FEAR AND LOATHING IN LAS VEGAS (1998) | Reaction & Commentary | I'll never be the same...

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 22 авг 2024
  • Head to squarespace.co... to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code shanellericcio
    This week we're watching FEAR AND LOATHING IN LAS VEGAS!! This was a weirdo wild ride -- I like to borrow from Wicked the musical in these moments, I can't say that I've been changed for the better, but I have been changed for good. Comment below, am I being a drama queen?
    Want to engage more? PO box below!
    PO Box 4390
    Burbank, CA 91503-4390
    PATREON INFORMATION!!
    See my full-length reaction on Patreon:
    / shanellericcio
    MY PODCAST:
    / @thestarvehiclepodcast
    Business Inquiries: theshanellericcio@gmail.com
    *AS ALWAYS* I do NOT claim ownership of any clips used in this watch. Used for entertainment purposes only
    Buying your gear from these links supports me as a creator:
    I receive a small commission on these purchases with the use of my link!
    My camera - Panasonic Lumix G7 - amzn.to/2UhbTbe
    Mic - amzn.to/2VWJHL9
    Lighting: I use a daylight bulb - amzn.to/36YLGAZ
    Paper Lantern: amzn.to/3lWFlR6
    Softbox Light: amzn.to/3SqGFYz
    Desk Tripod: amzn.to/3YVpJff
    Rainbow lamp: amzn.to/3rkG5xS
    My favorite desktop Drive: amzn.to/3Ilvxrj
    Extra Batteries: amzn.to/3ZcWswp
    Lens - I bought this secondhand to save! - amzn.to/3kj3Xmz

Комментарии • 795

  • @ryanswaynow
    @ryanswaynow Год назад +374

    FUN FACT: when Johnny is walking through the club during the flashback sequence, and says “There I was… there I am!” The guy he’s looking at is the actual real life, Hunter S Thompson.

    • @Me4u2c42
      @Me4u2c42 Год назад +7

      Was going to say this. Lol. 🤙🏽🤙🏽🖖🏼🤙🏽🤙🏽

    • @Paul77ozee
      @Paul77ozee Год назад +5

      Plus l think you see him in the old footage of Woodstock wearing the black jacket and l think standing near a heels angles member. He spent time with them for a story.

    • @ryanswaynow
      @ryanswaynow Год назад +8

      @@Paul77ozee yeah and he had the balls to stand up to their leader for kicking a dog and smacking a woman, so they almost beat him to death.

    • @Paul77ozee
      @Paul77ozee Год назад +2

      @@ryanswaynow it amazes me that The Rolling Stones manager hired the angels for security at one of there concerts. I think it was at Altamont.

    • @ryanswaynow
      @ryanswaynow Год назад +4

      @@Paul77ozee that’s definitely the concert where they were security and killed that dude. A lot of people consider that and the Manson murders the combo that ended the hippie era.

  • @LordVolkov
    @LordVolkov Год назад +260

    "I... think he's a good writer..."
    Hunter was an exceptional writer, with a very dark sense of humor and strong political views that he expresses with a savage eloquence. I highly recommend seeking out his work.

    • @harpermanVideo
      @harpermanVideo Год назад +10

      Best modern American writer. A G.O.A.T. for sure.

    • @GoodDocGonzo
      @GoodDocGonzo Год назад +3

      😢I miss Hunter

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov Год назад +16

      @@GoodDocGonzo He would have much to say about the current state of America...

    • @aaronlane1391
      @aaronlane1391 Год назад +7

      Fear and Loathing was my first HST book when I was about 13 lol (I read that Clockwork Orange and Catch 22 in the same summer- actually I think these books helped navigate the last couple years quite a bit) My favorite HST books are Hells Angels and The Curse of Lono.

    • @gregstephens
      @gregstephens Год назад +4

      Yes, I would say “exceptional” is not too much praise in the slightest. One of the finest American writers- and not using “American” to limit his talent is scope, but to emphasize one of his main topics.

  • @BulldogMack700rs
    @BulldogMack700rs Год назад +28

    "when does the bender stop" 2005 was the year Thompson died, he never stopped.

    • @potterj09
      @potterj09 Месяц назад +1

      It's never gonna stop man ... hop !!! .. like a bunny !!! 😆

  • @mithroch
    @mithroch Год назад +187

    Bill Murry also played Hunter S Thompson in Where the Buffalo Roam... but Depp absolutely nails the portrayal... right down to his speaking cadence

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov Год назад +9

      He spent time with Hunter to capture his mannerisms, tone, and cadence. It really is a great performance!

    • @gordonhaire9206
      @gordonhaire9206 Год назад +9

      Bill Murray only plays one role: Bill Murray.

