Sentences with phrase «beatnik who»

Mumbling through interviews, playing the bongos in a cow field and taking speed with Eartha Kitt in seedy New York nightclubs, Dehaans Dean is a strung - out beatnik who likes to keep reminding himself that hes a rebel without a cause.
Bobbie Jo is entranced with poet Alan Landman, a visiting beatnik who is passing through Hooterville.

Not exact matches

I know some people hear the word hippy / hippie and perceive a marijuana smoking, unintelligent, dirty, lazy, beatnik, who smells bad and is tripping out while listening to the Greatful Dead.
eccentric artist who gave up the business world to live a beatnik / bohemian lifestyle.
«Beatnik Blues: Investigating Daddy - O» is a brief look at how the film fits into the tough guy movies that were in vogue during the 1950s, with comments from the usual film historians who pop up in Shout!
All That Heaven Allows — Douglas Sirk melodrama about a wealthy widow (Jane Wyman) who falls in love with the Thoreuvian tree farmer Rock Hudson, and has to choose between social pressure and the beatnik.
In fact, it so desperately wants to capture that beatnik - y place and tone where crime films and swinging London met that it just seems to try too hard, slathering the movie with music, trippy visuals and other elements that just can't make up for the deficit of a weak and blandly told story about a ex-con (Colin Farrell) hired to look after a reclusive young actress (Keira Knightley) who finds himself falling in love, which of course puts himself in direct confrontation with one of London's most vicious gangsters.
Fads and fashions aside, a giant of that scene is the septuagenarian George Herms, an artist who converts found detritus to sprawling collages and visual poems, all with a beatnik sensibility.
Disney passed two years later and the project was taken on by the dean of the NYU School of the Arts, who injected unseemly New York career - orientation into the extended beatnik art culture of Southern California.
A framed newspaper clipping from the Los Angeles Herald Examiner, October 15, 1964, describes the somewhat wayward clientele of the place as «beatniks, neighborhood time wasters and unclassifiable types who could be radio talkers, TV writers, actresses and European tourists,» mentioning that in the past it was frequented by such colorful luminaries as Jean Harlow, Clara Bow and John Barrymore.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z