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Pull My Daisy
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Pull My Daisy
IDFA 2023

Pull My Daisy

Robert Frank, Alfred Leslie
United States
1959
28 min
Focus: 16 Worlds on 16
Festival history

New York, early morning: it’s going to be a strange day in this cluttered loft on the Lower East Side, home to railroad brakeman Milo and his wife, a painter. Their dinner guest, a bishop, has only just arrived when a bunch of beat poets turn up. In fact it is Allen Ginsberg and some friends, all of whom appear as themselves in Robert Frank’s directorial debut, loosely based on a play by Jack Kerouac.

They are soon bombarding the bishop with philosophical wisecracks and questions about the sanctity of baseball. Everything we hear actually comes from the mouth of Jack Kerouac himself—he improvised the voice-over to accompany the film, which was recorded without direct sound.

Kerouac’s wry and ironic retelling blends with the bebop soundtrack, and once he gets going, he even treats us to some freewheeling beat poetry. The bishop’s mother seats herself at the organ and the poets join in with swinging jazz sounds. Confusion increasingly reigns supreme in this Beat Generation cult classic.

Credits
Director
Music
    David Amram
    David Amram
Screening copy
    Museum of Fine Arts Houston
    Museum of Fine Arts Houston

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