    • @yournamehere6002
      @yournamehere6002 Год назад +13

      @@gordonhaire9206 Bill Murray was good as Thompson, he too spent time with Hunter

    • @galaxytractor
      @galaxytractor Год назад +3

      I think the Depp character, (Hunter) was just making a commentary (from his perspective) as a drugged out writer, on what he viewed America to be. I don't think that the movie has any real message other than that. Much of what he says sounds intellectual because he's a 'writer'. The only real message (if this movie contains such a thing) is that drugs (like many endeavors) may make for interesting adventures, but that doesn't make them 'good'.

    • @Ahzpayne
      @Ahzpayne Год назад

      Give me a home, where the buffalo roam...and I'll show you a house full of shit.

  • @adamdarmstaedter1256
    @adamdarmstaedter1256 Год назад +26

    The part in the casino when the carpet is morphing is one of the most accurate depictions of tripping on acid that I have seen in a movie.

    • @regularsizeruss3874
      @regularsizeruss3874 Год назад +1

      Right!?! The mumbling too.

    • @stevencoardvenice
      @stevencoardvenice 7 месяцев назад

      Yea. Both mushrooms and acid begin with illusions like that, when you're starting to feel it. Carpets and Walls flowing and breathing

    • @potterj09
      @potterj09 Месяц назад

      "Free lunch, final wisdom, total coverage!"

  • @jrobwoo688
    @jrobwoo688 Год назад +63

    I am sooooo here for this! “Too weird to live, too rare to die.”

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov Год назад +5

      The book/movie is endlessly quotable in the weirdest way. "We can't stop here! This is bat country!"

    • @sammybear7100
      @sammybear7100 Год назад +3

      @@LordVolkov Don't judge your taco by its price

    • @rickwelch8464
      @rickwelch8464 Год назад +5

      "I have never been able to properly explain myself in this climate"

    • @tommcewan7936
      @tommcewan7936 Год назад +3

      "A high-powered mutant of some kind never even considered for mass production."

    • @daz97
      @daz97 6 месяцев назад +1

      TELL ME ABOUT THE GOLF SHOES 😂😂😂

  • @christopherconard2831
    @christopherconard2831 Год назад +21

    1) Yes, he was an incredible writer. He is also credited with creating a style known as Gonzo Journalism. The goal being to join and immerse yourself in a group to the point of becoming one of them, then writing from that point of view.
    2) I'd hate to be his neighbor. He was President Ford's neighbor in Colorado. He would often send pictures of Ford and the Secret Service to them. He took the pictures through a scope on a rifle.
    Different times.

    • @Research0digo
      @Research0digo 5 месяцев назад

      His whacko neighbor accused Thompson of shooting at his cattle. A real firefight ensued. Score settled.

  • @dennismason3740
    @dennismason3740 Год назад +70

    Depp is playing Hunter S. Thompson, a brilliant if drunk journalist for Rolling Stone. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas originally appeared in segments in the magazine. I read it every few years and it has me howling. Depp probably does a nice audio version in YT. Depp's portrayal of Hunter is pretty good. The movie is basically based on a real journalistic adventure - it's best to not underestimate the veracity of the scenes.

    • @NoActuallyGo-KCUF-Yourself
      @NoActuallyGo-KCUF-Yourself Год назад +7

      "Drunk" is an understatement.

    • @jnagarya519
      @jnagarya519 Год назад

      Drunk!? He wasn't stingy in his use of alcohol, but he was 'way beyond that in drug use.

    • @stevencoardvenice
      @stevencoardvenice 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@jnagarya519
      His bread and butter was liquor and coke. His daily routine. The psychedelics were more for special nights

  • @d4mdcykey
    @d4mdcykey Год назад +16

    To be honest, that "bender" lasted several _decades._
    Hunter was not a normal man, he was equal parts brilliant and tragic.
    Long live the memory of Gonzo.

  • @CChissel
    @CChissel Год назад +28

    Big Hunter Thompson fan here, read all his books and watched all the movies based on them. This is my favorite movie of any book he’s written. Depp does a phenomenal job at portraying Thompsons alter ego and just has a stunning performance overall. Love this movie so much and glad you’re experiencing it. Basically he looks at America as a corrupt and adulterous place that is trying very hard to hide its true nature, under the guise of “the American dream” which never really existed, at least not anymore. It’s all a lie, a big scam and we are all doomed lol but we have to fit in or else it will be even worse for us

  • @MrDootDali
    @MrDootDali 11 месяцев назад +6

    Hunter Thompson's "watermark" written observation makes perfect sense to me, and IMHO is among the greatest moments of American literature.

  • @michaelbuhl4250
    @michaelbuhl4250 Год назад +9

    I got to see Hunter S. Thompson speak at Vanderbilt University back in the '80s. It was just as strange as you would expect. He started off coherent, but it devolved into him pacing the stage listing off dangerous animals and saying he was going to be taking away by rich Greeks.

  • @srottfaen
    @srottfaen Год назад +51

    Lets just say that "reality" is a nebulous concept in this movie.

    • @euchongo4240
      @euchongo4240 Год назад +3

      And in reality

    • @Enrique-Garcia
      @Enrique-Garcia Год назад +2

      "Reality" is probably the one word Hunter couldn't spell. On purpose.

