Ken Kesey’s Pranksters Take to the Big Screen
It took an Oscar-winning director to make sense of the drug-addled footage shot by the enigmatic author and his Merry Pranksters
- By Daniel Eagan
- Smithsonian.com, August 05, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
“What they were doing was glorious, fun and magical in the best sense of the word,” Gibney says. The director sees Kesey as an artist and adventurer who was at heart a family man, the coach of his local school football and soccer teams. “In a way, the bus trip is kind of Kesey’s art piece,” Gibney argues. “I think part of his mission was to be a kind of Pied Piper for a country that was just enveloped in fear. He was saying, ‘Come out of your bomb shelter. Have fun. Don’t be trapped in a maze.’”
Gibney agrees that Kesey was attracted to the chaos of the journey, a chaos amplified by the extraordinary amounts of drugs consumed by the Pranksters.
Unlike many of his followers, Kesey tried to use drugs to explore his personality, not to repeat the same experiences. “You take the drug to stop taking the drug,” he said.
“He was talking about enlightenment,” Gibney explains. “At one point Kesey says, ‘I didn’t want to be the ball, I wanted to be the quarterback.’ He’s trying to gently guide this trip to become a sort of mythic journey rather than just, you know, a keg party.”
In execution, the trip turned into an extended binge, with the Pranksters using any excuse to drink, smoke and drop acid. Early on Cassady swerves the bus off an Arizona highway into a swamp. Kesey and his companions take LSD and play in the muck while waiting for a tow truck to rescue them. Whether visiting author Larry McMurtry in Texas or poet Allen Ginsberg in New York, the Pranksters—as their name implies—become a disruptive force, leaving casualties behind as they set off on new adventures. For viewers today who know the effects of hallucinogens, the sight of Kesey passing around a carton of orange juice laced with LSD is chilling.
Kesey and his companions returned to California by a different route, a slower, more contemplative journey. Gibney likes this section of the film best. By now the camerawork, so frustrating in the opening passages, feels more accomplished. The imagery is sharper, the compositions tighter. The Pranksters detour through Yellowstone, drop acid by a mountain lake in the Rockies, and drift through beautiful but secluded landscapes. Back at his ranch at La Honda, California, Kesey would screen his film at extended "Acid Test" parties, where the music was often provided by a group called the Warlocks-soon to evolve into the Grateful Dead.
Gibney came away from the project with a greater appreciation for Kesey’s presence. “He’s a Knight of the Round Table and a comic book figure all at once, a classic American psychedelic superhero. He’s got the barrel chest of a wrestler, and when he puts on a cowboy hat, he’s like Paul Newman. But there’s always something bedrock, Western, sawmill about the guy.”
Magic Trip lets you participate vicariously in one of the founding moments of a new counterculture. Directors Gibney and Elwood give you a front row seat to the all-night drives, bleary parties, sexual experimentation, mechanical breakdowns, breathtaking vistas, Highway Patrol stops and even the occasional compelling insight into society and its problems. In a sense this is where hippies started, and also where their movement started to fail.
Magic Trip opens Friday, August 5, in selected cities, and is also available on demand at www.magictripmovie.com.
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Comments (7)
The Gillig bus is a FAKE. It NEVER belonged toany of the MERRY PRANKSTERS!
Posted by zane kesey on August 17,2011 | 05:05 PM
What a terrific recounting of the history into which the Pranksters hurled themselves and of what they thought they were doing -- and, indeed, did -- with their gear-slogging, culture-changing, mind-bending antics ... ah , that seems too kind a term in retrospect, but it's fascinating learning how unthreatening they ere in '63. What a difference the next 3 years made.
Posted by Phil on August 15,2011 | 12:05 PM
So this is what you liberal people are doing with tax money. They should close the Smithsonian. No more tax dollars for hippie, liberal, God hating "commie pinkos."
Ahem..Kidding of course.
All in all a great review of of an important piece of history. Kudo's to the folks who reconstituted the film. Nice review and btw, acid was good for a lot of folks. It opened up deeply personal emotional experiences.
I also want to thank you for the shot of the Bus. "Further" is the current nome de groupe of the remaining Grateful Dead. BTW, I was just informed my wife took the Grey Rabbit.
It was a different country wasn't it dear?
Posted by Sabu on August 15,2011 | 12:00 PM
Yes.......
Posted by Chris on August 12,2011 | 04:03 AM
Being 61 years old, having read Kesey, Kerouac, Burroughs, Ginsberg, Castaneda, Vonnegut, and lived a bell-bottomed version of "Mr. Naturals" comix, I look back at these times with humor and a true sense of loss. My children's generation face most of the same problems of war and a diminished future and use the culture and technology for understanding the society and the implacable forces of war and money arrayed against their youth and chances for success. "You are either on the bus or off the bus" is my favorite quote and the only rule Kesey set. Despite the deaths of millions of brain cells, wrong turns down stoned roads and the confusion of those times and these, my kids are together on the bus we all helped to build. Pot is still the most popular recreational drug worldwide. What gives me hope is that history shows how right we were to resist the draft, to end the wars, to heal and sustain the earth, and to not ever Bogart that joint.
Posted by Phillip Warren Beard on August 11,2011 | 12:20 PM
Thank you for taking a sane look at the magically insane. To many times great ideas are dismissed as the work of ill conceived minds with no central focus. But you took the time to approach this subject from the perspective of a rational outlook instead of a blind eye. Again thanks and never change that focus.
Posted by gary h on August 10,2011 | 10:35 AM
Hey - did you know that there is an actual merry Prankster bus going up for sale at Auction in about 4 weeks? Worldwide Auctioneers in Auburn Indiana is selling a 1965 Gillig bus that is full of Grateful Dead artifacts and authentic tour posters and was owned by an original Prankster, Paul Currier. Details at wwgauctions.com
Posted by Bob DeKorne on August 9,2011 | 11:04 AM