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Revolutionary Road Photo Shoot

Posted by Susan Thea Posnock On October - 18 - 2008

These photos turned up on Kate Winslet Fans Photos of Leo and Kate.  They seem to go well with the tone of the film.  At the same time I dug up this review/appreciation of Revolutionary Road by the great writer Richard Ford, writing for the New York Times in 2000, and eerily calling it “American Beauty” (Circa 1955).   One of Yates’ main laments as told by Ford:

Yates – who was both famously decorous and famously plain-spoken – once remarked to an interviewer that he felt he had written too little in his life, and that his was the misfortune to have written his best book first. And although over his 30 years of public life as a writer Yates’s reputation rose, then fell, then rose again, ultimately distinguishing him as that ambiguous thing, a “writer’s writer,” one who does not make it (as did his contemporaries Cheever, Updike, Walker Percy) into the permanent, big-money main arena of American literary fashion, it is also true that nothing he wrote came near the achievement and acclaim of “Revolutionary Road,” which “lost” the 1961 National Book Award to Walker Percy’s novel “The Moviegoer.”

Two more photos and more Ford after the jump.

Ford continues talking about the book (he’s really better at it than anyone I’ve ever read):

In 1961, “Revolutionary Road” must have seemed an especially corrosive indictment of the postwar suburban “solution,” and of the hopeful souls who followed its call out of the city in search of some acceptable balance between rough rural essentials and urban opportunity and buzz. Frank Wheeler, the novel’s principal character, is 29, already a combat veteran and a Columbia graduate and outwardly a man on the way up. Yet Yates depicts him sarcastically as a compromised, self-important “suit” with “the kind of unemphatic good looks that an advertising photographer might use to portray the discerning consumer of well-made but inexpensive merchandise.” In the novel’s close notice Frank is a deluded, dissipated bore who imagines himself “as an intense, nicotinestained Jean-Paul-Sartre sort of man,” but is merely an adulterer spicing his talk with literary references while following work so stultifying and meaningless that he even laughs at himself.

April Wheeler is also a youthful 29, though unappreciated by her husband, who sees her as a “graceless, suffering creature whose existence he tried every day of his life to deny.” Yates imagines April slightly more charitably – as a slightly dazed, slightly spoiled, actress wannabe possessing no particular good will for her spouse, who still struggles to set a go-nowhere life onto new rails that will lead her family (or more particularly lead her) to Paris and a main chance at freedom. Yet April finally succumbs to a lack of vigor and becomes complicitous in being lied to, then tricked and demoralized, then driven crazy, and finally done in by circumstances she simply lacks the moral vigor to control.

He ends it (and it’s well worth a read) this way:

If we finally see the Wheelers and their set as strange and remote “50’s types” with their smoky Paris reveries, their gooney business pontifications, no-fuss sexual dalliances, their memories of youth and a just war fast receding, we should still, I would plead, let this novel have its way with us. Types always come to us from some fast truth somewhere. And by envisioning the change from one small, not-so-long-ago era to another – to our very own era, in fact – “Revolutionary Road” looks straight at us with a knowing and admonitory eye, and invites us to pay attention, have a care, take heed, live life as if it mattered what we do, inasmuch as to do less risks it all.

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9 Responses for "Revolutionary Road Photo Shoot"

  1. Jen1 October 18th, 2008 at 11:08 pm 1

    *swoon*. Beautiful photos. I just stared at the first one with Leo and Kate. Stared. They’re soo pretty.

  2. Emma October 19th, 2008 at 2:08 pm 2

    Gorgeous photos. Can’t wait for the movie.

  3. Revolutionary Road's Beautiful Black and White Photo Shoot « FirstShowing.net October 19th, 2008 at 2:46 pm 3

    [...] few photos from a beautiful photo shoot for the film have popped up over on Kate Winslet Fans (via Awards Daily), and I thought they were worth sharing today. The film is set during the 1950’s and these photos [...]

  4. Ryan Adams October 19th, 2008 at 5:03 pm 4

    Just to give appropriate credit to the original source of the photos: they come from the November issue of Interview magazine. I scan photos from Interview for posting here all the time, so I’m not criticizing KateWinsletFansPhotos.com for doing so. But it is a little shady of them to tag the photos with their own website address in the corner — and completely fail to mention where they came from.

    Interesting to see that the Richard Ford piece is a NYTimes article from 2000. It’s reprinted as the Forward in the edition of the novel I read.