  • @dudermcdudeface3674
    @dudermcdudeface3674 Год назад +48

    When he describes his experiences in the decade before, the optimism and hope, then says "you can almost see the high water mark" where it all started to go wrong...the clarity and sadness in that moment are the heart of the story. Through most of their chaotic tripping, there doesn't seem to be any purpose behind it, but that story tells us it's a kind of wake for dead dreams that he still mourns.

    • @DjDown1984
      @DjDown1984 Год назад +3

      One of the greatest dialogues in history

    • @guitarattempter71
      @guitarattempter71 Год назад +2

      It's because Hunter already knew that the American Dream was dead. It just took the rest of us 50 years to catch up.

    • @dudermcdudeface3674
      @dudermcdudeface3674 Год назад +1

      @@guitarattempter71 It's a little more complicated than that.

    • @jnagarya519
      @jnagarya519 Год назад

      Thompson did kill himself.

    • @enotsnavdier6867
      @enotsnavdier6867 Год назад +2

      ​@@guitarattempter71The American Dream never truly existed tbh

  • @jenniferdarling6
    @jenniferdarling6 Год назад +15

    Growing up on this book we were nervous when this released but it holds up to the aesthetic and ideas of Thompson

    • @Glitch_Wizard
      @Glitch_Wizard Год назад +1

      Totally understandable. Of all the books that exist this one is near the top of the list of ones id be nervous about a movie adaptation for lol.

  • @Shawnie_G
    @Shawnie_G Год назад +16

    So Glad you did this! Hunter S Thompson was such a unique human!

  • @sample.text.
    @sample.text. 6 месяцев назад +3

    Johnny actually lived with Hunter S. Thompson for a while. They had a great friendship.
    Just two kindred spirits who happened to find one another in their lifetime.
    His mannerisms, while exaggerated in the movie, are actually very similar to how Hunter was.

  • @Rumblepak_5
    @Rumblepak_5 Год назад +13

    The scene of him checking into the hotel at the beginning is the best portrayal of an acid trip. Reminds me of the time I was trying to check out at Toys R Us just as the acid hit me, the cashier sounded like she was speaking jibberish and it took much longer that it should have to buy a Star Wars toy to play with while I was high.

    • @stevencoardvenice
      @stevencoardvenice 7 месяцев назад +1

      Everything is the best portrayal. I don't even know where to begin. Masterpiece movie.
      Sounds like your trips have been relatively mild. Unfortunately I've gone to that wild animal dimension like benicio in the tub, etc. Took too much one time by accident. I've been with many friends who've gotten like that, over the years. Werewolf mode. Lots of screaming, puking, rolling around on the floor

  • @johntyson
    @johntyson Год назад +46

    This movie nails the visual and mental mind F of a strong acid trip. Much of my misspent teen years were under the influence of LSD and trying different experiences while on LSD. Standing in line for an hour to ride a roller coaster was something I’ll never forget. Riding the roller coaster was a relief after standing in line with dozens of strangers.

    • @shadyd2544
      @shadyd2544 Год назад +4

      Holy shit I couldn't imagine going on a freaking roller coaster while on that stuff. I barely have the courage to leave my room on that stuff.

    • @LordToddtastic666
      @LordToddtastic666 Год назад +5

      LSD (among other things) is the reason most of the 1990's is a blur for me. I had a blast, but don't remember a hell of a lot of it

    • @Harv72b
      @Harv72b Год назад +9

      LSD brings back three primary memories for me:
      1) Seeing Silence of the Lambs in the theater on acid (do not recommend)
      2) Going through a haunted amusement park on acid (sort of recommend)
      3) Dropping acid in my friend's basement bedroom, putting "Kashmir" on single track repeat on his stereo, and then going upstairs where, once the drug kicked in, the mere thought of returning to the basement to make *that goddamned song stop playing over and over and over again* was an impossibility (do not, under *ANY* circumstances, recommend--I _still_ can't listen to that song, more than 30 years later)
      In short, what doesn't kill you gives you interesting stories to leave in RUclips comments.

    • @johntyson
      @johntyson Год назад +2

      @@shadyd2544 Lol! I actually passed out going through a loop on one roller coaster. Regaining consciousness while on acid while still riding a roller coaster is a sensation I’ll never forget.

    • @johntyson
      @johntyson Год назад +2

      @@Harv72b Love it. You are my people.

  • @matthewfike4491
    @matthewfike4491 Год назад +24

    Hunter S. was an incredibly interesting fellow. His send off after death alone is worth reading about.

  • @TheNeonRabbit
    @TheNeonRabbit 6 месяцев назад +5

    About the flags:
    The full title of the book upon which this movie is based is "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream"

  • @themadpizzler6081
    @themadpizzler6081 Год назад +21

    Terry Gilliam is a genius of atmosphere, this, "FIsher King", "Adv. Baron Munchausen".... they're all beautiful movies.

