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Easy Riders, Raging Bulls
by Peter Biskind
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"Easy Riders, Raging Bulls vividly chronicles the exuberance and excess of the times: the startling success of Easy Rider and the equally alarming circumstances under which it was made, with drugs, booze, and violent rivalry between costars Dennis Hopper and Peter Fonda dominating the set; how a small production company named BBS became the guiding spirit of the youth rebellion in Hollywood and how, along the way, some of its executives helped smuggle Huey Newton out of the country; how director Hal Ashby was busted for drugs and thrown in jail in Toronto; why Martin Scorsese attended the Academy Awards with an FBI escort when Taxi Driver was nominated; how George Lucas, gripped by anxiety, compulsively cut off his own hair while writing Star Wars; how a modest house on Nicholas Beach occu…
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"Darren Aronofsky: This is an incredibly delicious read—just a great, great account of that era from Easy Rider (’69) through the mid-’70s. It’s the story of all those great filmmakers—my icons—Scorsese, Coppola, Friedkin, and Bogdanovich. They changed the way movies were made in America. It recounts their adventures in making movies. When I read it, I was on a boat near the Great Barrier Reef. I’d gone to the Melbourne Film Festival to promote my first movie, Pi . So it was probably ’98. Having just started my career—having just been to Sundance and just begun to feel like a real filmmaker, part of this generation of Sundance filmmakers—reading about this earlier generation of filmmakers, which most of the Sundance filmmakers base themselves on, it just resonated with me. It was interesting to see how certain directors had navigated a long career and others had burnt out really quickly. The players in Hollywood change all the time, but the town never changes. And that’s the truth. It’s different people, but the same characters are always emerging. So it was an education—and a really great read. Darren Aronofsky: I think that was really a golden era of filmmaking. They were doing things that no one had ever done before, and they really had the run of the show. Within the studio system, it doesn’t really work that way any more. But in independent filmmaking, of course, you’re outside the system, so you have ultimate freedom. Today, the independent sphere mirrors what was happening in studios in the early ’70s. Except we generally have less money to play with."
"Biskind’s book documents a period in filmmaking that was formative for me. The films made in the ’60s and ’70s by Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese, Brian De Palma, Robert Towne, and Hal Ashby represented such a leap forward from just a decade earlier. They shook up the way we all look at movies."