Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson (2008)
Director: Alex Gibney
Movie review
From Time Out Chicago
For a journalist, Hunter S. Thompson sure had a lot of guns: 22 of them by his ex-wife’s recollection in Gibney’s seasoned, evenhanded profile. And that will always be the dominant image of him, wiry and wired, a loon behind his shades, squatting on his Aspen, Colorado, compound shooting at something.
Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson is a valuable reclamation of the political from the personal. Terry Gilliam and Johnny Depp (Gibney’s enjoyably sober narrator) turned Thompson into a borderline clown for 1998’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas; this documentary restores a fair measure of the intelligent (even feared) critical colleague, here remembered by Nixon adviser Pat Buchanan, boss Jann Wenner of Rolling Stone, and Jimmy Carter and George McGovern. They all smile, recalling the “romantic” let down by elections and his own hopes for change.
The film is smart enough to create an arresting swirl of late-’60s media hyperbole: Hells Angels, Vietnam bombings and Nixon’s automatic grinning. It makes sense that a writer would emerge from it all ready to play his own dirty tricks. But where is the 1980s clampdown? Still, this is valuable stuff—a reminder of tactics our press has forgotten.
Author: Joshua Rothkopf
Time Out Chicago Issue 175: July 3–9, 2008
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