    • @carm3d
      @carm3d Год назад +6

      Brazil

    • @n0tk0sher
      @n0tk0sher Год назад +1

      ​@@carm3d I 2nd that! My favorite.

    • @LordVolkov
      @LordVolkov Год назад +2

      Brothers Grimm is such a beautiful gothic fantasy and wildly underrated among Terry's films.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Месяц назад

      _Jabberwocky_

  • @hdtv00
    @hdtv00 Год назад +25

    This movie has the GREATEST audio commentary on the dvd from criterion collection in the history of movies. They go to Hunter S Thompson's Owl Ranch and record him watching it. It's insanity.

    • @Theomite
      @Theomite Год назад

      It takes all of his daughters to keep him involved and coherent. Amazing.

  • @ianrastall
    @ianrastall Год назад +18

    The book is really what it's all about. That's why the movie got made, and why Sid & Nancy's Alex Cox was part of the project. It's a counterculture classic. Hunter believed in "gonzo journalism", i.e. making his own life the story. So it's all true, BTW. That's why it's not just, "That's one way to do it," with the bathtub scene. His lawyer had taken a whole sheet of acid and was trying to commit suicide, but Hunter threw a grapefruit into the tub instead of the radio.

  • @terryhughes7349
    @terryhughes7349 Год назад +14

    If you watch historical video, Depp absolutely nailed the role. Just a fun film. Great reaction Shanelle! After watching the film, i always order a Singapore Sling for my last drink.
    Carrie Fischer convinced her mother (Debbie Reynolds) to make a cameo in the film

  • @jrobwoo688
    @jrobwoo688 Год назад +15

    Natural Born Killers directed by Oliver Stone. Story by Quentin Tarantino, but highly reworked for the screen by Oliver Stone. The visuals alone, make the film definitely worth a watch.

  • @neillio
    @neillio Год назад +14

    Terry Gilliam is a very interesting filmmaker! Hope you get to check out more of his stuff on the channel because he really has a unique style and vibe.

  • @Paul77ozee
    @Paul77ozee Год назад +2

    My favourite part is always the guy who walks in on Depp and Flea. Just the way he looks at the door while smoking and sitting at the bar, wondering what’s happening behind that door.

  • @bmatt2626
    @bmatt2626 Год назад +7

    As a drug person this movie was validating, and as a former drug person this movie is validating.

  • @peterschmidt4348
    @peterschmidt4348 Год назад +5

    Please watch "All Quiet on the Western Front" (2022). Winner of 4 Oscars.

  • @GMontag
    @GMontag Год назад +6

    Oh man, if Monty Python is the only thing you know Terry Gilliam for, you're in for a treat with the rest of his filmography. Time Bandits, Brazil, 12 Monkeys, The Fisher King, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen are all amazing films.

  • @Scumdrops420
    @Scumdrops420 Год назад +3

    Hunter S Thomson is one of my favorite writers, and Terry Gilliam (Pronounced Gilly-am) is my favorite director. Every movie he makes is unique. So this movie holds a special place in my heart. I catch something new each time. I wish you'd have shown the scene where Johnny's Hunter meets the real Hunter.

  • @donkfail1
    @donkfail1 Год назад +10

    I thought Hunter S. Thompson and his writing would be impossible to depict, but this is fantastically close.
    If you aren't familiar with Terry Gilliam; do watch more of his movies. I recommend Brazil (1985), 12 Monkeys (1995) and The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus (2009).

    • @jnagarya519
      @jnagarya519 Год назад +1

      The film is better than the book.

  • @gluuuuue
    @gluuuuue Год назад +6

    Thompson is actually saying something, but I do think a lot of it is steeped in the context of that entire cultural experience of that time in history.
    I was born in the '70s, heard my parents (who themselves were at best only into the peace movement) tell stories about that whole age, and even saw older family and strangers still deeply into or affected by it, and even then it's difficult for me to fathom how real all that was or how far some people, like Hunter S. Thompson, went down those rabbitholes.
    I tend to love this sort of experiential filmmaking, and most of Gilliam's films.

  • @jakemcnulty7510
    @jakemcnulty7510 Год назад +35

    Hey Shanelle, love the reaction as always. I hope this leads to you checking out more Terry Gilliam films on the channel. These would include "Time Bandits" (1981), "The Adventures of Baron Munchaussen" (1988), "The Fisher King" (1991), "12 Monkeys" (1995), "Tideland" (2005), "The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassas" (2009), "The Man Who Killed Don Quixote" (2018) and my personal favourite "Brazil" (1985). All of them worth a watch, and I promise you'll not regret it.
    P.S. I don't mean to be 'nit-picky' or anything, but it is pronounced "Gil-Lee-Um". Just thought you should know.

    • @pumkinheadfanvhsforever6087
      @pumkinheadfanvhsforever6087 Год назад +3

      Don't leave out that he was the 6th member of Monty Python! He was behind all the animation for the show(as well as acting in some of the skits and all the movies). Love Brazil!

