On the Road screened on May 23, 2012 at the
Cannes Film Festival, where it was nominated for the top prize. A shorter version, running 124 minutes, was shown on September 6, 2012 at the
Toronto International Film Festival. Theatrical distribution rights in North America were sold to
AMC Networks with
IFC Films and
Sundance Selects releasing it theatrically.
StudioCanal bought rights for the United Kingdom and Australia. The film was released in the United States on December 21, 2012. Alongside its theatrical opening, the film was simultaneously released on
IFC Films video on demand service.
Box office The film had a limited release and grossed $744,296 at United States box office and $8,040,022 internationally with a worldwide total of $8,784,318.
Critical reception 's portrayal of Dean Moriarty was singled out for praise. Early reviews of
On the Road were mixed, although the performance of Garrett Hedlund was often singled out for praise and Eric Gautier's photography also received favorable notice. The film has a 47% approval rating on the website
Rotten Tomatoes, based on 152 reviews. The website's critical consensus states: "Beautiful to look at but a bit too respectfully crafted,
On the Road doesn't capture the energy and inspiration of Jack Kerouac's novel."
Metacritic gives the film a weighted average score of 56 out of 100, based on 32 reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews". In
The Hollywood Reporter, veteran reviewer
Todd McCarthy praised the film, writing "While the film’s dramatic impact is variable, visually and aurally it is a constant pleasure. Eric Gautier’s cinematography is endlessly resourceful, making great use of superb and diverse locations". McCarthy also spoke highly of Hedlund's performance saying, "Although the story is Sal/Kerouac’s, the star part is Dean, and Hedlund has the allure for it; among the men here, he’s the one you always watch, and the actor effectively catches the character’s impulsive, thrill-seeking, risk-taking, responsibility-avoiding personality." Stewart's performance garnered some mixed reviews, with one critic writing "Stewart as Marylou completes the awkward threesome for a large part of the film and whilst there is little for her to do here she also makes very little out of what she has to work with," and that she "flatters to deceive, offering some moments of passion...criminally underplaying a character in Marylou who is supposed to burn with energy." However,
New York magazine's Kyle Buchanan wrote, "Certainly, there's nothing regrettable about Stewart's performance here: It reestablishes the promising character actress last seen in
Into the Wild and held captive as
Twilight's leading lady for years," and Todd McCarthy said, Stewart "is perfect in the role." In her review for
The New York Times,
Manohla Dargis criticized the film saying, "Mr. Salles, an intelligent director whose films include
The Motorcycle Diaries, doesn't invest
On the Road with the wildness it needs for its visual style, narrative approach and leads. This lack of wildness – the absence of danger, uncertainty or a deep feeling for the mad ones – especially hurts Dean, who despite the appealing Mr. Hedlund, never jumps off the screen to show you how Cassady fired up Kerouac and the rest". Peter Bradshaw of
The Guardian felt that the film was a "good-looking but directionless and self-adoring road movie", and that it had "a touching kind of sadness in showing how poor Dean is becoming just raw material for fiction, destined to be left behind as Sal becomes a New York big-shot. But this real sadness can't pierce or dissipate this movie's tiresome glow of self-congratulation". Finally,
Time magazine's Richard Corliss had a problem with Salles' approach to the material: "Though there’s plenty of cool jazz in the background, the movie lacks the novel’s exuberant syncopation – it misses the beat as well as the Beat. Some day someone may make a movie worthy of
On the Road, but Salles wasn't the one to try. This trip goes nowhere".
Eric Ehrmann, writing in the May 31, 2012 edition of the
Huffington Post, blamed Francis Ford Coppola for having "outsourced" the film to "a Brazilian director from a billionaire banking family who gentrified" the novel's characters. Ehrmann, a pioneering
New Journalism writer, covered the funeral of Jack Kerouac for
Rolling Stone in 1969.
Home media On the Road was released on DVD and Blu-ray on August 6, 2013 by
MPI Media Group. ==Awards and nominations==