Register  |   Log In  |  
Sign up to our weekly newsletter    
Search   
Follow Me on Pinterest
Empire
Trending On Empire
Two free posters with Empire magazine
Subscribe: Get Dead Island: Riptide
Empire's Soundtrack Celebration
90 Years Of Warner Bros.
Vote for your favourite film
Cannes Film Festival 2013
News, photos and more from the Croisette
Reviews
STAR RATINGS EXPLAINED
Unmissable 5 Stars
Excellent 4 Stars
Good 3 Stars
Poor 2 Stars
Tragic 1 Star

FILM DETAILS
Certificate
15
Cast
James Franco
Mary-Louise Parker
Jon Hamm
Jeff Daniels
David Strathairn.
Directors
Jeffrey Friedman.
Screenwriters
Jeffrey Friedman
Rob Epstein.
Running Time
84 minutes

LATEST FILM REVIEWS
Everybody Has A Plan
3 Star Empire Rating
Easy Money
3 Star Empire Rating
Fast And Furious 6
3 Star Empire Rating
Beware Of Mr. Baker
4 Star Empire Rating
Liability, The
3 Star Empire Rating



5 STAR REVIEWS
Gatekeepers , The
5 Star Empire Rating
Stoker
5 Star Empire Rating
In The House
5 Star Empire Rating
Lincoln
5 Star Empire Rating
Italian Job, The
5 Star Empire Rating

Howl
And the Beats go on...


Plot
Docudrama about '50s Beat poet Allen Ginsberg and the writing and reception of his seminal poem Howl, the publisher of which was charged and tried for obscenity in 1956.

Review
Howl
Quaint as it may seem these days, the first skirmishes in the culture wars were fought over books. In the UK obscenity laws came crashing down over D. H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover in 1960, but three years earlier in the US it was Beatnik Allen Ginsberg’s poem Howl that found itself in the dock in the personage of Lawrence Ferlinghetti, its publisher. Epstein and Friedman’s curiously disappointing attempt to tell the story of the genesis of the poem and the obscenity trial intertwines footage of James Franco as Ginsberg — an actor/novelist/postmodern jester whom the poet would have loved in all kinds of ways — in a recreation of a long interview, a dramatic staging of the trial in which the prosecutors tried to prove the work had no value, as well as a reading of the poem set to Eric Drooker’s animations.

The strongest strand is Franco’s touching portrayal of the early years in ’50s New York. He channels Ginsberg with deftness and sympathy, presenting an uncertain, virginal gay writer (in a time when such things weren’t fashionable or legal) and depicting his reaching out sexually and artistically to the group of artists who became the Beats: notably Jack Kerouac (Todd Rotondi) and vitally Neal Cassady (Jon Prescott), their unofficial muse and, at one time, Ginsberg’s lover.

Due to a fractured structure, Franco can’t develop as satisfyingly as promised and as Drooker’s animations make another unwanted appearance you wish the directors had taken the straightforward route. Howl’s fearsome language and wild imagery is clod-hoppingly literally rendered: when Ginsberg speaks of the greatest minds of his generation “chained to subways” we get animated trains. “Boxcars… boxcars… boxcars…” gives us — well, boxcars. (This approach stalls when Franco muses about being “fucked in the ass by saintly motorcyclists and screaming with joy”, but a shot of a bewildered man wandering through a forest of erect cocks is enough to get a guffaw from even the most po-faced poetry groupie.)

On the upside it’s a pleasure to hear Franco reading Ginsberg’s irrepressibly rude epic — but despite an unexpectedly moving final few moments for a movie about the unruly birth of the Angel-headed hipsters, this is a puzzlingly straight bag.


Verdict
With a frustrating format and poor animation, it's still worth it for Franco and the chance to engage with a key work of poetry.


Reviewed by Adam Smith

Write Your Review
To write your review please login or register.

Your Reviews

Average user rating for Howl
Empire Star Rating

RE: Howl

Sooooo goood in fact. ... More

Posted by Rhubarb at 19:40, 14 March 2011 | Report This Post


RE: Howl

I thought of going on to Part II, but I couldn't think of an appropriate replacement for Moloch which, to be fair, is in the poem an awful lot too! Oh, and James Franco is awesome - he's the best bit, really. The references "who contain a devastating capture of a man, snapshot in life, not in entirety, but in totality at that time", and "who create a film that has value in performance", make note of the fact that Franco was really, really good. ... More

Posted by homersimpson_esq at 19:14, 14 March 2011 | Report This Post


RE: Howl

L: homersimpson_esq I saw the best performance of the film destroyed by animation, crazy mad, poor dragging the film through unnecessary genres desperate for an angry fix celluloidheaded characters seeing through to some heavenly connection to the starry projector in the machinery of the theatre, who see the film as more than the sum of its parts, ideas unbidden, animated, in different stock, who cast their eyes in changed times, yesterday, before, chopped up, who animat... More

Posted by sparkwood at 23:09, 13 March 2011 | Report This Post


RE: Howl

L: homersimpson_esq L: Deviation This is genuinely brilliant. I'll never irritate you ever again. hanks, it's a nice thought, but I give you a week. wo days. ... More

Posted by sanchia at 18:38, 13 March 2011 | Report This Post


RE: Howl

L: Deviation This is genuinely brilliant. I'll never irritate you ever again. hanks, it's a nice thought, but I give you a week. ... More

Posted by homersimpson_esq at 18:30, 13 March 2011 | Report This Post


RE: Howl

L: homersimpson_esq I saw the best performance of the film destroyed by animation, crazy mad, poor dragging the film through unnecessary genres desperate for an angry fix celluloidheaded characters seeing through to some heavenly connection to the starry projector in the machinery of the theatre, who see the film as more than the sum of its parts, ideas unbidden, animated, in different stock, who cast their eyes in changed times, yesterday, before, chopped up, who animat... More

Posted by Deviation at 14:44, 12 March 2011 | Report This Post



CURRENT HIGHLIGHTS
Movie Poster Mashups: The Furniture Edition
You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll be appalled at the punning...

Cannes Film Festival Videblogisodes #1
Leonardo Di Caprio, Baz Luhrmann and a mysterious stranger kick things off

Exclusive: Why Man Of Steel Wasn't Called Superman
Writer and producer David S. Goyer speaks

Dwayne Johnson Talks Fast & Furious 6
'I wanted to come in and frankly dominate the movie.'

Music Celebration: David Holmes On The Making Of The Out Of Sight Soundtrack
'I watched the film... the music was all over the shop'

The Rise And Fall Of The Movie Power Ballad
What happened to those endless movie theme no.1 hits?

Hans Zimmer Career Interview
On The Dark Knight, Man Of Steel and Going For Gold

Subscribe For Only £20
Get Dead Island: Riptide and six issues of Empire for only £20! Subscribe now
Steven Spielberg iPad App
Hollywood's most beloved director in this unique iPad special. Download now
Empire iPad Edition
The world's biggest movie magazine available on iPad Download now
Home  |  News  |  Blogs  |  Reviews  |  Future Films  |  Features  |  Interviews  |  Images  |  Competitions  |  Forum  |  iPad  |  Podcast  |  Magazine Contact Us  |  Empire FAQ  |  Subscribe To Empire  |  Register
© Bauer Consumer Media  |  Terms And Conditions  |  Our Data Promise To You  |  Bauer Entertainment Network
Bauer Consumer Media. Company number 1176085 (England). Registered Office: 21 Holborn Viaduct, London EC1A 2DY