Kirsten Dunst and Kristen Stewar |
Director Walter Salles, Viggo Mortensen and the Competition film's other stars also came out for the film festival.
CANNES - Kristen Stewart, Kirsten Dunst, Viggo Mortensen, Sam Riley, Garrett Hedlund and director Walter Salles brought more star power to the Croisette midday Wednesday during the photocall and press conference for Competition film On the Road,Jack Kerouac book. based on the famous
Helping them take over the Palais des Festivals were Tom Sturridge, Danny Morgan and the film's producers.
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During the press conference, the cast was asked about shooting in
Montreal and preparing for the film by spending time together and
studying movies and other creative output from the era the film is set
in.
"Montreal is where we started. It was [the] conception," said
Stewart. "I am usually pretty self-conscious about running around a
town with my face hanging out, and I didn't care at all, because I was
with these guys. I really loved it. I got to live more in those four
weeks than ... in a normal lifetime."
Salles said he set up a Montreal "boot camp" for four weeks where
the stars watched films from the likes of Shirley Clarke and others, as
well as documentaries on jazz masters of the time. "Then we tried to
forget them all and create our own story on the screen," he explained.
After a reference to a Canadian hockey team flag that Mortensen
brought to the event and waved at the beginning, Dunst said she finds
Montreal wonderful. "I have worked in Montreal many times, but I only
shot a few days in Montreal and San Francisco," she explained.
Producer Roman Coppola, son of Francis Ford Coppola, was asked about a recent Kerouac renaissance of sorts.
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"Kerouac never went away," he argued. "New generations have always discovered him."
Discussing the long, winding road to finally turning the book into
a movie, he said, "My dad bought the rights in 1979, and many different
filmmakers and writers tried."
But when Salles expressed interest, he said he knew the project
would finally become reality. "Walter is such a natural filmmaker to
take this material on," Coppola told the crowd. "It was such a natural
fit."
Added Salles, "When Roman and I first talked, what I proposed was to do a documentary in search of the possible film."
Salles also explained the themes of the film like this: "It's about
the loss of innocence. [It's about] discovering that this is the end of
the road and the end of the American dream. This is not the story about
the Beat Generation. It is about what precedes it. It’s about the
formative years of that generation."
src: thr
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