Pull My Daisy

Pull My Daisy
Robert Frank
Alfred Leslie
United States of America
28
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Synopsis

Pull My Daisy is a classic look at the soul of the beat generation, made with writers Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, and painters Alfred Leslie, Larry Rivers, and Alice Neel. It was written and narrated by Kerouac, based on his unproduced play The Beat Generation. It tells the story of a bishop (Richard Bellamy) and his mother (Alice Neel) who pay a visit to Milo, a railroad worker. At the same time his poet friends, Ginsberg, Peter Orlovsky, and Gregory Corso, hang around quizzing the bishop about the meaning of life and its everyday relationship to art and poetry. Pull My Daisy is recognized as one of the most important works of avant-garde cinema.

Biografía del director

Robert Frank

Robert Frank (b. 1924, Zurich) is one of the most well-known and acclaimed photographers in the world. Yet he was also a filmmaker, a fact that comparatively few remember or are even aware of. From 1959 onwards, he put his work as a photographer on hold to focus on cinema, going on to complete more than 25 films over a 50-year career until his death in September 2019. Many of these are regarded as seminal works within the international independent and documentary scene.

Photo credit: Dodo Jin Ming

Alfred Leslie

Director's biography not available

Finished

Sessions

December

Wednesday 16
20:00 h
Filmoteca Española. Cine Doré.

Credits

Language
- Subtitles in spanish
Director
Robert Frank, Alfred Leslie
Screenplay
Jack Kerouac
Cinematography
Robert Frank
Editing
Leon Prochnik, Robert Frank, Alfred Leslie
Production
Walter Gutman