    • @TheJamieRamone
      @TheJamieRamone Год назад +6

      I can vouch for Time Bandits and 12 Monkeys.

    • @TOKYOTOYBANZAI
      @TOKYOTOYBANZAI Год назад +3

      Those are all fantastic! Brazil is my personal favofrite, but I also love Baron Munchaussen, Time Bandits and especially - The Fisher King (a close second next to Brazil).

    • @tejoe13
      @tejoe13 Год назад +1

      Time Bandits is a must watch.

  • @williambailey1206
    @williambailey1206 Год назад +7

    Yeah!!!! Just woke up from being sick for almost a week, go on RUclips and having one of my favorite reactors doing another one of my favorite movies I had the privilege of seeing in theatres. Thanx Shanelle. Nothing better than waking up with a smile.

  • @vincentkrommenhoek7431
    @vincentkrommenhoek7431 Год назад +2

    The scene where they convince security that they need to see the show and behave. Then get kicked out after a few seconds dying of laughter was golden. Awesome movie and a bit to insane for most people. The visuals while on drugs are pretty on point.

  • @svenpoletka5236
    @svenpoletka5236 Год назад +3

    The bender ends precisely when it means to, never sooner nor later!

  • @ryanswaynow
    @ryanswaynow Год назад +2

    “When do you throw in the towel on the bender?”
    I asked myself that 10 years ago. I’ll let you know when I finally do.

  • @S.E.Walker
    @S.E.Walker Год назад +4

    I did not like or understand this movie the first time I watched it. Now, two decades and a lot of drugs later, it is one of my favorite films and it keeps getting funnier every single time I see it. (And that monologue about the wave cresting is unreasonably brilliant). So happy you gave this bonkers movie some much-needed reaction love.

    • @stevencoardvenice
      @stevencoardvenice 7 месяцев назад

      Exactly. In high school i felt it was the worst movie I had ever seen in a theatre. Exhausting.
      But I like you, a few years later, after experiencing the fear and the loathing myself, I realized its one of the best movies ever made. And definitely the funniest movie ever made.
      One time me and 3 friends/roommates drank beers and ate shrooms one night and put this on. I've never laughed like that in my life. We were all crying. Especially the elevator scene, and the bath tub scene. We were all vibing with what was going on on-screen, and just kept laughing and laughing. Then I went and puked in my room around 4am, because all the beer fluids and shrooms had confused my stomach
      Another good one to watch if you're trippin is dumb and dumber with Jim Carrey and Jeff daniels.

  • @matthill5426
    @matthill5426 Год назад +2

    Fun movie trivia here: Johnny Depp actually let the real Hunter S. Thompson shave his head into male pattern baldness for this role, with a straight razor. Measure of trust right there, letting a stoned AF Hunter at your scalp with a blade!
    Depp and Thompson became friends during the making of this movie, and Depp even payed for Thompson's remains to be disposed of after his death according to his wishes: he was cremated, and his ashes shot into the sky on a rocket. Fitting end for a space cowboy like Thompson, I'd say. :)

  • @XXXScorpionXXX
    @XXXScorpionXXX Год назад +1

    The fact that you were clueless as to what you were getting yourself into makes it all the more better 😂

  • @robertlopez628
    @robertlopez628 Год назад +2

    When you're on a binge you're just going from one drug hit to another without noticing or caring about the outside world, you think you're fine but you're not. This movie replicates this experience. Flashing bits of memory between drugs usage. I love this movie.

  • @ebaker1968
    @ebaker1968 Год назад +10

    Watch a documentary on Hunter S. Thompson. It'll give you some perspective on Johnny Depp's performance in this film. He really nails it. A lot of the dialogue in the movie is directly from the book.

  • @TheLyleB
    @TheLyleB Год назад +1

    Walking into Circus Circus with their heads full of ether like the village drunkards in some early Irish novel is one of the best scenes ever put to film.

  • @johnrussell-bk7lv
    @johnrussell-bk7lv Год назад +2

    I have done acid many times and I have been to Vegas and NEVER shall the two meet in my life. If you have any morals and the concept of virtue matters to you at all then Vegas is a nightmare even when sober. The strip is a tiny beacon of opulence and mindless excess surrounded by miles and miles of abject human misery in every direction. It's a perfect encapsulation of everything that is evil and depraved about unfettered capitalism and the absolute rejection of any and all ancient wisdom in favour of slobbering, wanton greed and lust. Hunter Thompson had a weird ability to explore the depths of such things with drugs and intellect without his entire soul devolving into a primal scream. I'm not sure I have that kind of strength, but I'm grateful that someone once did.

  • @mithroch
    @mithroch Год назад +5

    Fear and Loathing is about what became of the 60s hippie dream... why it wasn't sustainable... and the forces that corrupted it.

  • @StarkRG
    @StarkRG Год назад +1

    "Is it real or is it fantasy"
    Yyyeeesss?
    This is one of those movies that take repeated viewings to really understand.

