{"id":2421797,"date":"2019-01-03T16:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-01-03T23:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aspentimes.com\/?p=292226"},"modified":"2019-01-03T16:00:00","modified_gmt":"2019-01-03T23:00:00","slug":"aspen-film-and-anita-thompson-toast-20th-anniversary-of-fear-and-loathing-in-las-vegas-movie-adaptation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/alwaysmountaintime.com\/kspn\/local-news\/aspen-film-and-anita-thompson-toast-20th-anniversary-of-fear-and-loathing-in-las-vegas-movie-adaptation\/","title":{"rendered":"Aspen Film and Anita Thompson toast 20th anniversary of \u2018Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas\u2019 movie adaptation"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText DropCap\">Marking the 20th anniversary of the film adaptation of <a id=\"N0x219fa10N0x238e430:N0x219fa10N0x22e0838\" href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=8m662obIvhY\">&#8220;Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas,&#8221;<\/a> Aspen is toasting the late and legendary writer Hunter S. Thompson.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">His iconic tale of journalist Raoul Duke and attorney Dr. Gonzo&#8217;s darkly comic journey to the ugly heart of Nixon-era America was first published in 1971. The contemporary classic film adaptation by director Terry Gilliam, with Johnny Depp as Duke and Benicio Del Toro as his attorney \u2014 alongside a cavalcade of inspired cameo appearances, including Thompson himself \u2014 arrived in theaters in May 1998.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">Aspen Film is hosting an anniversary screening at the Wheeler Opera House tonight, followed by a Q&amp;A with Thompson&#8217;s wife, Anita.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">&#8220;This story is a journey that is about the &#8216;we,'&#8221; she said in a New Year&#8217;s Day interview at Owl Farm in Woody Creek. &#8220;About not trying to do everything on their own. That&#8217;s such an important message right now.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">On a bookshelf behind her in the living room sat a commemorative clapper board from the film shoot, signed to Hunter Thompson from Depp (who writes &#8220;Why have you cursed me?&#8221;), Del Toro (&#8220;\u2026and we have Magnums!&#8221;) and Gilliam (&#8220;We are all going down together \u2014 no survivors!&#8221;). A photo of the marquee at the film&#8217;s premiere at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival, inscribed by the author, is on a nearby shelf. Both are on view in a preserved Owl Farm compound that was the writer&#8217;s home for some four decades and that Anita Thompson now operates as a private museum, and where she is working to establish a residency program for writers and musicians.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">Proceeds from the anniversary screening will benefit Aspen Film and The Gonzo Foundation, also run by Anita Thompson, which funds scholarships for military veterans to attend Columbia University (the &#8220;Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas&#8221; author attended Columbia after his service in the U.S. Air Force).<\/p>\n<div id=\"single-mid-script\" class=\"p402_hide\">\n<h2>Recommended Stories For You<\/h2>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">Depp, in preparation for his role as the fictionalized Hunter, lived in the basement at Owl Farm in the spring of 1997. He stayed across the hall from what Thompson called &#8220;the war room,&#8221; the study where he&#8217;d meticulously polished &#8220;Vegas&#8221; \u2014 based on an actual trip to Sin City with attorney Oscar Zeta Acosta \u2014 after writing an initial draft in a Los Angeles hotel. The tales of Depp&#8217;s time embedded at Owl Farm have become the stuff of local lore in the two decades since. (Former Pitkin County Sheriff and &#8220;Kitchen Readings&#8221; co-author Bob Braudis will join Anita Thompson onstage at the Wheeler today to share some of his memories.)<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">The actor studied Thompson&#8217;s speech and mannerisms and received personal lessons in Thompson&#8217;s driving style \u2014 which was notoriously skilled but decidedly nontraditional \u2014 by whipping around Aspen in Thompson&#8217;s &#8220;Red Shark&#8221; convertible. Preparing his cinematic doppelganger, Thompson, a diligent self-archivist, also dug up hotel receipts and menus and unpublished notes from the actual Vegas trip for Depp to study. He loaned Depp the Red Shark for the film along with the clothes he wore in Vegas \u2014 his signature patchwork jacket and safari hat, Hawaiian shirts and a batch of TarGard cigarette holders. And Thompson, in the kitchen at Owl Farm, himself shaved Depp&#8217;s head down to a bald pate to match his own from the &#8220;Fear and Loathing&#8221; era to complete the actor&#8217;s transformation.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">Depp first made contact two years earlier during a 1995 visit to Aspen with then-girlfriend Kate Moss. The pair were drinking at the Woody Creek Tavern, the story goes, and asked \u2014 through a mutual Woody Creek friend \u2014 if they could meet Depp&#8217;s favorite living writer. Thompson made his way to the Tavern and greeted Depp by ceremoniously bopping him on the head with a cattle prod. The group then headed back to Owl Farm, where Depp detonated a Thompson-constructed bomb in the yard by firing a pistol at it. Thus, the pair&#8217;s enduring friendship and creative partnership was sealed.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">Months later, the pair of Kentucky natives attended a Louisville event honoring Thompson. The author was ceremoniously bequeathed a key to the city. Both he and Depp were made official Kentucky colonels. (Thompson thereafter referred to the actor as &#8220;Colonel Depp.