Showing posts with label on the road. Show all posts
Showing posts with label on the road. Show all posts

3/26/2013

Complete List of Theaters Showing 'On The Road'

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via On The Road Facebook

OPENING March 22nd, 2013
South Coast Village - Costa Mesa, CA
Paseo Camarillo Cinema - Camarillo, CA
Camera 7 - San Jose, CA
Coolidge Corner - Brookline, MA
Showroom - Asbury Park, NY
Village East Cinemas - New York, NY
Manhasset Cinemas - Manhasset, NY
Claridge - Montclair, NY
Cinema 100 - White Plains, NY
Art Theatre - Long Beach, CA
Rancho Niguel 8 Cinemas - Laguna Niguel, CA
Camelview 5 - Scottsdale, AZ
Del Mar - Santa Cruz, CA
Living Room Theatres - Portland, OR
Claremont 5 - Claremont, CA
Monica 4 - Santa Monica, CA
Playhouse 7 - Pasadena, CA
Town Center - Encino, CA
Aquarius - Palo Alto, CA
E Street Cinema - Washington, DC
Kendall Square Cinema - Cambridge, MA
Ritz 5 - Philadelphia, PA
Embarcadero Center Cinema - San Francisco, CA
Shattuck Cinema - Berkeley, CA
Century Centre - Chicago, IL
Lagoon - Minneapolis, MN
La Jolla Village - La Jolla, CA
Esquire Theatre - Denver, CO
Cedar Lee Theatre - Cleveland, OH
Crest Theatre - Sacramento, CA
Egyptian Theater - Seattle, WA
Main Art Theatre - Royal Oak, MI
Tivoli Theatre - University City, MO
Midtown Art - Atlanta, GA
Magnolia - Dallas, TX
Sundance Houston 8 - Houston, TX
Sundance Sunset - Los Angeles, CA

3/09/2013

'On the Road' heading back to theaters in March

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[...] Beginning March 22, the movie will play on 150 screens, including several in cities, such as Chicago and San Francisco, where it never played. IFC will also make it available on VOD for the first time.
"We were planning a pretty major expansion for January," Jonathan Sehring, president of IFC Films, said in a phone interview Wednesday. "But when you don’t get the awards attention that you're hoping for, you have to be willing to change your plans." Sehring said he believes March offers a clearer runway, without the traffic of the holidays' major awards titles.

Studios routinely try so-called "qualifying runs" in December before a wider release the following year. But those tend to be deliberately below-the-radar plays for one or two weeks designed to give the film awards eligibility, and usually seek to avoid extensive media and review attention that a distributor prefers to come later.

"On the Road," on the other hand, received buckets of print and broadcast coverage in December, particularly in big markets like New York and Los Angeles, where it played, and was reviewed by many major outlets at the time. (At the moment it has a very modest 43% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes.)

Hedlund’s publicist said in an e-mail that the actor had done "so much press from Cannes on" that he would not be doing anything additional to promote the new release. Stewart’s rep did not respond to a request for comment.

[...]

“This is a movie that played Cannes and is directed by Walter Salles,” he said. “I like Harmony Korine a lot—we did a movie with him—but it’s not exactly the same audience.”
source via @Kstewbutt  @KStewDevotee 

1/08/2013

Full Transcript of On the Road SB Cinema Society Screening Q & A

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Source Via
“On The Road” (Screening was on 9th December)

Roger Durling with Actors Garrett Hedlund and Kristen Stewart

Roger Durling: Garret, you’ve been involved with this project from the get-go, how many years has it been?

Garrett Hedlund: Since 2007.

Durling: And I read that you gave up other opportunities with other films to be in this project. What was it that made you so adamant about being a part of it?

Hedlund: You’d be crazy not to, you know when Walter gave me this role, I thought it was one of the most incredible things that had ever happened to me. And also, you know, I was a big fan of the book. I read it for the first time, I was seventeen, and a lot of the other writers from the beats and just literature in general had such a huge influence on me. I felt that to be involved with something as iconic as this was an opportunity of a lifetime, really. And I could go as deep as I could in terms of research, I mean, we had time. The film wasn’t greenlit at the point when I signed on, so there was years of meeting the family members of the characters in the book. You know, Dean Moriarity was the alter ego of Neal Cassady, so I spent a lot of time with John Cassady, his son. I got to go to San Francisco and meet with some of the other beat writers and sit down with them. I spent a lot of time reading Kerouac and Cassady and all the letters, I read all of the writers that inspired them – Proust, and Nietzche and Wolfe. So it was, you know, really incredible.

Durling: And Kristen, you’ve also been involved with this project for a very long time, since, Into The Wild with Sean Penn?

Kristen Stewart: It was a little after that. I think it was in 2007, I was seventeen.

Durling: What was it that attracted you to this role?

Stewart: On The Road was my first favorite book. I read it as a freshman in high school. And then when I heard Walter was directing it I would have done anything to be involved. I would have been his assistant on it. I would have done craft service. The reason you love something, it’s so clear. I don’t even really remember the details of the initial conversation; I think I just drove away shaking. I mean I was fairly certain. Not necessarily that I would get the part, because it could have been decades and we still would have had to wait fifty years for it to begin, but that I wanted to commit to something like that. Which is obviously, at least the way I remember, so irresponsible of me. I wasn’t ready for that part yet, at all. I got involved when Garrett did, and if fifty years had gone by and we’d missed out then it would have been a really painful experience.

