No More to Say and Nothing to Weep For: An Elegy for Allen Ginsberg

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
AMG AllMovie Guide:

No More to Say and Nothing to Weep For: An Elegy for Allen Ginsberg

Top

Plot

Allen Ginsberg was one of the leading voices of American poetry from 1956, when he published his ground-breaking piece Howl, until his death in 1997. Along with his friends and colleagues William S. Burroughs, Jack Kerouac and Michael McClure, Ginsberg was one of the key figures in the Beat Movement, who pushed literature into bold new directions of self-expression and championed poetry as a performance medium. Ginsberg also saw clear links between poetry, music and the counterculture, and he was an outspoken political activist as well as collaborating with the likes of Bob Dylan, Patti Smith, The Clash and Paul McCartney. No More To Say and Nothing To Weep For: An Elegy For Allen Ginsberg is a documentary which pays homage to Ginsberg's life and art, as well as exploring his relationship with his family, his homosexuality, his embrace of Buddhism and his understanding of the realities of death. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Cast

Allen Ginsberg

Credit

Colin Still - Director, Colin Still - Cinematographer, Colin Still - Producer

Previous:No More Women (1934 Film), No More Women (1924 Film)
Next:No Mother to Guide Her (1923 Film), No Name on the Bullet (1959 Film)

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

Copyrights: