Beat Movie Review
Beat Review
"Beat" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Gary WalkowProducer : Andrew Pfeffer,Alain Silver,Donald Zuckerman
Screenwiter : Gary Walkow
Starring : Courtney Love,Norman Reedus,Ron Livingston,Kiefer Sutherland,Daniel Martínez
Judy Davis might have commanded the definitive Joan Vollmer role in Naked
Lunch, but in Beat, Courtney Love makes a not-half-bad at reinterpreting the
last weeks of her life before being accidentally(?) shot in the head during a
William Tell parlor trick by her famed writer husband William S. Burroughs.
Set in broken down Mexico City, the film finds Vollmer receiving a visit from
beat-heads Allen Ginsburg (Ron Livingston) and Lucien Carr (Norman Reedus).
(Carr, a minor figure in beat history, was a UPI reporter responsible for
introducing many of the beats to one another as well as inspiring Jack Kerouac
to type On the Road on a roll of teletype paper.) Burroughs (Kiefer
Sutherland) is off on one of his bisexual booty calls, leaving his wife to
ponder whether she should stay with her philandering husband (being no faithful
lap dog herself) or skip town and return with her two kids to New York with
Lucien and Allen. (Her very short history should tell you which route she
actually chose.)
A loving portrait of the early beat lifestyle, Gary Walkow's ode to Vollmer is
sweet and endearing, despite its tragic finale. The four lead players all
imbue their characters with substanial flair, especially Sutherland's mannered
and deadpan witticisms. The direction is capable if short of masterful (and
sometimes Walkow's shots make it all to obvious he's trying to create a pretty
shot, eventually making it painfully clear you're watching a movie). As well,
the story's point-a-to-point-b plotting gets the job done with hardly a wasted
line -- and without a second to spare, clocking in at about 78 minutes. Zoom!
Reviewer: Christopher Null





