Watching "Kill Your Darlings"

Verlie 2022-09-08 23:23:53

Although Allen Ginsberg is the protagonist, we all know that the blond goblin Lucien Carr is the core character. He is cunning, selfish, vain, stubborn and lawless. Under the pomegranate skirt, all the plot is driven by what happened to him. I have never gotten the handsomeness of Daniel Radcliffe in Harry Potter before, and I don't agree with everyone calling him "Second Beauty". In this film, the hairstyle and glasses have been changed, and I actually think he has become a lot more handsome. Allen Ginsberg in the photo is quite similar. As for Dane DeHaan, who makes many people crazy outside the show, I don't particularly like the look. In "Valérian and the City of a Thousand Planets", I think this child's appearance is really gloomy. , The temperament is very evil, the dark circles are too heavy, and there is no feeling of the melancholy literary youth. Elizabeth Olsen gave me a little surprise in this film, and it's still beautiful.

After watching the movie, I learned a little bit about the stories of the prototypes, and wanted to know if the reason why Lucien killed David Kammerer was like in the movie, he loved and hated it, and finally the relationship between the two was irreversible under heavy pressure. The ground is broken, towards the end of the blood. "In 1939, 14-year-old Carl met 28-year-old David Kemerau. Kemerau, then an English teacher and a physics instructor at Washington University-St. Louis, met Carl while leading a teenage group and has been with him ever since. Addicted to it. For the next five years, Kemero followed Carl, no matter which school Carl went to, Kemerol showed up. When Carl later talked about it, he insisted that Kemero had always been a lover to him. Sexual demands. Whether Kemero's attention was a form of harassment or flattery for Carl is debated to this day. Carl transferred several times during this time: from Philip College in Massachusetts, From Bowdoin College in Maine, to the University of Chicago, Kemero followed him. Carr insists, and Barros believes, that Carr never slept with Kemero. Kerouac's biography Writer Dennis McNally said that Carl and Cameron's relationship was one that was entangled with each other and heralded unfortunate catastrophe. "Reading this, I had a faint sense of where the unease I was watching the movie came from, and their story seemed to It's a story about a stalker who was finally killed by his lover. Kammerer in the movie is always entangled in Lucien's side, helping him with his homework, asking for forgiveness, and having no self. In the movie, according to Lucien himself, it's just a harassment, and a person you don't like follows you wherever you go for five years. Later, "(Lucien) asked Ginsburg to remove his name from the "Howl and Other Poems" credits, and the two had always had a very delicate relationship, dominated by Carl avoiding Ginsburg. But Carl and Kerouac has always maintained a close relationship." That's the straight man's way of doing things. I don't know if Ginsberg felt hurt, but judging from his one-sided crush on Lucien, he probably guessed the ending early on. Alas, poet, who feeds on pain, sips tears, and wears scars.

"Crazy prodigal sons and angels pounding ideas, little known, but still leaving behind what they might want to say in the afterlife,

Reborn in jazz costumes in the shadow of band horns and blowing out the sufferings of bare soul courtship in America, blowing out the cry of Elie Lirama Mara Masabadani on the saxophone , the whining smashed the city to the last radio,

The absolute heart of this piece of poetry of life, plucked out of themselves, would be enough to eat for a thousand years. "

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Extended Reading

Kill Your Darlings quotes

  • Lucien Carr: [on Kerouac's writings] It's brilliant, no?

    Allen Ginsberg: It's missing some periods and commas.

    Lucien Carr: It's better than anything you've ever written.

    Allen Ginsberg: I use periods and commas.

  • Allen Ginsberg: [reading his poem] Be careful, you are not in Wonderland. I've heard the strange madness long growing in your soul, in your isolation but you fortunate in your ignorance. You who have suffered find where love hides, give, share, lose, lest we die unbloomed.

    Jack Kerouac: Allen, that was beautiful, kid.

    Lucien Carr: You wrote that?

    Allen Ginsberg: You asked me to.