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puce puce
puce Breakfast with Hunter
Wayne Ewing  sortie février 2004

I’ve watched this DVD three times in 49 Hours now. Y’know, once as it is. Then with the extras. Then with commentary..(Commentary by Director/producer; Wayne Ewing and partly, by the star of the show himself, who leaves half way through it)…

And…well. It is a lovely, exceedingly-watchable film. Goes down smooth but satisfying. No fat on it...if anything it leaves me wanting more. This film lingers in the palate of your heart and mind long after it’s over.

And yet it’s such an straightforward and unadorned piece. The camera work reminds me of the photographer William Eggleston, in a way. Not visually but in the sense that it’s almost as if the photographer isn’t there. We are watching via the mirror in the Trailer, via the empty bottles in Hunter’s kitchen, we are the clock face above the fireplace in Johnny Depp’s castle.

And speaking of décor, what I’ve just noticed is that the background to the mainman of this picture hardly seems to change…the location, the geography..…. The sets…

Wherever Hunter S Thompson is, it’s like..It hardly matters, as he is the Sun of the room, all else orbiting around him. So if he’s in a Film trailer with Johnny Depp, Benicio Del Torro and Harry Dean Stanton.. (‘You look like a ghost’ remarks the latter perfectly, commenting on a lonely looking Polaroid of HST)…

Wherever we are, the background hardly changes…hardly matters..Hunter is his own environment. He has become so much himself that wherever he is, it is he. I reckon.

The effect of this is exactly what the title of this quietly masterful, subtle and enduring film implies: After watching it, you do feel as if you have had breakfast with hunter. I mean, breakfast with anyone is a pretty intimate experience. And be glad you get to do it with Hunter Stockton Thompson through this film, ‘cos in everyday life, it’d probably become an endurance test that only the blessed, strange and robust could acclimatise to.

(E.J. Carroll writes in her flawed by hugely readable Biography of the Good Doctor that breakfast for hunter in the late 80’s consisted of something like; ‘2pm; Dunhill 2:05 Coffee, 2:15:chivas, 2:20, first lines of coke; 2:25; Dunhills, 2:30; Orange juice, 2:35; Dunhill; 2:40; Larger lines of coke; 2:45; Chivas; 3pm Marijuana pipe etc etc)

(As to Hunter’s continuing existence, he advises doctor’s to take him as an example and ‘study his habits, rather than condemn them’).

This is a rare film…Devoid of wanting to please in the crass manner WE’VE BECOME ACUSTOMED TO….by which I mean, in contrast to most of the pre-digested schlock that sewers up our cinemas and our local branches of ‘Blockbusters’. What we have here is subtle and endlessly interesting, almost seemingly without effort. (the edits are so smooth as to be musical) It is complex in its simplicity. By lingering on the hands and faces and conversations of the people here, we get a film that is much more sophisticated in it’s basic intent than all the Matrix movies put together.

One of the things I like about Hunter (aside from his work. To which end I actually think he’s an underrated writer) ….is that Hunter is one of the few dudes still breathing during in my lifetime who has a kind of genius for living…by this I mean he seems to have recognized and made the effort to have lived HIS life.

On one level of this, obviously, the kind of diet/lifestyle in evidence here is not for all. Observe; he has chivas and Ice as a first meal and then grazes on the stuff day long while chain-smoking constantly..(Interesting details for the ‘health’ conscious: A lot of water in the ice and a filter on the fag).. And of course, whatever else the Doctor of Divinity imbibes these days…. (By the way, if you want to see HST do coke, check out the Extras section of the Excellent ‘Criterion’ edition of ‘fear and loathing’).

‘Breakfast..’ is candid but not that candid…(unless that’s not salt in the shaker at the viper room)..And this makes me wonder….Like when one sees old folks in the street..And you think..’When was the last time they had sex..and did they know it was the last time when they did..? One wonders; Does an elderly dope fiend know at the time when he’s done his last line..?)..

Artificial intoxicants aside, it’s real personal joy for me in watching recent footage of HST, to behold someone who has seemingly achieved ‘individuation’-a dude who has become himself so completely.

