Dane DeHaan & Daniel Radcliffe in Kill Your Darlings |
The movie opens
in New Jersey in 1943, the night Ginsberg receives his acceptance to
Columbia University: the camera scans his small house, in which his
father (David Cross), a poet, is the embodiment of patriarchal order
and his mother (Jennifer Jason Leigh) a paranoid-schizophrenic whose
meltdowns can only be soothed by her sensitive son. When Allen shows
up at Columbia, he immediately responds to the older student Lucien
Carr (Dane DeHaan), who stages a guerrilla reading of an erotic
passage from Henry Miller during a freshman library orientation –
the movie unfolds the growing love between them as they become
inseparable friends, and it tracks the emergence of a new bohemian
aesthetics of sensation fuelled by drugs, jazz and sex. The movie is
strongest in these early scenes of discovery and experimentation,
which feature a creepily convincing portrait of Bill Burroughs by Ben
Foster, in spite of the director’s irritating tendency to convey
Allen’s drug-scrambled consciousness by slowing down or speeding up
the soundtrack, or by playing scenes backwards – the artistic
equivalent of VCR rewinding or fast-forwarding. It’s when Jack
Kerouac (Jack Huston) shows up and the plot line involving David
Kammerer, played by the wet blanket Michael C. Hall, takes over that
the movie completely dissipates. The story expands to cover Kerouac’s
domestic life with Edie Parker (an anodyne Elizabeth Olsen), but it
loses the dramatic focus of the Allen-Lucien relationship. And the
movie can’t make up its mind about Kammerer. Is he a sad-sack
loser, this former professor of English who follows Lucien
cross-country from school to school, or a nefarious stalker? Is he
beguiled by Lucien’s sociopathic charm, or vice versa? I think
these questions are supposed to be dramatic and resonant, but they
have no tension or shape – they’re just confusing.
Dane DeHaan as Lucien Carr in Kill Your Darlings |
Dane DeHaan, the young actor who gave such an extraordinary performance as Ryan Gosling and Eva Mendes’ son in The Place Beyond the Pines last year, is ideal casting for the disturbed, manic Lucien, but he suffers from this lack of direction. In Pines, he showed that raw, wiry energy and emotional grit that make Gosling one of the best actors of his generation. It’s not that he’s bad in Kill Your Darlings, but he stays on the surface of his character, as though he hasn’t made clear decisions about his motivations - the performance feels vague, billowy. Radcliffe stays specific. From the first shot of him dancing with a broom to radio jazz in his childhood home and snapping to attention as his father walks into the room, he creates a portrait of the artist as a young sensualist divided by his parent’s demands: his father’s order and his mother’s chaos. Allen identifies with his mother and her fits and anguish, and he’s her protector when the father wants to lock her up in an institution. She may be mad, but she can’t hide her feelings – in that way, Allen thinks, she’s freer than most everyone else. This opening scene is brief, and David Cross is so ridiculously cast as the austere, imposing father threatened by his son’s confederacy with the mother, but Radcliffe stays with the revelations it gives into his character. This is an Oedipal love story. You see that Allen falls in love with Lucien because, mad and free, he’s like his mother. His poetry and his homosexuality both come from a desire to overthrow the father. He wants to unlock the prison of patriarchal order his mother is confined to. He wants to let the mad run wild.
This premise is
daring and original, especially the link between the non-traditional,
iconoclastic writing the Beats produced and their homoerotic web of
relationships. And by focusing on Lucien Carr, a young man so
conflicted about his own sexuality he attracts men platonically only
to humiliate them when they express their love, as the visionary
behind the movement, the movie shows an ambiguous line between
liberation and repression. But at the end of the day the picture is
so blundered and misshapen these ideas don’t have room to breathe
and grow. Part of the problem is that Krokidas doesn’t have much of
an instinct for tone, especially for levity. A pivotal scene in which
the Beats – Allen, Lucien, Kerouac and Burroughs – break into the
restricted section of the Columbia University Library and switch out
the Shakespeare folios in the reading room display cases for Ulysses
and Tropic of Cancer
should express the exuberance and impudence of these young artists.
It should be comic. But it turns into a deadly serious chase
sequence, with police swarming the dark library and the men try to
escape, and it goes on forever. The dramatic tension is so bloated
that the scene is no fun to watch at all. And it should be: this is
the kind of inspired artistic prank that makes these characters
sympathetic in the first place. The movie starts to bludgeon you with
its faux-gravity. The title of the film comes from a piece of advice
often quoted in creative writing classrooms: “In writing, you must
kill all your darlings.” As both writer and director, John Krokidas
fails to do precisely this.
– Amanda Shubert writes about film, books and the visual arts. A founding editor of Full Stop, the online magazine of literature and culture, she is also a contributor to the forthcoming anthology Talking About Pauline Kael (Scarecrow Press, 2014). Most recently, she interviewed the actress and folk singer Ronee Blakley for The Rumpus.
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