Easy Rider

Director: Dennis Hopper
Written by: Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper, Terry Southern
Cast: Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper, Jack Nicholson

Year / Country: 1969, USA
Running Time: 95 mins.

Two American bikers, Billy (Dennis Hopper) and Captain America (Peter Fonda), make a drug deal in Los Angeles, selling a stash of cocaine. They stash the money in plastic tubes hidden inside Captain America’s gas tank, which is decorated in stars and stripes like the American flag. Then they hit the road, heading for the Mardi Gras festival in New Orleans.

These two are counterculture figures; bikers, yes, but more hippie than outlaw. They ride through the American South and Southwest, camping under the stars, smoking grass by the fire, and drifting freely. Along the way, they encounter fellow wanderers, free-spirited hippie women, and the memorable, alcoholic lawyer George Hanson (Jack Nicholson).

Easy Rider has a unique atmosphere all its own. The film’s striking images of wide-open, desolate landscapes, paired with its incredible rock soundtrack, create a dreamlike sense of freedom. It’s a road movie, yes, but also a time capsule. The tagline sums it up perfectly: ‘A man went looking for America. And couldn’t find it anywhere…’ Throughout the journey, they meet farmers, hippies, rednecks – a cross-section of America. But beneath it all is a deeper tension: a clash between the angry and the peaceful.

The film’s marijuana-smoking scenes feel genuine, and the acid trip near the end is raw and unsettling – likely because the cast actually used real drugs during filming. That honesty helps make Easy Rider the ultimate hippie movie, capturing the spirit and disillusionment of its era.

The film was a surprise box office success, shaking up the Hollywood system and briefly shifting creative power to the directors. For a moment, they – not the studios – understood what audiences really wanted to see. The film became a landmark of New Hollywood, capturing the spirit of the 1960s and earning Hopper an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay.

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Biography: Dennis Hopper (1936, Kansas – 2010, Los Angeles) was an American actor, director, writer, and artist known for his intense screen presence and deep ties to countercultural cinema. Hopper began his career in the 1950s with small roles in films like Rebel Without a Cause (1955), alongside James Dean. His early work in Hollywood was promising, but his rebellious nature and substance abuse problems often put him at odds with studios. He achieved cult status with Easy Rider (1969), which he co-wrote, directed, and starred in alongside Peter Fonda. He continued his directing career with a mix of critical and commercial disappointments, as well as a few moderately successful films. As an actor, however, he delivered memorable performances in several major hits, including Blue Velvet and Speed. Beyond his film work, Hopper was also a prolific photographer and painter, with his artwork exhibited in galleries around the world.

Filmography: Mary Jennifer at the Beach (1964, short), Easy Rider (1969), The Last Movie (1971), Out of the Blue (1980), Colors (1988), Catchfire (1990), The Hot Spot (1990), Chasers (1994), Homeless (2000, short), Pashmy Dream (2008, short)

Dungeon Classics #17: Love and a .45

FilmDungeon’s Chief Editor JK sorts through the Dungeon’s DVD-collection to look for old cult favorites….

Love and a .45 (1994, USA)

Director: C.M. Talkington
Cast: Gil Bellows, Renée Zellweger, Rory Cochrane
Running Time: 101 mins.

This little known nugget is written and directed by C.M. Talkington, who did little else in his career. A shame really, because this movie is very enjoyable. It reminds me a lot of True Romance which was released a year earlier. The story is about two lovers played by Gil Bellows and Renée Zellweger who are leading a happy life in a trailer home. Watty Watts (Bellows) robs convenience stores for a living. This goes well until his crazy partner Billy Mack Black (Rory Cochrane) kills a girl during a heist. After killing two rangers in self defense, the couple takes off to Mexico pursued by the psychopathic Billy Mack and two other homicidal maniacs who Watty Watts borrowed money from. It’s a wild ride full of humor, violence and great music. Look out for the terrific Jeffrey Combs in a non-horror role and Peter Fonda as a hippie.

Race with the Devil

Director: Jack Starrett
Written by: Wes Bishop, Lee Frost
Cast: Peter Fonda, Warren Oates, Loretta Swit, Lara Parker

Year / Country: 1975, USA
Running Time: 84 mins.

You know these vacations where everything goes wrong? Not like it does in Race with the Devil I bet. Two friends go camping with their wives in a luxury RV. On the first night in the countryside, they accidentally witness a satanic ritual in which a girl gets sacrificed. Then they are spotted and have to flee in terror. Of course, the sheriff doesn’t believe a word they are saying, so they decide to head to Amarillo in Texas to talk to the cops there. But these devil worshippers are not to be messed with and they start a pursuit. A tense ride for life and death begins…

Peter Fonda plays a very different character in this movie than he does in the car chase flick Dirty Mary, Lazy Larry, in which he played a misogynist criminal. This time around, he is a normal American who has to experience America’s nightmare. The tension certainly rises to a boiling point when everybody seems to be part of the satanic cult. ‘Witnesses on the run movies’ can be fun and Race with the Devil is no exception. It’s like The Hills Have Eyes on the move with cannibals replaced by occult freaks.