  • @cbretschneider
    @cbretschneider Год назад +7

    I really hope you watch more Terry Gilliam films. He always goes for wacky camera work and absurd storytelling. Nobody portrays madness like he does. Brazil, Time Bandits, The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, 12 Monkeys, The Imagenarium of Dr. Parnassus, Tideland... The Fisher King is my personal favorite starring Robin Williams & Jeff Bridges with Amanda Plummer, Mercedes Rueh & Michael Jeter. Extra special bonus points if you read the Arthurian legend of Parsifal too. 🥂

    • @lisathuban8969
      @lisathuban8969 Год назад +1

      I absolutely LOVE Time Bandits, Adventures of Baron Munchausen, and, even though it's hard to watch, the excellent Brazil.

  • @TheNeonParadox
    @TheNeonParadox Год назад +3

    Of all the movies made about Hunter's journalistic endeavors, I can't believe nobody has made a movie about his time with the Hell's Angels.

  • @protovision2010
    @protovision2010 Год назад +4

    Fantastic movie + reaction! "A high-powered mutant of some kind never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die."
    Gilliam's film's are great, and a lot deal with descending into madness. Check out "Brazil (1985)", and "The Fisher King" (1991), with an AMAZING performance by Robin Williams, and an Oscar for Mercedes Ruehl 👍

  • @user-of5xb3ki4c
    @user-of5xb3ki4c Год назад +1

    The "Tilty cam" is called a Dutch Angle and it's used to signify that "something isn't right" or "All isn't as it seems" in a scene.

  • @ChiliConCarnage
    @ChiliConCarnage Год назад +3

    I was already tripping balls when I saw this movie for the first time. It was an experience, to say the least.

  • @martinbraun1211
    @martinbraun1211 Год назад +9

    PLEASE give STAR TREK a chance. 🖖

  • @09Raffytaffy
    @09Raffytaffy Год назад +2

    Oh boy...! Went a bit crazy back in the day over Thompson! Here come the flashbacks lol R.I.P. Hunter. If any of you feel the notion to delve into this further. Take a deep breath and don't dive too deep!

  • @silversasquatch79
    @silversasquatch79 Год назад +2

    missed opportunity to end the video with "as your attorney I advise you to like, comment, and subscribe" 🙂

  • @JonnyMoto
    @JonnyMoto Год назад +6

    There's always "Where the Buffalo Roam" with Bill Murray. It's not the same story but he plays as Hunter S. Thompson as well.

  • @bazil83
    @bazil83 Год назад +1

    10:42 "things have *mescalated"... eyyyyyy, I'm here all week.

  • @AZURAKAZ
    @AZURAKAZ Год назад +1

    Saw it completely sober and had trouble finding my way out of the theater afterwards.

  • @eugeneodonnell4680
    @eugeneodonnell4680 Год назад +1

    Johnny shaved his head right in the pattern of Hunter Thompson's baldness. To prepare for the role he spent about six weeks living with Hunter. They became close friends until Thompson died in about 2006.

  • @GKinslayer
    @GKinslayer Год назад +1

    The way they did Depp's hair is he was friends with the person that wrote the book - Hunter S Thompson. And it was Thompson himself that shaved Depp's hair for this role. Also if you dig camera angles Gilliam's movie Brazil is chock full of them.

  • @likecrazyhorse
    @likecrazyhorse Год назад +2

    That hippie licking acid off Johnny's sleeve is Flea from Red Hot Chili Peppers

  • @myfriendisaac
    @myfriendisaac Год назад +2

    9:50 I love that 🤷🏾‍♂️😂 The film is a visual acid trip that just escalates continually!!!

  • @3DJapan
    @3DJapan Год назад +2

    Funny thing is, it's a pretty accurate portrayal of Hunter S. Thompson.

  • @harrydoupe9315
    @harrydoupe9315 Год назад +1

    Another fun fact: I saw Debbie Reynolds in Las Vegas when I was in my teens. Lucky.

  • @christopherdeguilio6375
    @christopherdeguilio6375 Год назад +1

    One of my personal all time top five.
    I was 23 and working on Cape Cod for the summer and living in a tiny shack on the beach with three of my friends when this movie came out.
    We had all read Hunter S Thompson in college and were fans and we saw this movie at least once a week for it's entire theatrical run ...in various states of mind....
    and with various company... it'll just always bring me back to that summer

  • @bigjay123
    @bigjay123 Год назад +3

    I love love this movie not just the shots but the acting and the jokes and the whole thing I just love it

  • @VizEffects-MorphVideos-to7yx
    @VizEffects-MorphVideos-to7yx Месяц назад +1

    I've seen this movie many times... I guess my mind overlooked the crazy camera angles, or the flags. You're awesome at pointing out the details I missed.
    Cheers!

  • @ll7868
    @ll7868 Год назад +3

    Easily one of my Top 10 All-Time, Any Genre Movies. Terry Gilliam is a freakin' genius, even as a kid his animations on Monty Python were my favourite part of the show, hilariously trippy. As an adult they were even better when stoned.