This very sense of being has obviously spread through Owl farm too..Like all great homes it appears as an extension of the person who made it…Full of God and details, relics, skulls, talismans, clippings, bottles, furs, 80’s telex and phone machines, beautiful lamps, Guns and books, a huge Log fire, Knives and bones, broad half shuttered windows, numerous pictures and Polaroid’s, faded and otherwise..(If you have a ‘zoom’ on your DVD you can explore at length and in detail-and for once, in having the setting of Owl farm at Woody creek captured digitally, this usually extraneous feature is useful).

Indeed, you hear Hunter talking in 1996 about having just rediscovered the actual audiotape of his and Oscar’s now mythic journey to Las Vegas in a bedroom drawer…after 25 years??

What other goodies would we find if allowed to roam, stoned, speeding or tipsy through the compound..?
Well…You get a real idea of what could be unearthed, given the chance, from this film.
Like the best art this picture triggers your imagination, works with you, cajoles you, stokes you up…

Pivotal and classic scene: Film director Alex Cox. A guy whose face, incidentally, I’ve always liked but which seems horribly wrong in this setting, for some reason…
Anyway, Alex is supposed to direct ‘Fear and loathing in Las Vegas’. It’s the Mid 90’s.he arrives in a pretentious black cape with Co-writer Todd..(Also in Black cape, smock, Beret et al-It seems they have come dressed as Jack the ripper’s dentists or some such..).. We see Hunter cooking joyfully, Garlic butter melting gorgeously on fat sausages in a pan. Outside the kitchen window there are mountains through heavy snowfall..…The genial host has music playing….a log fire roars in the hearth….How’s that for a welcome?

(Alas-Turns out Alex and Todd are- (as am I), Vegetarians. So. In which case. Why do they allow Hunter, in chef mode, to talk them through the Sausage cooking ritual only to then refuse ‘em)??

A wrong start indeed. Anyhoo. Alex and Todd become fixated on an idea they have for the Fear and loathing film that involves DR Gonzo being swept about on a cartoon wave.

HST is almost instantly and violently opposed to this idea, making comic light as it does, of one of the most fundamental and timeless pieces of his writing, period.
(The ‘waterline’ Speech).

And yet Cox refuses to back down, indeed seems to want to provoke Hunter, going so far as to invade his personal space, while becoming almost condescending and patronizing of the author. It’s a perverse and odd manner Alex has here. Insulted and wounded, HST loses his temper and the gruesome twosome flees into the night, Black cloaks flapping Crow-like, as the Doctor rages tactfully into his agent’s answer machine. (Speaking of animation, as the argument built, I almost expected Alex and Todd to morph into giant animated Ravens before flying away cawing into the snowy night).

It’s a great piece of cinema, a genuinely disturbing scene and excruciating to watch. You will chew your fist in embarrassment and delight.

This is indeed, the high ‘Watermark; scene of the movie, it’s highest dynamic, also illustrating the myth of hunter. Even when insulted in his own home he remains reasonable and in control. In fact, It’s almost a disappointment not see him bring out a handy cattle-prod and manipulate Cox’s unique facial features into even more complex arrangement than as is.

What more do you want? We get other writers in conversation with HST, friends over reading from ‘Screwjack’ (Don Johnson beckoning madly for a drink as he recites the poetic ‘bestiality’ piece from said book)…. there are even Dolphin’s in here somewhere..

We meet Juan, Hunter’s son, who comes across as an almost Zen like chap, radiating peace and nobility. In some sense I imagine him older than his dad. If Hunter is, as he believes, to be reincarnated, he will surely be reborn as his own son.

Ok.

I’ve said enough. You get the idea. I liked this film, it made me happy.

 

 

If you’ve never even read any of hunter S Thompson’s books but believe that poetry, music, magic, work, beauty, horror and fun can run together in any one life at any given moment -then buy this film.

DVD- A documentary by Wayne Ewing

You can order this documentary directly on the web site here : www.breakfastwithhunter.com

Anthony Reynolds         
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# 28 janvier 2018 : Lost in Music

Le punk n'est peut être pas encore mort mais le légendaire Mark E. Smith nous a quitté du haut de ses 60 ans dont près de 40 d'activisme musical pour le meilleur et pour le pire.
Pour le reste de l'actualité culturel, voici le sommaire de la semaine, avec comme toujours de quoi écouter, livre, voir et sortir.

