One of the most notorious
auteur misfires of the ’70s, this misbegotten mind-fuck was Dennis Hopper’s
follow-up to Easy Rider (1969), the
surprise blockbuster that not only transformed Hopper from a journeyman actor
to an A-list director but also established him, for a brief time, as a leading
voice of the counterculture. Alas, Hopper’s poor choices as an actor,
co-writer, and director turned The Last
Movie into a metaphor representing the way some people, Hopper included,
fell victim to the excesses of the drug era. In trying to escape the
constraints associated with conventional cinema, Hopper created a maddening
hodgepodge of self-indulgent nonsense and uninteresting experimentation.
Hopper
stars as Kansas, the horse wrangler for a Hollywood film crew that’s shooting
on location in Peru. After a fatal on-set accident, Kansas drops out of his
Hollywood lifestyle to start over in South America, hooking up with a sexy
local girl (Stella Garcia) and scheming with a fellow U.S. expat (Don Gordon)
to get rich off a gold mine. Kansas also romances a beautiful upper-crust
American (Julie Adams), with whom he engages in gentle sadomasochism, and he
gets roped into a bizarre situation involving Peruvian villagers who are
“shooting” their own movie using primitive mock-up cameras and microphones made
from scrap metal and sticks. (One of The
Last Movie’s myriad pretentious allusions is that the “fake” film crew is
making more authentic art than the “real” film crew.)
Simply listing the trippy
flourishes in The Last Movie would
take an entire website, so a few telling examples should suffice. Early in the
picture, a Hollywood starlet (played by Hopper’s then-girlfriend, former Mamas
and the Papas singer Michelle Phillips) conducts a ritual during which she
pierces a Peruvian woman’s ear with a large pin while people stand around the
scene wearing creepy masks and chanting. Later, Kansas leads a group of
Americans to a whorehouse, where they watch a grimy girl-on-girl floor show;
this inexplicably drives Kansas into such a rage that he ends up slapping
around his long-suffering female companion. And we haven’t even gotten to the
weird one-shot bits that are periodically inserted into the narrative. At one
point, Kansas leans back while a woman shoots breast milk from her nipple to
his face. Elsewhere, while getting his hair trimmed, Kansas shares the
following random remark: “I never jerked off a horse before.” Good to know.
The
whole movie culminates with a befuddling barrage of images, including scenes of Kansas getting beaten by members of the “fake” film crew, as if the Hollywood
runaway is some sort of martyr for art. It’s all very deliberately weird.
During the final stretch, for instance, Hopper cuts to silly things like “scene
missing” placeholders and outtakes of actors consulting their scripts. The
idea, presumably, was to deconstruct Hollywood filmmaking so that a new art
form could emerge from the ruins, but Hopper missed the mark in every way. That
said, it’s worth noting that Hopper brought interesting friends along for the
ride. Cinematographer László Kovács, who also shot Easy Rider, does what he can to infuse Hopper’s scattershot frames
with artistry, and the cast includes ’70s cult-cinema stalwart Severn Darden
(who does a musical number!) as well as maverick B-movie director Samuel
Fuller, who plays a version of himself during the scenes depicting the making
of the Hollywood movie.
The Last Movie: FREAKY
3 comments:
While I'm willing to give you a pass for some of your errors in the plot description, considering the confusing nature of The Last Movie, the character Hopper plays is named Kansas, after Hopper's birthplace, Dodge City, Kansas. "Kansas" is even painted on the red pickup truck he drives around in.
Perhaps, because I had the possibly dubious benefit of watching this film more than once before writing about it for my biography of Hopper, it is not incomprehensible, as many critics have said. At the end of the film, the villagers shanghai Kansas into their "movie" a combination of a passion play and imitation of the B-Western about Billy the Kid that the villagers witnessed being filmed in their village.
For those interested in a detailed examination of the making of The Last Movie, I recommend my book about Hopper. FWIW, I'm not a fan of the film, either.
dennishopperbook.com
Agree that it's not incomprehensible, just undercooked, although certainly some of Hopper's directorial decisions are beyond normal understanding. Fixed the Dallas/Kansas thing. No idea how that error got through, thanks for catching. If anything else egregious remains (either here or in the follow-up post on American Dreamer), feel free to let me know....
This film played for two weeks at the Pi Alley Theatre in Boston where I was a ticket taker. It was one of the very rare times where we had to put up a sign in the window of the box office after the opening day saying "absolutely no refunds under any circumstances"
Post a Comment