Kristen Stewart and Garrett Hedlund Chat About the Movie Adaptation of On the Road

There's traffic from Silver Lake. That's why Kristen Stewart and Garrett Hedlund, the stars of On the Road, are late to the Benedict Room of the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills. We're as psychically far from Jack Kerouac's Beat gospel as you can get: fidgeting under crystal chandeliers in a $400-per-night hotel, with guests in comfy white robes riding gilded elevators and maids pushing breakfast trays of eggs Hollandaise and medicine ball–sized avocados.

The journey from scroll to screen has been an equally strange odyssey.

Since Kerouac published his sex-, drugs- and satori-searching novel in 1957, false starts and "unfilmable" rumors have lengthened its odds of adaptation.

The author once sought Marlon Brando to play Dean Moriarty, the book's infamous thief/wildman and Kerouac's trim-hipped "Western Kinsman of the Sun" (Kerouac assured he could handle the narrator/protagonist Sal Paradise, based on himself).

Two decades later, Francis Ford Coppola acquired the rights and famously struggled to bring the book to life, with actors Colin Farrell, Ethan Hawke, Brad Pitt and Billy Crudup variously attached as male leads. We were one German investment group away from On the Road as proto-slacker parable.

A decade later, aided by several European and Latin American co-financiers and Walter Salles, director of The Motorcycle Diaries, the $25 million adaptation premiered to mixed reviews at May's Cannes Film Festival.

The local unveiling occurred during November's AFI Fest at Grauman's Chinese Theatre with an afterparty at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. There was an electro-funk mash-up DJ, a shadow light projection for Shellback Caribbean Rum and the dull iridescence of a thousand iPhones and bald agent scalps. No whiskey was served.

It's two days after that Hollywood night on a weatherless Southern California Monday morning. Early November. 9:17 a.m.

With silver eyes and wine-dark hair, Kristen Stewart is sitting in front of me and we're not talking because Hedlund still hasn't shown up and what small talk can you make with the 22-year-old, tabloid-tormented star of Twilight. In person, she's pretty but severe, as though her face is all elbows.

When her co-star finally arrives, Stewart offers a sisterly hug with a sense of relief that suggests she's acutely aware of how awkward it is to be interviewed by people who know every uncomfortable (and possibly spurious) facet of your existence.

Hedlund is her opposite. If Stewart is shy and pallid, and balsamic salad-thin, Hedlund is broad-shouldered, farmer-tanned and blond.

The 28-year-old Midwesterner has the loquacious confidence and aw-shucks ambition of a young congressional chief of staff.

As a movie star, he is in the Armie Hammer–as-Winklevii mold. She is an L.A.-born goth locker pinup for kids who define old-school as before Instagram arrived on Droid phones.

The question before them is: What is On the Road even supposed to mean when you can Google Earth and Yelp your way across the heartland?

"I think [the Internet] gives people the urge to travel to further and more remote locations to get their kicks ... to find lands that are untouched by human hand," Hedlund says, with slang indicative of the time he spent researching the Beat muse Neil Cassady, Kerouac's model for Moriarty.

There was the cast's three-week Beat boot camp, which included Skype tutorials from an old Kerouac colleague about the proper way to break Benzedrine capsules with beer bottles.

In order to get into the spirit of the book, Hedlund estimates that he filled up about 100 notepads on multiple treks across the country's surviving backroads.

Stewart was originally cast at 17 to play Mary Lou, née Luanne Henderson, the sexualized child bride worshipped and scorned by Moriarty and Paradise.

"I'm 100 percent nostalgic for times that I haven't lived in ... when there was less insignificant stimulation," Stewart says, tapping her foot with nervous energy, jangling the copper bangles around her wrists, folding her T-shirt with her hands and mostly looking down.

"If you're not watching a TV show or downloading something, you're bored," she adds. "Back in the day, there was less to do, people had to use their minds."

Stewart speaks infrequently and with caution, cognizant that even her most banal sentences are parsed with vice presidential scrutiny, or at least NBA All-Star. After all, most basketball franchises can't sell merchandise like Team Edward.

Hedlund, whose previous big credit was Tron: Legacy, handles most of the talking — staying true to the dynamic of the film.

"I've always romanticized the late '40s and '50s — the cars, jazz, the open roads and lack of pollution," he says, business-casual in a navy blue dress shirt, the top button unbuttoned; his chest is nearly hairless. "Now there are more vehicles, less hitchhikers, more billboards and power lines and stuff.

"People wrote wonderful long letters that took months to receive, and now everything is email. "

Both reiterate the idea that the book's timelessness is immutable. Even though a contemporary Kerouac could have seen Cassady's conquests on Facebook, the actors point out that young people will always be hypnotized by the amphetamine prose and intoxicating ideas of freedom and rebellion.

"Anybody that wants to walk out that door and leave home for a few months and rely on themselves instead of fate might have some interesting stories to tell," Hedlund says.

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8 comments
mshavisham79
mshavisham79

I wonder if it ever occured to this 'journalist' that Stewart behaved as she did, that is, nervous and cautious, because of the VERY TYPES OF THINGS HE JUST WROTE? Having someone scrutinize your every movement & speculate on your meal choices thanks to your size would make me an awful lot twitchier than she tends to be.

bebe19
bebe19

@mshavisham79  maybe Kristen saw right through this "journalist" and she made him defensive.  She might of distracted him off is game and all he could write about is useless dribble.

bebe19
bebe19

i want to know about the movie not how much you want to date Hedlund or throw Stewart into oncoming traffic to be run over until she's a bloody pile of flesh.  Maybe you should be writing for a tabloid because this bit is about as informative as US mag.

MaryPop
MaryPop like.author.displayName 1 Like

What I learned from Mr. JWeiss' interview that will move me to the cinema to see On the Road.

1. Spurious - Not being what it purports to be; false or fake: "spurious claims".2. The rooms @Four Season's Hotel in Beverly Hills are $400/night and serveeggs Hollandaise.3. Stewart had great intuition in not trusting this "journalist" with small talk.4. This "journalist" finds his job boring.5. Garrett is fine.  His chest is tan and hairless.

Jackelin
Jackelin

Great pic.  Besides the writer crushing on Garrett he gave us nothing but a condescending critique of the actors instead of the movie and the book.  Totally disrespected the actors.  Big fail.

juliet207
juliet207

I'm a writer and it's hard work. The writer of this piece clearly put a lot of work into clever phrasing. But beneath the avalanche of pointless descriptions and press release rehash is a deeply bored and, as a result, boring person who couldn't be bothered to find anything worthwhile to say or ask. This, for example:  "As a movie star, he is in the Armie Hammer–as-Winklevii mold. She is an L.A.-born goth locker pinup for kids who define old-school as before Instagram arrived on Droid phones." Waste of space, waste of time. 

art05
art05

Obviously, Jeff Weiss had already a preconceived idea about Kristen Stewart. To write a good article, and to get the best out of an interview, is part of being a good journalist. Unfortunately, the article is prejudiced and narrow-minded.But hey, this is a great picture of Garrett and Kristen.

Lk1330
Lk1330

Cute Pic, lame boring article. "Hedlund is broad-shouldered, farmer-tanned and blond." Bet you wanted to tap that, won't blame you ;)

 

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