One Fast Move or I'm Gone

http://www.nypress.com/article-20519-one-fast-move-or-im-gone.html

A doc that shows Kerouac's emotional turbulence

October 21,2009
By Matt Connolly

One Fast Move or I'm Gone: Kerouac's Big Sur
Directed by Curt Worden
At Clearview-Chelsea Theatres
Runtime: 97 min

The fact that Jack Kerouac's Big Sur苔 searing and unsentimental 
account of the author's messy emotional and mental breakdown 
following the success of On the Road虐as inspired so bald-faced a 
piece of hagiography as Curt Worden's One Fast Move or I'm Gone: 
Kerouac's Big Sur is a choice irony. There's nothing inherently bad 
about the documentary about the real-life events that eventually 
culminated in the classic; it's just that there's little revelatory 
in it either. If you go in thinking that Jack Kerouac was a troubled 
guy but one hell of a writer, that's about all you'll take out as well.

Worden traces the well-known trajectory of Kerouac's post-On the Road 
career. Launched into the limelight and idolized as the voice of the 
Beat generation in 1957, Kerouac gradually grew cynical and 
disaffected by his own lionization. Feeling himself sinking deeper 
into alcoholism, he fled to friend and Beat poet Frank Ferlinghetti's 
cabin in Big Sur to rest his mind and dry out his body. As anyone who 
has read Big Sur knows, though, this isolation brought a whole new 
kind of inner torment.

The line between historical fact and its fictional retelling is 
frequently traversed throughout One Fast Move: apt for a film about 
so unflinchingly autobiographical a novel. As friends of 
Kerouac虹ncluding Ferlinghetti and Carolyn Cassady, the wife of close 
Kerouac confidante Neal Cassady and object of Kerouac's 
affection苓iscuss the events that became the book's plot, artists 
ranging from Sam Shepard to S.E. Hinton to Tom Waits read from and 
reflect upon the novel and its impact on their lives. It's no dig at 
the effect that Big Sur has had upon subsequent generations of 
writers, musicians, and others胖ar Williams' tearful reading of a 
select passage is quite moving負o say that hearing people talk about 
why a book is great usually ends up meaning a great deal to the 
speaker and making the listener wish they could just pick up the damn 
thing and read it themselves. These heartfelt but increasingly 
repetitious testimonials to Kerouac's genius outnumber the 
more-intriguing anecdotes from the writer's social circle, as when 
Cassady wryly informs us that any amorous advances her character 
makes in Big Sur were actually initiated by Kerouac in real life.

One Fast Move often has a nice, shaggy-dog quality, as when Worden 
assembles multiple interviewees in a coffee shop or around a campfire 
and lets them riff about their relationship with Kerouac and Big Sur. 
Ultimately, though, his aesthetics feel redundant and occasionally 
pedestrian. This is one of those movies where someone reading about 
the ocean in voiceover is accompanied by pretty shots ofhe ocean. 
Such moments are microcosms of the film as a whole: earnest, 
pleasant, utterly obvious, and kind of dull.

.

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