&#8221;)<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">&#8220;No one has enough money to pay for the experience I&#8217;ve had on this movie,&#8221; Depp said in 1998 production notes for the film. &#8220;To be able to spend the amount of time I did with Hunter, and then to work with Terry, Benicio and the incredible company of actors and crew.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">Though not a box office hit, in the two decades since its premiere the film has attained cult classic status and has received a prestigious Criterion Collection release. Thompson&#8217;s literary legacy, meanwhile, has grown in stature in the 14 years since his death by suicide. Anita Thompson noted that recent years have brought a steady stream of dissertations, books and attention from academia. While his role as a political activist \u2014 both <a id=\"N0x219fa10N0x238e550:N0x219fa10N0x22e0ef8\" href=\"https:\/\/www.aspentimes.com\/entertainment\/exhibit-on-hunter-thompsons-1970-sheriff-campaign-begins-tour-at-aspen-historical-society\/\">here in Pitkin County from the 1970 &#8220;Freak Power&#8221;<\/a> campaign onward and <a id=\"N0x219fa10N0x238e5b0:N0x219fa10N0x22e0f88\" href=\"https:\/\/www.aspentimes.com\/entertainment\/in-freak-kingdom-a-professor-examines-the-political-hunter-s-thompson\/\">nationally against authoritarianism from the Nixon years<\/a> through the Bush eras \u2014 has been increasingly recognized.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">The film has provided a pop culture entry point to that work for young people.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">&#8220;After a writer dies, there&#8217;s no guarantee that their work will continue to live,&#8221; Anita Thompson said. &#8220;Anything to get a new generation or a new person introduced to Hunter&#8217;s work will make the world a better place. Once they read a page of Hunter&#8217;s work, they gain confidence \u2014 I&#8217;ve seen that over and over and over again. \u2026 Having this movie celebrated is an indication of that and it will introduce someone to Hunter that&#8217;s never been introduced before.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">The wild drug-fueled ride of the film version and its generous doses of booze and cocaine and acid (and amyls and ether and &#8220;uppers, downers, screamers, laughers,&#8221; etc.) may overshadow some of the incisive Nixon-era political messages from the book.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">&#8220;The movie is more about the lifestyle, but if you pay attention you&#8217;ll see that it&#8217;s about the activism and staying on your own path,&#8221; Anita Thompson said.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">The often-quoted &#8220;wave speech&#8221; from the book, for example, <a id=\"N0x219fa10N0x238e610:N0x219fa10N0x22e12e8\" href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=az36k4-Hc94\">gets reverent treatment in Gilliam&#8217;s film<\/a>. This poignant elegy for &#8217;60s idealism is narrated in voiceover by Depp&#8217;s Duke as he works on his typewriter in a dim-lit hotel room with The Youngbloods&#8217; &#8220;Let&#8217;s Get Together&#8221; playing in the background, with flashes of Flower Power-era San Francisco onscreen.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">How to handle the speech was among the last straws for Thompson before the dismissal of director Alex Cox from the film. Cox had been attached to &#8220;Fear and Loathing&#8221; before Gilliam signed on. After some rough-and-tumble creative battles with studios and producers \u2014 and a long, tortured development process that extended back to the 1970s with a revolving door of directors and actors \u2014 Cox and Thompson split over the treatment of the wave speech.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">&#8220;Alex Cox had a drug-addled view of the wave speech, which was not the point at all,&#8221; Anita Thompson recalled. &#8220;Hunter always called it &#8216;the crown jewel.&#8217; Cox didn&#8217;t get it. But Terry Gilliam did and Johnny did. It comes through.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">Gilliam, the visionary Monty Python alum whose pre-&#8220;Vegas&#8221; work included &#8220;Brazil&#8221; and &#8220;12 Monkeys,&#8221; brought the book&#8217;s hallucinatory visions to the big screen \u2014 miraculously capturing &#8220;Vegas&#8221; iconography from the bats overhead in the desert to the lizard people in a Vegas casino. The <a id=\"N0x219fa10N0x238e670:N0x219fa10N0x22e1528\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/1998\/05\/22\/movies\/film-review-a-devotedly-drug-addled-rampage-through-a-1971-vision-of-las-vegas.html\">original New York Times review<\/a> described the visual aesthetic as &#8220;splendiferous funhouse terror&#8221; and called the film &#8220;the closest sensory approximation of an acid trip ever achieved by a mainstream movie.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">&#8220;My guess is that today&#8217;s audience wants this film desperately,&#8221; Gilliam said upon the movie&#8217;s release. &#8220;I think they need it. That&#8217;s why I&#8217;ve been referring to &#8216;Fear and Loathing&#8217; as a cinematic enema for the &#8217;90s \u2014 just clean out the system.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">Thompson famously balked at attending the premiere at the Cannes Film Festival, writing to Depp to try to stop Gilliam and Universal from marketing it as a &#8220;drug movie&#8221; (&#8220;Airports are hard enough for me now,&#8221; Thompson wrote at the time).