it didn't ever leave. At the age of mendously important year. 14, I traded in my Ja Rule CDs for the new Dashboard Confes- sional album; I tore down my A throwback Ludacris pin-up pictures for a Conor Oberst poster and I to the music declared to my mom that, from then on, I would only wear band memories of shirts from Hot Topic. The underlying forces at work adolescence here were powerful - I had an adorably broken heart from a girl that may not have known we were dating and an insatia- Now it's 2013 and I'm - tech- ble desire for melancholy. There nically - an adult. These days, was something alluring about my anxieties just aren't as poet- boys wearing skinny jeans and ic as they once were and even hearts on their sleeves and Jesse Lacey would have trouble something more alluring about writing a heart-tugging song the girls who idolized them. about hunting for an intern- Most important though, in this ship or choosing a major. Inbed radical metamorphosis from listening to Deja Entendu, I'm wannabe thug to pop-punk kid yearning for a time when angst - emo, if you insist - was the was simpler and prettier, but element of wistful longing. I'm also, I realize, having nos- I can remember my first of talgia about having nostalgia. many bouts with musical nos- As I spend the day revisiting talgia. Sitting on a park bench, the dusty MP3s of old, reflect- sharing a headphone with a best ing upon the glory days of friend while listening to Fall pop-sensible woe and obnox- Out Boy's second studio album, iously long song names, I am yet From Under a Cork:Tree, we'd again struck by the sheer awe- say things like, "This album someness of 2003. I remember lacks the unrefined truth of remembering it like it was yes- their previous," or, "Man, don't terday. ERS D'OEUVRES, rITA NMENT &