    Like Sasha says, Ford understands and capsulizes Revolutionary Road as well as any writer can in a summary, but I stopped reading it as a Forward when I realized he was about the describe the entire plot, from start to finish.

    So be forewarned about Ford’s Forward: It’s meant to be read by those who know the novel well and are already familiar with all its plot turns — or for those who never intend to read it and don’t mind spoilers.

    Sasha’s excerpts here are excellent, but anybody who clicks to the link to read the full article should be aware that Ford’s appraisal is full of spoilers.

    [yep, this is me, after the weekend off, coming back after two days with a comment that's all cautionary and scoldy and shit.

    Also, it's aggravating to come home to find this issue of Interview in the mailbox, and realize I could've posted these two ago if I hadn't been away. 8-) ]

  5. Kate Winslet and DiCaprio in black and white | Reel Suave October 19th, 2008 at 8:41 pm 5

    [...] Continue reading here [...]

  6. Arthi V October 20th, 2008 at 12:56 am 6

    The photos are like a peek into their lives. Understated yet holding lot of untold..untold stories..

    I want to read the book before seeing the film. Will do so but unable to get the book till now….

  7. Ajax Celebrity » Blog Archive » Revolutionary Road’s Beautiful Black and White Photo Shoot October 20th, 2008 at 3:51 pm 7

    [...] few photos from a beautiful photo shoot for the film have popped up over on Kate Winslet Fans (via Awards Daily), and I thought they were worth sharing today. The film is set during the 1950’s and these [...]

  8. jms1967 October 20th, 2008 at 6:47 pm 8

    Thanks, Sasha, for the extended excerpts from Ford’s review. He’s one of America’s best writers. When it comes to criticism, he wields his scalpel in a hypontic way. I’m even more interested in seeing the movie after reading his thoughts on the book. (Oh, yeah, the photos: They’re pretty, too.)

  9. Tosh December 17th, 2008 at 12:03 am 9

    Just watched a clip from Revolutionary Road, and it looks like it should be pretty cool. Plus, the film was just nominated for 4 Golden Globes! It opens on Dec. 26, and you can find the clip here:
    http://www.clipser.com/watch_video/1109756


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  • Contender Tracker

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    Up

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    Best Actor
    Jeff Bridges, Crazy Heart
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    George Clooney, Up in the Air
    Matt Damon, The Informant!
    Jeremy Renner, The Hurt Locker
    Viggo Mortensen, The Road
    Ben Foster, The Messenger
    Michael Stuhlbarg, A Serious Man
    Michael Sheen, The Damned United

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    Gabby Sidibe, Precious
    Carey Mulligan, An Education
    Meryl Streep, Julie & Julia
    Abbie Cornish, Bright Star
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    Michelle Monaghan, Trucker

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    Christoph Waltz, Inglourious Basterds
    Alfred Molina, An Education
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    Peter Sarsgaard, An Education
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    Zach Galifianakis, The Hangover
    Anthony Mackie, The Hurt Locker
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    Julianne Moore, A Single Man
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    Kathryn Bigelow, The Hurt Locker
    Lone Scherfig, An Education
    Quentin Tarantino, Inglourious Basterds
    Joel and Ethan Coen, A Serious Man
    Neill Blomkamp, District 9
    Spike Jonze, Where the Wild Things Are
    Tom Ford, A Single Man
    Jane Campion, Bright Star

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    Mark Boal, The Hurt Locker
    Joel and Ethan Coen, A Serious Man
    Jane Campion, Bright Star
    Quentin Tarantino,Inglourious Basterds
    Michael Haneke,White Ribbon
    Bob Peterson, Pete Docter,Up
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    Nick Hornby, An Education
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    Peter Morgan, The Damned United
    Geoffrey Fletcher, Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire
    Scott Burns, The Informant!
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    Best Editing

    Chris Innis, Bob Murawski, The Hurt Locker
    Sally Menke, Inglourious Basterds
    Dana E. Glauberman,, Up in the Air
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    Greig Fraser,Bright Star
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    Roger Deakins, A Serious Man
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    Bruno Delbonnel,Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
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    Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
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    Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
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    Best Sound Editing

    District 9
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    Up

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    Mary Zophre, A Serious Man
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    Best Original Score
    Carter Burwell, Karen O,Where the Wild Things Are
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    Best Makeup

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    Best Song

    Best Live Action Short

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    China’s Unnatural Disaster: The Tears of Sichuan Province
    The Last Campaign of Governor Booth Gardner
    The Last Truck: Closing of a GM Plant
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    Music by Prudence
    Rabbit a la Berlin
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