  • @carm3d
    @carm3d Год назад +1

    I got heavy motion sickness when I saw this in the theater; probably because we were seated in the front.
    Benicio DelToro gained weight for this role
    When they were kicked out of the restaurant at the start of the movie, there was an angel with a flaming sword guarding the entrance. This is a reference to when Adam and Eve were removed from the Garden of Eden. It was guarded by an angel with a flaming sword. Basically the restaurant saying, "And stay out!"
    The dinosaurs looked just like the illustrations in the book.

  • @xotmatrix
    @xotmatrix Год назад

    I like that I can say "yes" to every one of Shanelle's pre-watch speculations about this movie.

  • @mypl510
    @mypl510 Год назад +4

    Watched in the theater and some folks actually walked out on it. The rest of us agreed it was, and is, a masterpiece!

  • @RaceSimCentral
    @RaceSimCentral Год назад +2

    I had to read the book to really appreciate this. I couldn't even make out anything they were saying lol It helped a ton. It really just seems like a stream of thoughts, non stop, crazy.

  • @Im_The_Dude
    @Im_The_Dude Год назад +1

    I have always said, as someone who used to partake heavily in substances that are not of a legal nature, that the pace and overall feeling of this movie is the most accurate representation of an experience on “too much” of most drugs I enjoyed. Anxiety, confusion, hilarity and fright. All at once. Fantastic movie.

  • @namco003
    @namco003 Год назад

    My work had me in Vegas over a year ago for 8 months(3 weeks there 1 week home), and I made it a point to watch this movie the first day I was there and I pretty much just let it run when I went to bed. The place I was working at is in the movie, but it's the scene where he drives past the Welcome to Vegas sign, and the camera pans and stops, that area is now a huge shopping area, like an outdoor mall, but in the movie it was being constructed. I'm a huge Python fan, and would watch flying Circus when closing up at Blockbuster, and since Terry Gilliam directed it, I watch it. Loved it so much.

  • @muffinamy83
    @muffinamy83 Год назад +1

    Hunter S. Thompson. Yeah, he's "a pretty good writer." Spit-take when you said that! 😆

  • @kinokind293
    @kinokind293 Год назад +2

    What else is there to say? Gilliam is a genius - look at his other work. As someone once said in Orson Welles' obituary, "if ever someone should have just been given money and told to go make movies", it's Gilliam (pronounced: gill-E-um). You should read some of Hunter Thompson's writing - A gifted writer and indescribable weirdo. His Rolling Stones articles are legendary. If one were going to only watch one Gilliam movie, I'd say "Brazil". When the studio wanted to change the end of it for American audiences, Gilliam told them "then we won't release it in America". They relented. An artist beyond compare.

  • @kevinramsey417
    @kevinramsey417 Год назад +4

    Terry Gilliam was by far the perfect director for this movie. I simply couldn't take one of those funhouse mirrors if I were that wasted.

  • @anthonyleecollins9319
    @anthonyleecollins9319 Год назад +3

    Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas is a very powerful book. I read it when it was a series in Rolling Stone, before it was in book form. Well worth reading.
    The keys to the movie (IMHO) are the Dr. Johnson quote at the beginning, and the "wave speech."

  • @Scallycowell
    @Scallycowell 5 месяцев назад

    The truest thing about this movie is The Fear. You get it during the comedown of a super heavy dose of trip. Anxiety spikes, time slows to a crawl, minutes feel like hours, and all you can do is ride it out.

  • @NoActuallyGo-KCUF-Yourself
    @NoActuallyGo-KCUF-Yourself Год назад +1

    If anyone can make you feel like you're tripping, it's Terry Gilliam.

  • @Roofers-Nail-Hardest
    @Roofers-Nail-Hardest 4 месяца назад

    This movie put all kinds of questions in my head when I watched it as an adolescent in 98. The answers to the questions almost killed me. Looking back, it was worth it.

  • @markmcgee2417
    @markmcgee2417 Год назад

    The little person carrying the phone to Hunter was also in Where The Buffalo Roam another film based on Hunter S. Thompson with Bill Murray portraying Hunter.

  • @AlanCanon2222
    @AlanCanon2222 Год назад

    I regularly play guitar in Hunter's old neighborhood in Louisville, and I'm happy that we unleashed him upon the world. Louisville is still the sort of insanely creative place that spawns Mr Thompson's kind. I heard a story of someone who happened to be at some big shindig in northeastern Jefferson County, with plenty of old Louisville money rubbing elbows with new. Hunter Thompson pulled up in a golf cart -- on the road, mind you -- and scooped up a couple of people for a joyride back to some other event back where he'd come from....

  • @radwolf76
    @radwolf76 Год назад

    I remember that at the time this came out, I heard a story about Depp preparing to play the role. Since it was based on a real person, he had asked Hunter S. Thompson if he could shadow him for two weeks to pick up his mannerisms and vocal idiosyncrasies. After the first week, Hunter handed over his personal cellphone to Depp, letting him answer all his calls from friends and family for him, while listening in to be ready to take the phone back form Johnny if the actor said something that he actually wouldn't have said. No one who called that second week realized they were not talking to the real Thompson.

  • @robynmontgomery9826
    @robynmontgomery9826 Год назад

    I've seen this movie a forgotten number of times and have yet to be adequately prepared for the red salmon scene.

  • @potterj09
    @potterj09 Месяц назад

    "I got all the makings right here .... all I need is a place to cook !!!"

  • @hashtagPoundsign
    @hashtagPoundsign Год назад +1

    If you haven’t seen them, I recommend in no particular order:
    “Colossus: The Forbin Project” (1970),
    “Primer” (2004),
    “Bagdad Cafe” (1987),
    “Explorers” (1985),
    “The 51st State” (2001),
    “Falling down” (1993),
    “Matchstick Men” (2003),
    “Super Mario Bros.” (1993),
    and lastly in this list
    “Spawn” (1997)

  • @thomassantillan2194
    @thomassantillan2194 Год назад +1

    "Do I have to try acid?"
    Most people should, at least once.

  • @roryphares6192
    @roryphares6192 Год назад +2

    My uncle made this film, he’s a key grip. He welded a frame on the car for the driving scenes.

  • @nicholasbielik7156
    @nicholasbielik7156 Год назад +1

    Herman Melville’s novel The Confidence Man identified the idea of The United States as a con in 1857. Its an idea that each generation has to come to terms with. We’re so good at selling the dream that it’s hard for us to see through it to the banal and unpleasant reality.

  • @manuelvillacana9284
    @manuelvillacana9284 10 месяцев назад +2

    My favorite movie with the actor who played the police officer would be silver bullet by Stephen King.

  • @apatternedhorizon
    @apatternedhorizon Год назад +2

    Read the book. Then read The Rum Diary.
    Look up gonzo journalism. It's basically writing in a first person stream of consciousness style with some hyperbole and that's what this is.
    Johnny spent a lot of time with Hunter to get his mannerisms and way of speaking down pat. And then when Hunter killed himself, johnny funded a cannon to shoot Hunter's ashes into the sky out of a giant gonzo fist because that's what he wanted.
    Hunter shaved Johnny's head. There's a famous picture.
    The guy in the bathroom was Flea from RHCP.
    Buy the ticket, Take the ride.
    Another Freak in the Freak Kingdom.
    Too weird to live, Too rare to die.

  • @pkunberger9287
    @pkunberger9287 Год назад

    “Heightened reality”. That’s one way to describe it 😂

  • @m.pieterse3785
    @m.pieterse3785 Год назад +1

    Holy shit girl, i just learned you're a comedian. I thought you looked familiar. Thanks for keeping it real. Real. Great content!

  • @robovike
    @robovike Год назад +1

    It blows my mind that the guy who directed this drug-fueled felony-gathering film is the same one who helped the little people and the kid defeat Napoleon, demons and the Devil itself (Terry Gilliam, Time Bandits).

  • @mindcrome
    @mindcrome Год назад

    17:59 Thompson's line about North Las Vegas is spot on "North Vegas is where you go when you've fucked up one to many times on the Strip." I grew up and still live in North Las Vegas.

  • @OneThousandHomoDJs
    @OneThousandHomoDJs Год назад +1

    5:30 -- the character was based on a real lawyer, a Chicano who was friends with Hunter, despite HST being a journalist. Oscar Zeta Acosta
    was the real guy's name, and he was a serious dude.

    • @OneThousandHomoDJs
      @OneThousandHomoDJs Год назад +1

      In May 1974, Acosta disappeared while traveling in Mazatlán, Sinaloa, Mexico.[2][4] His son, Marco Acosta, believes that he was the last person to talk to his father. Acosta telephoned his son from Mazatlán, telling him that he was "about to board a boat full of white snow." Marco is later quoted in reference to his father's disappearance: "The body was never found, but we surmise that probably, knowing the people he was involved with, he ended up mouthing off, getting into a fight, and getting killed."[11]
      In 1977, Thompson's investigation of Acosta's disappearance, titled "The Banshee Screams For Buffalo Meat," was published in Rolling Stone.[12] According to Thompson, Acosta was a powerful attorney and spokesman, but suffered from an addiction to amphetamines and had a predilection for LSD. Thompson wrote that he believed Acosta was either murdered by drug dealers or was the victim of a political assassination.[2] Others have speculated that Acosta overdosed or suffered a nervous breakdown during his trip.[4]

  • @clarenceworley3714
    @clarenceworley3714 Год назад

    Hunters "attorney" in the film was an actual attorney and activist from LA. His real name is Oscar Zeta Acosta and went missing while visiting Mexico in the 70s. He was presumed dead and Hunter later wrote his obituary.

  • @nativepoet80
    @nativepoet80 4 месяца назад

    One of my all-time favorite movies and one of my all-time favorite authors! I was able to see this in 1998 when it first came out while being on LSD