Beat - Movie Review

  • 01 November 2005

Rating: 3 out of 5

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!

Image caption Beat

Facts and Figures

Year: 2000

Run time: 93 mins

In Theaters: Saturday 29th January 2000

Distributed by: LionsGate Entertainment

Production compaines: Martien Holdings A.V.V., Walking Pictures, Background Productions, Beat LLC, Millenium Pictures, Pendragon Film, Pfilmco

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 3 / 5

Rotten Tomatoes: 57%
Fresh: 4 Rotten: 3

IMDB: 5.6 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director: Gary Walkow

Producer: Andrew Pfeffer, Alain Silver, Donald Zuckerman

Screenwriter: Gary Walkow

Starring: Kiefer Sutherland as William S. Burroughs, Courtney Love as Joan Vollmer Burroughs, Ron Livingston as Allen Ginsberg, Norman Reedus as Lucien Carr, Sam Trammell as Lee, Alec Von Bargen as Heard, Tommy Perna as Dwight, Daniel Martínez as Jack Kerouac, Kyle Secor as Dave Kammerer

Also starring: Andrew Pfeffer, Alain Silver, Donald Zuckerman, Gary Walkow