Product Description
-------------------
Product Description
-------------------
For 25 years, Academy Award®-nominated director Jerry Aronson
accumulated more than 120 hours of film on Allen Ginsberg,
resulting in this comprehensive portrait of one of America s
greatest poets, author of Howl and other groundbreaking poems.
The DVD includes exclusive and revealing interviews with his
friends, family and contemporaries as well as never-before-seen
materials made public through the close friendship forged between
subject and filmmaker. The film acts as a contextual overview of
the last 60 years of American culture, from the Beat era through
the uncertainty of current times.
Special Features
----------------
* Exclusive Interviews; Making Of Featurette; Ginsberg poem
readings; Further extended and deleted scenes featuring Bob
Dylan, William Burroughs, Neal Cassady; Photo gallery; Theatrical
Trailer; Memorial for Allen Ginsberg; and more
Review
------
Fiercely funny and moving --Rolling Stone
Splendid! A great American story --Los Angeles Times
A very rich slice of cultural history, lovingly presented.
--Boston Globe
P.when('A').execute(function(A) {
A.on('a:expander:toggle_description:toggle:collapse',
function(data) {
window.scroll(0,
data.expander.$expander[0].offsetTop-100);
});
});
About the Actor
---------------
Irwin Allen Ginsberg (June 3, 1926 April 5, 1997) was an
American poet and one of the leading figures of the Beat
Generation in the 1950s. He vigorously sed militarism,
economic materialism and sexual repression. Ginsberg is best
known for his epic poem "Howl", in which he celebrated his fellow
"angel-headed hipsters" and harshly denounced what he saw as the
destructive forces of capitalism and conformity in the United
States.
In October 1955, Ginsberg and five other unknown poets gave a
free reading at an experimental art gallery in San Francisco.
Ginsberg's "Howl" electrified the audience. According to fellow
poet Michael McClure, it was clear "that a barrier had been
broken, that a human voice and body had been hurled against the
harsh wall of America and its supporting armies and navies and
academies and institutions and ownership systems and power
support bases." In 1957, "Howl" attracted widespread publicity
when it became the subject of an obscenity trial in which a San
Francisco prosecutor argued it contained "filthy, vulgar,
obscene, and disgusting language." The poem seemed especially
outrageous in 1950s America because it depicted both heterosexual
and sexual sex at a time when sodomy laws made sexual
acts a crime in every U.S. state. "Howl" reflected Ginsberg's own
sexuality and his relationships with a number of men,
including Peter Orlovsky, his lifelong partner. Judge Clayton W.
Horn ruled that "Howl" was not obscene, adding, "Would there be
any freedom of press or speech if one must reduce his vocabulary
to vapid innocuous euphemisms?"
In "Howl" and in his other poetry, Ginsberg drew inspiration
from the epic, free verse style of the 19th-century American poet
Walt Whitman. Both wrote passionately about the promise (and
betrayal) of American democracy, the central importance of erotic
experience, and the spiritual quest for the truth of everyday
existence. J. D. McClatchy, editor of the Yale Review, called
Ginsberg "the best-known American poet of his generation, as much
a social force as a literary phenomenon." McClatchy added that
Ginsberg, like Whitman, "was a bard in the old manner outsized,
darkly prophetic, part exuberance, part prayer, part rant. His
work is finally a history of our era's psyche, with all its
contradictory urges."
His achievements as a writer as well as his notoriety as an
activist gained him honors from established institutions. For
example, his collection The Fall of America shared the annual
U.S. National Book Award for Poetry in 1974. Other honors
included the National Arts Club gold medal and his induction into
the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, both in
1979. Ginsberg was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in 1995 for his book
Cosmopolitan Greetings: Poems 1986 1992.
See more ( javascript:void(0) )