[Through My Lens] A Journey Through the Coast of Big Sur
Photos by AngieStar Photo
The USA Pacific Coast Highway (PCH) is perhaps America's most dramatic scenic drive. And along this coast is a region called Big Sur that lies along the Central Coast of California, and renowned as one of the best of scenics drives in the whole world. As someone who has road tripped through a good portion of the country already, I made it my mission to take a journey through the coast of Big Sur to see for myself.
I started my drive from Los Angeles just before sunrise, so I would have perfect daylight by the time I reached Big Sur. Immediately, I was taken into the high coastal cliffs, following each twist and turn there is along the Pacific Ocean. With the perfect California breeze into my open windows of the car, while listening to a perfectly timed music playlist, I was awestruck. And just when I thought scenery couldn't get any more amazing, I found myself in Big Sur. To me, the area is more of an experience than a tangible place. There are no stop lights, or shopping centers, just 90 miles of driving along a narrow two-lane highway with breathtaking view points and campsites. The wildlife is a whole other aspect of Big Sur as one of your first stops is on the beach at Piedras Blancas in southern Big Sur near San Simeon to see hundreds on Elephant Seals in their natural habitat. Then with the abundance it birds and forest animals, every one of your senses are heightened with all the combined elements of life.
Here are some of the photos I captured, and what makes me want to back. If anything is taken from this, it should be to take a trip to Big Sur; it's worth it.
[RH Review] Big Sur
When Jack Kerouac wrote On the Road, he was in his mid-to-late 20s, earnest and optimistic about what America could offer him. However, by the time On the Road was published, Kerouac was in his mid-30s, already a witness to the country's rapidly evolving landscape. Feeling jaded and unnerved by the sudden success of On the Road and readers' misunderstanding of who Kerouac actually was (the near middle-aged disillusioned Kerouac and not the desperately optimistic mid-20s Sal Paradise), he visited fellow Beat writer Lawrence Ferlinghetti's cabin in Big Sur, California to unwind, serving as the basis of 1962's Big Sur.
Does the Big Sur adaptation capture Kerouac's language-heavy prose, or is it encumbered by Kerouac's writing style?
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Big Sur
Director: Michael Polish
Rating: R
Release Date: November 1, 2013
Jack Kerouac (Jean-Marc Barr), jaded with the success with On the Road, travels to Lawrence Ferlinghetti's cabin in Big Sur to escape from city life. However, after three weeks, he becomes restless and yearns to return. Over the course of three visits between San Francisco and Big Sur, he reconnects with Neal Cassady (Josh Lucas), the proclaimed hero of On the Road, Carolyn Cassady (Radha Mitchell), Michael McClure (Balthazar Getty), Lew Welch (Patrick Fischler), and others.
In an attempt to help Kerouac break out of his slump, Cassady introduces him to his mistress, Billie Dabney (Kate Bosworth). However, Cassady finds himself jealous of the budding relationship. Throughout the affair and the drinking binges, Kerouac begins to slowly descend into alcohol abuse. With his dependence on drinking and the pre-existing despondence he already faced, he falls into a downward spiral plaguing both his physical and emotional well-being.
Kerouac wrote in On the Road, "...nobody knows what's going to happen to anybody besides the forlorn rags of growing old..." Big Sur is the romantic follow-up to those exact words. It's a sad look at what the author faced, especially with knowledge that he died a short seven years after Big Sur's publication. Of course, this is a review of the film adaptation and not the novel itself, and many things were lost in translation from the pages to the screen.
Obviously, the biggest disparity between the two is the inability to translate Kerouac's prose into a film. As seen in Walter Salles' On the Road, it's tough to adapt a Kerouac novel. His writing style is very language-heavy prose with some plot present, but the true heart/art of Kerouac's writing is found in his ambient word association and the beat and rhythm of it all. Director Michael Polish attempts to emulate this with voiceovers taken directly from the novel. The opening scenes of Bixby Beach supplement the voiceovers, but it's not enough.
That's not to say that Barr and the rest of the cast didn't deliver great performances. Compared to Kill Your Darlings' Jack Huston and On the Road's Sam Riley, Big Sur's Jean-Marc Barr has been the best big screen Kerouac I've seen. He's inquisitive, wise, and self-destructive in the way Huston and Riley weren't. Granted, the comparison comes with an asterisk, as these are three different films, actors, directors, novels, and phases in Kerouac's life. However, Huston and Riley didn't capture Kerouac's essence.
Adapting Jack Kerouac is hard, yet Polish did what he could to do both Big Sur and Kerouac justice. Unfortunately, the mystery of adapting Kerouac novels to the big screen continues unsolved. Beat Generation fans will enjoy seeing some of their favorite writers portrayed on the big screen, but there's little appeal to general audiences.
Score: 5.5 out of 10