Du côté de la musique :

"Mousquetaire #2" de Romain Humeau
"A vos amours!" de Adrienne Pauly
"Contresens" de Balmino
"Telemann voyageur virtuose" de Ensemble Amarillis
"Echoes" de Henri Demarquette & Vanessa Benelli Mosell
"Nuevo mundo" de Manu Guerrero
"Stravinsky : Chant funèbre & Le sacre du printemps" de Riccardo Chailly & Lucerne Festival Orchestra
Le Melodica Acoustic Festlval 2018 c'est très bientôt, on vous en parle !
Christophe et Enki Bilal au Festival Le Goût des Autres
et toujours :
"Thanks for listening" de Chris Thile
"Moondog new sound" de Ensemble Minisym
"Mossy Ways" de Eric Le Lann
"MOR" de Marcel Kanche
"Mille excuses" de Misska
"Essais, volume 2" de Pierre de Bethmann Trio
"Songs of praise" de Shame
Interview de Pierre autour d'une session live de 5 titres

Au théâtre :

les nouveautés de la semaine :
"Quoi/Maintenant" au Théâtre de la Bastille
"J'étais dans ma maison et j'attendais que lapluie vienne" au Théâtre du Vieux Colombier
"Ruy Blas" au Théâtre Le Ranelagh
"Oussama, ce héros" au Monfort Théâtre
"En attendant Bojangles" à La Pépinière Théâtre
"L"Inversion de la courbe" au Théâtre de Belleville
"Deux mensonges et une vérité" au Théâtre Rive- Gauche
"Riton Liebman - La Vedette de mon quartier" à la maison des Métallos
"L'Affranchie" au Théâtre Les Déchargeurs
"Marys' à Minuit" au Théâtre du Port de la Lune à Bordeaux
"Cirque plein d'airs" au Théâtre Le 13ème Art
"Hôtel Paradiso" à Bobino
"Diva sur Divan" à l'Aktéon Théâtre
"Moi, Papa" au Théâtre du Splendid
les reprises :
"En attendant Godot" au Théâtre Essaion
"Une Leçon d'Histoire de France - De l'An mille à Jeanne d'Arc" au Théâtre de Poche-Montpranasse
"Une Leçon d'Histoire de France - De 1515 au Roi-Soleil" au Théâtre de Poche-Montpranasse
"Phèdre/Salope" à La Loge
"Los Guardiola et leurs pantomimes dansantes" au Théâtre Essaion
"Légende d'une vie" au Théo Théâtre
"Citrons Citrons Citrons" au Théâtre Le Funambule-Montmartre
et les chroniques des autres spectacles de janvier

Cinéma avec :

les films de la semaine :
"Sparring" de Samuel Jouy
"Gaspard va au mariage" de Antony Cordier
"Jean Douchet, l'enfant agité" de Fabien Hagege, Guillaume Namur et Vincent Haasser
Ciné en bref avec :
"In the Fade" de Fatih Akin
"3 Billboards" de Martin McDonagh
'The Greatest Showman" de Michael Gracey
"Pentagon Papers" de Steven Spielberg
"Brillantissime" de Michèle Laroque
"Downsizing"de Alexander Payne
"La Surface de réparation" de Christophe Regin
et les chroniques des sorties de janvier

Lecture avec :

"Bettie book" de Frédéric Ciriez
"Ecoute la ville tomber" de Kate Tempest
"L'avancée de la nuit" de Jakuta Alikavazovic
"Le bois des ombres" de Barbara Dribbusch
"Les chemins de la philosophie" de Adèle Van Reeth
"Ne fais confiance à personne" de Paul Cleave
"Nos souvenirs sont des fragments de rêves" de Kjell Westo
et toujours :
"Assad" de Régis Le Sommier
"Celui qui disait non" de Adeline Baldacchino
"Etienne de silhouette" de Thierry Maugenest
"Fausses promesses" de Linwood Barclay
"Le pouvoir" de Naomi Alderman
"Mille soleils" de Nicolas Delesalle
"Itinéraire d'une enfant maltraitée " de Liliane Zylbersztejn

Bonne lecture, bonne culture, et à la semaine prochaine.

Les 4 derniers journaux
- 21 avril 2024 : Des beaux disques, des beaux spectacles, une belle semaine
- 14 avril 2024 : En avril, de la culture tu suivras le fil
- 07 avril 2024 :Un marathon de nouveautés !
- 01 avril 2024 : Mieux vaut en rire !
           
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