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Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Posted By: Efgrapha
Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC, 16:9 (720x480) VBR | 01:42:38 | 6.29 Gb
Audio: English AC3 5.1 @ 448 Kbps | Subs: English SDH, English
Genre: Drama, Biography

Daniel Radcliffe stars as Beat Generation icon Allen Ginsberg in this biopic set during the famed poet's early years at Columbia University, and centering on a murder investigation involving Ginsberg, his handsome classmate Lucien Carr, and fellow Beat author William S. Burroughs. The year is 1944. Ginsberg (Radcliffe) is a young student at Columbia University when he falls hopelessly under the spell of charismatic classmate Carr (Dane DeHaan). Alongside Carr, Ginsberg manages to strike up friendships with aspiring writers William S. Burroughs (Ben Foster) and Jack Kerouac (Jack Huston) that would cast conformity to the wind, and serve as the foundation of the Beat movement. Meanwhile, an older outsider named David Kammerer falls deeply and madly in love with the impossibly cool Carr. Later, when Kammerer dies under mysterious circumstances, police arrest Kerouac, Burroughs, and Carr as potential suspects, paving the way for an investigation that would have a major impact on the lives of the three emerging artists. Jennifer Jason Leigh, Kyra Sedgwick, David Cross, and Michael C. Hall co-star.

Synopsis by Jason Buchanan, Allmovie.com

Films about the Beat generation are all too often made for kudos by well-meaning but not so well-read dilettantes who simply want to advertise their often misguided interest in the this now-infamous bohemian group of writers. Kill Your Darlings, though, is the real deal, a genuine attempt to source the beginning of America's first true literary counterculture of the 20th century. It doesn't resemble Paul Thomas Anderson's film in style but an alternative title could easily be There Will Be Blood, since it is about the way fate can be determined in the crucible of violence, via a little-known but, in its own intimate way, galvanising moment in modern, but now fast-fading, literary history.

It begins in the early 40s, with Allen Ginsberg (Daniel Radcliffe) surprising his poet father with the news that he has been accepted into New York's Columbia University. His mother's mental issues have forced him to grow up fast but Ginsberg is still unworldly, and a chance meeting with fellow student Lucien Carr (Dane DeHaan) opens his eyes to a world of strong drugs, freeform jazz and, most confusing of all, sex. Carr is a guru of sorts, giving Ginsberg new and subversive ideas about art and literature, but behind him at all times hovers the spectre of David Kammerer (Michael C Hall), a much older man – an obsessed and mysterious "guardian angel" – who cannot let him go.

That Carr would one night murder Kammerer is well documented in all useful Beat biographies, but director John Krokidas really gives substance to this still-fascinating story, not simply by recounting it but giving it some much-needed context. Like Kammerer, the young Ginsberg becomes sexually fixated on Carr too, but Krokidas smartly doesn't use this as a gay awakening story (as he would have every right to do), rather as a turning point in this wide-eyed, middle-class boy's life. Which turns out to be the film's beauty; Krokidas perfectly isolates the Carr-Kammerer affair as a milestone in Beat history, forcing the three key players – Ginsberg and writers Jack Kerouac (Jack Huston) and William S Burroughs (Ben Foster) – to question their place in history and society.

Inevitably for a Beat story, the women don't have too much to do, but Krokidas rather beautifully undermines the overly male nature of this world by firmly setting the high-faluting ideals of the tough-talking but, let's face it, largely draft-dodging Beats against the brutal context of the second world war. He also resists the temptation to divide the group's protean sexuality into gay and straight, instead portraying events as a kind of underground Big Bang that sent Ginsberg, Kerouac and Burroughs off to their respective parts of the literary universe.

Best of all, though, it creates a true sense of energy and passion, for once eschewing the clacking of typewriter keys to show artists actually talking, devising, and ultimately daring each other to create and innovate. And though it begins as a murder-mystery, Kill Your Darlings may be best described as an intellectual moral maze, a story perfectly of its time and yet one that still resonates today.

Review by Damon Wise, The Guardian

IMDB 6,5/10 from 16 778 users

Wiki

Director: John Krokidas

Writers: Austin Bunn (story & screenplay), John Krokidas (screenplay)

Cast: Daniel Radcliffe, Dane DeHaan, Ben Foster, Michael C. Hall
Jack Huston, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Elizabeth Olsen, Kyra Sedgwick and other


Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)

Kill Your Darlings (2013)


Special Features:

- Commentary with Daniel Radcliffe, Dane DeHaan, John Krokidas and Austin Bunn
- Q&A with director/co-writer John Krokidas and co-writer Austin Bunn
- In conversation with Daniel Radcliffe and Dane DeHaan
- On the red carpet at the Toronto Film Festival
- Deleted scenes
- Theatrical trailer
- Previews

All thanks to original releaser

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