Logo
Spring Awakening
ISSUE #34.34 • SCREEN •
[SCREEN]

Thompsonland


Was he Dr. Gonzo, or just the man in the Nixon mask?

Social bookmarking | Permalink
Email | Print | Rate It! | 1 comment
Recently in "Screen"

October 8th, 2008
David Lean: Ten British Classics | Little things jolly well mean a lot.0 comments

October 8th, 2008
There Are Some Who Call Me…Tim | We just call it the only good new show on TV this fall.0 comments

October 1st, 2008
The Greening of Southie And On The Wing | All a city’s gotta do is act naturally.0 comments

October 1st, 2008
Mike Mignola | Hellboy ain’t afraid of no rubber puppets.0 comments

October 1st, 2008
God Is Not Mocked | That’s Bill Maher in the spotlight, losing his religion.23 comments

September 24th, 2008
PLGFF, Week Two | The Portland Lesbian and Gay Film Festival: Now with more wound-fucking!0 comments

September 24th, 2008
Towelhead | Once more in suburbia, with feeling.0 comments

September 24th, 2008
My Name Is Robert Paulson | Choke is more like a group-therapy sitcom than a movie. That’s ok.0 comments

September 24th, 2008
Brew Views • Top 5 Movies to Watch in Theater Pubs This Week0 comments

September 17th, 2008
Entourage | The party never ends; the show never changes.1 comment


IT’S YOUR TURN TO DRIVE: Hunter S. Thompson, on the lookout for bats.
BY AARON MESH | amesh at wweek dot com

[July 2nd, 2008]

When Richard Milhous Nixon died in 1994, his old bête noire Hunter S. Thompson summoned the remains of his moribund talent to offer a remembrance. The eulogy hit all the notes expected from the author of Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail ’72—the hell-raising journalist called the departed president a “bastard” and “scum”—but it began on a melancholy note. “It was Richard Nixon who got me into politics, and now that he’s gone, I feel lonely.”

Alex Gibney’s new documentary, Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson, expands on the poignancy of that line, hinting at why Thompson felt so bereaved. It was part of the American genius for polarization that Thompson saw Nixon as his doppelgänger, his mirror. Nixon was his dark shadow. Or maybe it was the other way around.

For the many readers—like myself—who began this summer eagerly devouring Rick Perlstein’s marvelous history book Nixonland: The Rise of a President and the Fracturing of America, these parallels are the most intriguing aspects of Gonzo. The documentary, directed by Gibney (who just won an Oscar for Taxi to the Dark Side), dutifully covers the swath of the mad doctor’s writing, but it is chiefly interested in Thompson the political animal—the man who dogged Nixon through New Hampshire and found his own reflection. Nixon was famously propelled by his resentments toward enemies, real and imagined, who would curtail his lust for power. Thompson’s greed was for libertinism—whiskey, guns and fame—but the resentment was the same. They both saw America as a gated country club, and they nursed their detestation for the men with the keys. And in the end, they both resigned. Nixon, in his elderly fits of sentiment, would tell interviewers he wished he had been a sportswriter. Thompson passed his final days in Colorado typing an insipid column for ESPN.

So it makes perfect sense that when Gonzo recounts Thompson’s last serious journalistic assignment—sent to cover the 1974 Ali-Frazier “Rumble in the Jungle” fight, he swallowed a cabinet of pills and wandered off to float in the hotel pool—Gibney re-creates the scene with washed-out footage of azure water and a man in a Nixon mask. The image is inspired on a number of levels, since this was the moment when a genuinely gifted writer decisively sacrificed his talent on the altar of indulgence, and when he slipped on a mask of celebrity that he would never remove.














icon Story continues below

advertisement
OMSI
advertisement

The rest of the movie, while amusing and honest, doesn’t often approach that level of perception: It’s content to splash in the shallow end of the pool. Gibney has recruited Johnny Depp to read from Thompson’s books, and in fact we probably hear Depp’s voice more often than Thompson’s, since Gonzo is liberally sprinkled with clips from the Terry Gilliam adaptation of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. There are plenty of guest appearances by old cronies, few of whom can stir themselves enough to say an unkind word about the man who squandered his last two decades shooting rifles on his ranch until he finally turned one on himself in 2005. The only regret voiced is one that Gibney repeats several times: Thompson should have stuck around long enough to become a proper foil for the Bush administration.

What Gonzo doesn’t dare say is that Thompson was a fitting adversary for George W. Bush. A writer who had been reduced to a comics-page caricature (Doonesbury’s Uncle Duke) was pitted against a commander-in-chief who borrowed his rhetoric from Justice League panels. What’s more, Thompson had seduced a generation of young pundits into polishing their images as imitation gonzos—embedded with the troops, or shouting bromides about peace, when they might have been investigating a doomed strategy. Hunter S. Thompson—like Richard Nixon—left behind a legacy of pale replicas that helped make America a more partisan, less intelligent place. It’s high time both sides took off the masks.

SEE IT: Gonzo is rated R. It opens Friday at Cinema 21.

 

Rate This Story
5 average/3 votes

 
read all 1 comments | add your comment
 

RECENT COMMENTS ON “Thompsonland”

1

Hunter is in Heaven, drinking heavily. From his cloud, he can urinate on Nixon's grave from a great height. People think it's just rain.

He made a lot of people laugh. May he res...

jeff taylor, Jul 2nd, 2008 10:39am
 
 
 





Ad
Children's Levy
Ad
Stereotypes Audio
Ad

Sponsored Links: WW Personals
Musician's Market
Snowboard Jackets


Recently in Willamette Week
October 12th 2008Unlucky Strike | The Oregon lottery is going into detox—and our state budget is along for the smoke-free ride.
October 12th 2008Jail Junkies | Who knows more about stopping property crime: Kevin Mannix or an ex-addict who stole 1,000 cars?
October 12th 2008Shipracked | Judy Shiprack wants to be your next county commissioner. Here’s what she doesn’t want you to know about a real-estate deal gone bad.
October 12th 2008Señor Smith | Low-wage Latino workers keep Sen. Gordon Smith’s family business humming. Not all of them are legal.
October 12th 2008OMFG IT'S MFNW!
October 12th 2008Sometimes a Great Lawsuit | Ken Kesey’s last prank pits his widow in a court battle with his best friend and a Playboy model.
October 12th 2008Sliced Bread, Beware | A better fire hose, a poker aid & a foldable clipboard—meet six Portland inventors whose big ideas are the best thing since, well, you know.
October 12th 2008How to Live Cheap in Portland | Throwing too much money away on food and shelter? here’s WW’s Recession Survival Guide.
October 12th 2008The Queer and the Qur’an | Ali is gay. And Muslim. Can he be both?