Don't miss a beat
James Franco-philes and local beatniks Howl for Allen Ginsberg biopic
The Sundance-star story of Allen Ginsberg's seminal poem, Howl, now showing at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, signals a chance for fans of the beat poet (as well as James Franco) to glimpse a pivotal moment in American literary history: The landmark 1957 obscenity trial surrounding the movie's namesake poem's publication.
Directors Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman have knit together four scripts: An intimate living room interview with Ginsberg (via Franco), San Francisco courtroom scenes (in which Jon Hamm represents the attorney defending publisher City Lights Books), clips of the poet reading the ode to his generation in underground cafés, and animated sequences of the stirring stanzas.
This pastiche method makes for a fast-paced 90-minute plot line, but the cartoon aspect can be at best jarring and at worst, detrimental to the poem's integrity. Perhaps a more thoughtful insertion of illustration would have been rendered in the style of the time, providing an aesthetically integrated experience.
Instead, the animations discount the authenticity of the spiritual journey described in Howl; the magic of Franco reading the poem's excerpts fizzles when the preprogramed imagery of confessional road trips, love affairs and search for personal liberation replaces the viewer's imagination.
Forget the incidental cartoons — Howl represents a triumphant closing to 2010 for the Houston film scene, which has seen its share of theater closures and insider squabbles. And while avoiding pedestrianism, this isn't a film exclusively for the art-world crowd.
The hyper-intellectual Franco was provided with a script that conveniently sneaks in interview transcripts about Ginsberg's upbringing, including the institutionalization of his mother and himself, and ties to beat comrades Neal Cassady and Jack Kerouac.
Perhaps regular Ginsberg readers will find the movie a cursory story of the poet's most well-known poem, but considering that this is the first drama to take on the character of Ginsberg, Howl is a stunning introduction to one of the 20th century's most significant writers, and the spark of American counterculture.
Over the course of the film, Franco's character narrates nearly the entirety of the epic poem, rendering the film accessible to the uninitiated. The courtroom sequences (which include a cameo by Mary-Louise Parker) were also derived from authentic court proceedings. By infusing the biography of a poem with solid performances and avoiding melodramatics, Howl sets the MFAH's subterranean screen on fire.
Howl is screening at the MFAH at 7 p.m. on Wednesday and Thursday; 2 p.m. on Friday and Saturday; and 5 p.m. on Sunday. Watch the trailer below: