The Last Movie
With Dennis Hopper, Stella Garcia, Julie Adams.
US, 1971, DCP, color, 108 min.
DCP source: Arbelos
Made the same year as Peter Bogdanovich’s The Last Picture Show, The Last Movie was only possible after the grand success of Dennis Hopper’s low-budget countercultural phenomenon Easy Rider. Given the green light to set up in a remote Peruvian village, the anarchic production helmed by one of Hollywood’s loosest cannons achieved its infamy for reveling in psychedelic, decadent danger wilder and more wanton than the Old West that Sam Fuller recreates in the film-within-a-film. With the lines between reality and fantasy blurring both behind and on screen, Hopper plays a stuntman who stays behind after a film wraps in Peru. Alternatively looking for love or gold, he watches the native villagers as they incorporate the rituals and iconography of both cinema and the West into their lives, using real bullets. In taking Hollywood’s money and fleeing into the heart of darkness, Hopper also earnestly points an inverted mirror toward his own benefactors, who had to witness their investment beautifully implode into a fragmented, feverish, funny nightmare—including startlingly disruptive cuts, character personality changes and nonlinearity within nonlinearity—that ultimately out-counters the counterculture. – Brittany Gravely
Bruce Conner created two different “trips” from the same rhythmically edited footage he shot between Mexico and his adopted hometown of San Francisco, each featuring the eponymous magic mushrooms—glimpsed only fleetingly in the earlier three-minute version of the film, but given haunting presence in the extended, step-printed version accompanied by music from frequent Conner collaborator, pioneering serial composer Terry Riley. – Haden Guest