Daily July 25, 2008 - July 26, 2008
Starts: 7:00pm
A landmark in film history, Easy Rider blew the studio
doors open for more young directors than any film before or since, helping to
create the wide-open climate that would lead to the production of many
outstanding films in the 1970s. As its director, Dennis Hopper is usually given
the lion's share of credit for the film's success, but the revelations of time
suggest that the contributions of the late Terry Southern and, to some degree,
Jack Nicholson have endowed the film with much of its residual power. Starring
Peter Fonda as Wyatt (alias Captain America)
and Hopper as Billy, it traces the hippie duo's adventures as they mount their
seriously chopped hogs on a journey to find the real America en route to Mardi Gras. In Arizona, they visit a commune whose members are having a
tough time, and in a small Texas
town they're jailed for joining a parade. But they're quickly sprung by an ACLU
lawyer, the quirky, hard-drinking George Hanson (Jack Nicholson), who accepts
their offer to join them on the trip to New
Orleans, eager to visit the best whorehouse in the
South. EASY RIDER accurately reflects the tensions and hostilities of the
period, Laszlo Kovacs's photography is superb, Nicholson is exceptional in his
breakthrough role--and the startling, stunning ending is a shocker.
--RottenTomatoes
What: Easy Rider (1969 Dennis Hopper)
Format: 16mm film
Runtime: 95 mins
When: July 25 & 26 @ 7 pm &
9:30 pm, July 27 @ 3 pm
Where: 5th Avenue Cinema, 510 SW
Hall St @ PSU
Admission: Free for PSU students,
faculty and staff w/ ID, $2 for other students, seniors, and children, $3
general admission
For more information:PSU Film Committee
film@pdx.edu503-725-3551
http://www.fifthavenuecinema.groups.pdx.edu