Film Review
Along with Arthur Penn's
Bonnie and Clyde (1967)
and Mike Nichols'
The Graduate (1967),
Easy Rider is one of a handful of
films which sparked a revolution in Hollywood and led to the birth of
the counterculture in American filmmaking in the late sixties, early
seventies. A decade after the start of the French New Wave, American
cinema was about to experience its own seismic renewal.
This film is as much a valuable social record of its
era as an inspired piece of filmmaking. Made on a budget of less
than 400 thousand dollars, it was a phenomenal success, taking over
sixty million dollars at the box office worldwide, and won an award at
Cannes for its director, Dennis Hopper (his first and best film).
This is also the film that put Jack Nicholson on the map, his Oscar
nomination helping to establish him as one of Hollywood's rising
stars.
Today,
Easy Rider feels
self-consciously arty and uncomfortably self-pitying, but when it hit cinema
screens in 1969 it caught the zeitgeist more than any film of its time,
reflecting and motivating a youth rebellion that began the previous
year, in the turbulent spring of 1968. And America's youth
had a great deal to rebel against. The political system had been
shown to be corrupt and self-serving. Technological and
industrial progress was ruining the planet. There was the
seemingly interminable war in Vietnam, which many now believed was
purely for dubious, profit-related motives. Meanwhile, the
Soviets and the Americans were busy building up their arsenals of
nuclear weapons to ensure that when the human race went, it went with a
bang. It is widely accepted that the 1960s were defined by the
sexual revolution, the start of true female emancipation. An
equally significant revolution erupted towards the end of the decade,
brought about by youngsters who believed they were born to be wild.
There is a wonderful irony in
Easy
Rider. Whilst the film wholeheartedly invites youngsters
to rebel and seize freedom where they can, it also makes it quite clear
that such freedom does not exist. Even the illusion of freedom,
bought by hard drugs, heavy drinking and free love, is ultimately
unsatisfying. The optimism with which the decade had begun was
all but spent by the time this film was in circulation, so its
depressing, almost nihilistic conclusion, was pretty well how most
adolescents saw their own future. Rebellion may be a pointless
gesture but, for many, it was the best alternative to conformity or
suicide.
Easy Rider is often credited
as cinema's first road movie and it broke new ground with its
soundtrack, which includes hits from The Band, The Jimi Hendrix
Experience and Steppenwolf, making it a nostalgia piece as much as
anything else. Other innovations include long tracking shots
through the wild American landscape (haunting images that contribute
much to the film's elegance and raw poetry) and a remarkable acid
montage sequence which effectively emulates the experience of a drugs
trip. Fonda, Hopper and Nicholson are all at their best here and
are well-served by Hopper's naturalistic and, at times, devastatingly
profound dialogue. Now stripped of much of its social relevance,
Easy Rider still manages to provide
a memorable viewing experience and, yeah man, it deserves its status as
a classic of American cinema.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Wyatt and Billy are a pair of drug-dealing bikers whose outlandish
appearance and easy lifestyle reflect their yearning for freedom.
Rich from their latest cocaine delivery, they decide to ride east to
New Orleans, to attend the Mardi Gras celebrations. On the
way, they pick up a hitchhiker and spend time with a hippie
commune. The hippie life appeals to neither Wyatt and Billy and
so the two men resume their journey. When they join in a
street parade in a respectable little town, they are thrown into jail
for parading without a permit. Here, they meet George Hanson, a
civil rights lawyer who was arrested for heavy drinking. George
arranges for his new friends to be released and decides to join them on
their trip to New Orleans. Passing through another town, the
three men draw the attention of some local roughnecks, who viciously
attack them one evening. This is turning out to be one Hell of a
journey, but will Billy and Wyatt ever find what they are looking
for...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.