12/29/2012

Pic and Account from the OTR NYC Premiere and After Party

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imagebam.com
 
Via @KstewAngel Then he goes into this whole story about his friend who saw an advance screening of “Into The Wild” and immediately called Walter about this actress nobody’d ever heard of to play Marylou, and he wrote her name down on a napkin: “Kristen Stewart” “And when I first met her in 2007 she had such an in-depth understanding of what ‘On The Road’ was about and knew the book inside out, and she was 17.”
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And then we go back to the party and Walter introduces me to Kristen Stewart, which is such a strange and unexpected thing that he has to be dealing with with this movie. Like, nobody in it was supposed to be a movie star. The leads were all cast because they were all unidentifiable fresh faces — film goers were already coming in with such fixed images in their minds as to what the characters looked like, the filmmakers couldn’t also have actors with established characters affixed. So they cast all relative unknowns in the main roles. Then lo and behold, Kristen Stewart becomes the biggest grossing actress of 2012 before the movie comes out. So Walter, and her, and everyone, have to deal with this.

But I get to hang with the mega-star for a while, and man, she’s so petite you could put her in your pocket! And she’s bookish, and reserved, and 180 degrees different than Marylou. We talk about indie film, and she confirms my assumption that’s she’s gonna do them the rest of her life. We didn’t say it, but this is a 22-year-old indie chick who fluked into the biggest movie franchise of the last few years, and she never has to work another day in her life. Yet she is going to be so many different interesting characters in the years to come. I tell her the truth that she brought Marylou more to life than Jack ever did, but she would hear none of it. To her, it was all Jack. And I beamed.
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And suddenly there’s Walter! And we hug, and he says he has to go find somebody and I’m “Okay,” and we wander off on some mission. I dunno what we were doin’ but we ended up on the roof and back again and I dunno if we ever accomplished anything but I told him, “Your kids are all gathered in the corner — you should go see them.” And this was the most amazing thing — in this beautiful penthouse skyline scene where I would not and did not take any pictures except for the one I’ll share shortly, but in the corner of this mobbed premiere party, Garrett, Kristen, and Sam were able to sit side-by-side in this alcove by the window, the three of them together again for perhaps the first time since they were all crammed in a ’49 Hudson for months, and able to enjoy the reunion together. And it’s so obvious how close they all are — it was like my high school reunion of a couple years ago — talkin, laughin and huggin all at the same time.

Source

New Still from On the Road

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Source

12/25/2012

List of Theaters Playing On The Road

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Source
 
OPENING December 21st, 2012
IFC Center - New York, NY

Lincoln Plaza - New York, NY
ArcLight Hollywood - Hollywood, CA
The Landmark - Los Angeles, CA
OPENING January 11th, 2013

Playhouse 7 - Pasadena, CA
Paseo Nuevo - Santa Barbara, CA
Rancho Niguel - Laguna Niguel, CA
Bethel Cinema - Bethel, CT
Avon Theatre Film Center - Stamford, CT

OPENING January 18th, 2013

E Street Cinema - Washington, DC
Ritz at the Bourse - Philadelphia, PA
Embarcadero Center Cinema - San Francisco, CA
Shattuck Cinema - Berkeley, CA
Century Centre - Chicago, IL
River East 21 - Chicago, IL
Century Evanston - Evanston, IL
Uptown Theatre - Minneapolis, MN
La Jolla Village - La Jolla, CA
Esquire Theatre - Denver, CO
Century 16 - Boulder, CO
Harkins Camelview 5 - Scottsdale, AZ
Fox Tower 10 - Portland, OR
Cedar Lee Theatre - Cleveland, OH
Camera 7 - San Jose, CA
UA Tara Cinemas 4 - Atlanta, GA
Manor Twin - Charlotte, NC
Loews Waterfront Theatre - West Homestead, PA
Enzian Theatre - Orlando, FL

OPENING January 25th, 2013

Bridgeport Village Stadium 18 - Tigard, OR
Main Art Theatre - Royal Oak, MI
Michigan Theater - Ann Arbor, MI
Tivoli Theatre - University City, MO
Cinerama - Seattle, WA
Lincoln Square Cinemas - Bellevue, WA
The Flicks - Boise, ID
Tivoli Manor Square - Kansas City, MO
The Charles - Baltimore, MD
Belcourt Theatre - Nashville, TN
DeVargas Mall 6 - Santa Fe, NM
Art Cinema - Coral Gables, FL
Arbor Cinemas at Great Hills - Austin, TX
Burns Court Cinema - Sarasota, FL
Keystone Art Cinema - Indianapolis, IN
Regency Cinema 6 - San Rafael, CA
Crocker Park Stadium 16 - Westlake, OH

OPENING February 1st, 2013

Gateway Film Center - Columbus, OH
Broadway Center Cinemas - Salt Lake City, UT
Del Mar - Santa Cruz, CA
OSIO Cinemas - Monterey, CA
Malco Ridgeway 4 - Memphis, TN
Showplace Naperville 16 - Naperville, IL
South Barrington 30 - South Barrington, IL
Lincolnshire 20 - Lincolnshire, IL
Mary Riepma Ross Media Arts Center - Lincoln, NE
The Fleur - Des Moines, IA
The Varsity - Des Moines, IA
City Center 12 - Vancouver, OR
Grand Cinema - Tacoma, WA
Summerfield Cinemas - Santa Rosa, CA
Westhampton Cinema - Richmond, VA
Colony Twin - Raleigh, NC
The Carolina - Durham, NC
Cinemapolis - Ithaca, NY
Fine Arts Theatre - Asheville, NC

OPENING February 8th, 2013

Regal Downtown Mall 6 - Charlottesville, VA
Triplex Cinema - Great Barrington, MA
Wilma Theatre - Missoula, MT
Liberty Hall - Lawrence, KS
Neon Movies - Dayton, TX

OPENING February 15th, 2013

Bear Tooth Cinema - Anchorage, AK
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