The overload of stupid redneck people and the lack of feminist awareness are annoying, but are compensated by an entertaining story that has elements of action, horror and mystery in it. The race from the title doesn’t start until fifteen minutes from the ending, but when it does it’s a spectacular piece of action. The ‘surprise’ ending does not come entirely unexpected, but it still holds a clever twist and provides a fitting ending to an entertaining seventies car flick.

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Biography: Jack Starrett (1936, Texas – 1989, California) has a large résumé in early 70’s exploitation flicks in different genres, such as; blaxplotation, western, crime and biker movies. Although not all of his pictures received favorable critique, some are definitely considered as classics in their kind. Cleopatra Jones and The Gravy Train have a steady cult following and the devil worship car chase horror / action film Race with the Devil became Starrett’s biggest ever drive-in hit and one of his most well-regarded movies. Besides directing he also acted and delivered a few remarkable performances, amongst others in Blazing Saddles and First Blood.

Filmography: Run, Angel, Run! (1969), The Bold Ones: The New Doctors (1969, TV episodes), Nam’s Angels (1970), Cry Blood, Apache (1970), Night Chase (1970, TV), The Strange Vengeance of Rosalie (1972), Slaughter (1972), Cleopatra Jones (1973), The Gravy Train (1974), Planet of the Apes (1974, TV episode), Starsky and Hutch (1975, TV episodes), A Small Town in Texas (1976), Hollywood Man (1976), Roger & Harry: The Mitera Target (1977, TV), Nowhere to Hide (1977, TV), Final Chapter: Walking Tall (1977), What Really Happened to the Class of 65? (1977, TV episode), Thaddeus Rose and Eddie (1978, TV), Mr. Horn (1979, TV), The Dukes of Hazzard (1979-1980, TV episodes), Beyond Westworld (1980, TV episode), Eischied (1980, TV episode), Hill Street Blues (1981, TV episode), Kiss my Grits (1982)

Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry

Director: John Hough
Written by: Leigh Chapman, Antonio Santean, Richard Unekis (novel ‘The Chase)
Cast: Peter Fonda, Susan George, Adam Roarke, Kenneth Tobey

Year / Country: 1974, USA
Running Time: 93 mins.

Peter Fonda’s Larry and his partner Deke (Adam Roarke) rob a supermarket manager for 150 large. On their getaway, they encounter the sluttish Mary who joins them on their high speed road trip in a blue Chevy. The law is on to them quickly leading to a number of spectacular chases. Off course the trio outsmarts the initially unmoved, but later fanatical police chief, played by Vic Morrow.

‘I’m gonna braid your tits’, the misogynist Larry tells Mary at one point during the movie. Not very politically correct but exploitation pur sang. Just check out the movie’s poster above: pure vintage 70’s cool. This film became a major drive-in cinema hit.

Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry is an excellent companion piece for Vanishing Point or Two-Lane Blacktop, philosophical, little story and big on car chases. That last element is especially well done. As soon as ‘the chase’ starts we get a 200 mph high-speed nitrous burnout. Very spectacular. The nihilistic tone doesn’t hurt the movie either.

The stupefying characters will be especially enjoyable for a stoned audience. Fonda plays a rougher (and crazier) version of his Easy Rider character Wyatt, and he pulls this off quite effectively. Mary’s part is harder to enjoy. We know she’s dirty, but why and what else is there to this girl?

The ending of Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry comes unexpectedly for those who are unfamiliar with this particular type of movie. It is shocking either way, and in a certain regard…beautiful. Especially as soon as the closing song ‘Time is Such a Funny Thing’ becomes audible.

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Biography: John Hough (1941, London) came into the picture with some low-budget horror flicks like Twins of Evil and The Legend of Hell House. He got his big break by securing himself a steady position as assistant director on the extremely popular TV-show The Avengers. Later he would try other stuff like sci-fi, fantasy, western, action and drama. He even directed a few Disney pictures. Late eighties he had a bump in the road, exemplified with the cruddy horror flick Howling IV: THe Original Nightmare. Hough’s last credit as a director to date was the gory Jack the Ripper tale Bad Karma.

Filmography (a selection): Wolfshead: The Legend of Robin Hood (1969), The Avengers (1968-69, TV episodes), Eyewitness (1970), Twins of Evil (1971), Treasure Island (1972), The Legend of Hell House (1973), Dirty Mary Crazy Larry (1974), Escape to Witch Mountain (1975), Return from Witch Mountain (1978), Brass Target (1978), The Watcher in the Woods (1980), Triumphs of a Man Called Horse (1982), Black Arrow (1985, TV), Biggles (1986), American Gothic (1987), Howling IV: The Original Nightmare (1988), A Ghost in Monte Carlo (1990, TV), Something to Believe In (1998), Bad Karma (2001)