<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">Depp&#8217;s portrayal of Raoul Duke is an exaggerated caricature of Thompson, like artist Ralph Steadman&#8217;s illustrations for the book. Some of the added flourishes in the film \u2014 like lashing out at wait staff \u2014 bothered the author, Anita Thompson recalled.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">&#8220;Hunter loved Johnny but he was insulted by the way that Johnny depicted him,&#8221; she said, recalling with a chuckle: &#8220;Hunter said, &#8216;If somebody acted that way in my presence I&#8217;d hit them over the head with a chair.'&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">The author&#8217;s misgivings about the portrayal didn&#8217;t dull their friendship, however. It continued through Thompson&#8217;s death, when Depp funded Thompson&#8217;s funeral and fulfilled his wish to have his ashes fired out of a massive canon behind Owl Farm, and since then as Depp has purchased and preserved Thompson&#8217;s papers and personal archive (along with reprising his role as a fictionalized Thompson in the 2011 film version of Thompson&#8217;s novel &#8220;The Rum Diary&#8221;).<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">The author also appreciated the power of the film medium in popular culture, and the influence of having a generational talent like Depp bringing the fictionalized Thompson to life on the big screen.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">&#8220;He recognized Johnny&#8217;s influence on an entire generation and on people who wouldn&#8217;t have otherwise read Hunter&#8217;s work,&#8221; Anita Thompson recalled.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">This weekend she&#8217;ll be celebrating that influence, this one-of-a-kind film and the rare opportunity for the gonzo faithful to gather in Aspen to see it on a big screen.<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText\">&#8220;It&#8217;s great that they&#8217;re putting it on the silver screen again,&#8221; Anita said, &#8220;so that we can all watch it together as a community at the Wheeler.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"STND-STND BodyText Tagline\"><a href=\"mailto:atravers@aspentimes.com\">atravers@aspentimes.com<\/a><\/p>\n<div id=\"single-factbox-mobile\" class=\"visible-xs-block\" readability=\"20.874779541446\">\n<p class=\"[No paragraph style]\">IF YOU GO \u2026<\/p>\n<p class=\"[No paragraph style]\">What: \u2018Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas\u2019 20th Anniversary Benefit, presented by Aspen Film<\/p>\n<p class=\"[No paragraph style]\">Where: Wheeler Opera House<\/p>\n<p class=\"[No paragraph style]\">When: Friday, Jan. 4, 5:30 p.m. reception &amp; 7 p.m. screening<\/p>\n<p class=\"[No paragraph style]\">How much: $30\/screening; $75\/reception and screening; proceeds benefit Aspen Film and the Gonzo Foundation (limited tickets also available for a VIP 4 p.m. reception at Owl Farm; $300)<\/p>\n<p class=\"[No paragraph style]\">Tickets: Wheeler Opera House box office; <a id=\"N0x1f55b60N0x207b7a0:N0x1f55b60N0x1fab5e0\" href=\"https:\/\/www.aspenshowtix.com\/Online\/default.asp\">aspenshowtix.com<\/a><\/p>\n<p class=\"[No paragraph style]\">More info: The screening will be followed by a Q&amp;A with Anita Thompson and fomer Pitkin County Sheriff Bob Braudis; <a id=\"N0x1f55b60N0x207b800:N0x1f55b60N0x1fab6b8\" href=\"https:\/\/aspenfilm.org\/\">aspenfilm.org<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.aspentimes.com\/entertainment\/aspen-film-and-anita-thompson-toast-20th-anniversary-of-fear-and-loathing-in-las-vegas-movie-adaptation\/\" target=\"_blank\">via:: The Aspen Times<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Marking the 20th anniversary of the film adaptation of &#8220;Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas,&#8221; Aspen is toasting the late and legendary writer Hunter S. Thompson. His iconic tale of journalist Raoul Duke and attorney Dr. Gonzo&#8217;s darkly comic journey to the ugly heart of Nixon-era America was first published in 1971. The contemporary classic [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[49],"tags":[],"class_list":{"0":"post-2421797","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","6":"category-local-news"},"acf":[],"publishpress_future_action":{"enabled":false,"date":"2026-06-11 19:28:17","action":"change-status","newStatus":"draft","terms":[],"taxonomy":"category","extraData":[]},"publishpress_future_workflow_manual_trigger":{"enabledWorkflows":[]},"distributor_meta":false,"distributor_terms":false,"distributor_media":false,"distributor_original_site_name":"KSPN The Valley&#039;s Quality Rock","distributor_original_site_url":"https:\/\/alwaysmountaintime.com\/kspn","push-errors":false,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/alwaysmountaintime.com\/kspn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2421797","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/alwaysmountaintime.com\/kspn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/alwaysmountaintime.com\/kspn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alwaysmountaintime.com\/kspn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alwaysmountaintime.com\/kspn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2421797"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/alwaysmountaintime.com\/kspn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2421797\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/alwaysmountaintime.com\/kspn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2421797"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alwaysmountaintime.com\/kspn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2421797"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alwaysmountaintime.com\/kspn\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2421797"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}