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Description

Lee Hill's meticulously-researched study of the 1969 cult road movie Easy Rider analyses both the circumstances surrounding the film's making and the social and cultural forces that found expression in it. Easy Rider broke the mould of Hollywood studio production, making stars of its producer, director and stars Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper and Jack Nicholson, and launching a new wave of radical and experimental American cinema. It was one of the crucial films of the late 60s, a film that enshrined the ideals of the counterculture but also foresaw the demise of these ideals in the despair and paranoia of a nation rocked by Watergate and the Vietnam War. It was a seminal road movie and a massive financial success that spawned endless imitations. Few films since have been able to catch its particular blend of innocence and cynicism, hope and despair.

Hill persuasively argues that the role of illustrious screenwriter Terry Southern in Easy Rider has been neglected as the exact circumstances of production, filming, and editing have become lost in mythmaking. Referring to little known archival material, Hill questions and sheds new light on some of the legends that surround Easy Rider.

In his afterword to this new edition, Hill looks back on Easy Rider more than 50 years after its first release.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
1. Going to Mardi Gras: The Making of Easy Rider
2. The Ballad of Easy Rider
3. End of the Road
Afterword to the 2026 Edition
Notes
Credits
Bibliography

Product details

Published 14 May 2026
Format Ebook (PDF)
Edition 2nd
Extent 88
ISBN 9781805750314
Imprint British Film Institute
Illustrations 60 colour illus
Series BFI Film Classics
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Lee Hill

Lee Hill has written about literature, film, music…

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