Magic Trip :: Movies :: Reviews :: Paste

Paste Rating

8.0

commendable

Seminal images from Woodstock abound. But what sparked the famed summer
of love? When did sex, drugs, and rock ’n’ roll first start to coalesce?
Where did hippies come from? Magic Trip, directed by Alison Ellwood and
Paste’s 2010 Person of the Year in Documentary Film Alex Gibney, is a
vibrant time capsule, a treasure trove of images from Ken Kesey and the
Merry Band of Pranksters’ cross-country trek to the 1964 World’s Fair.
It bridges the gap between the Beat Generation of the ’50s and the Acid
Rock that followed in the ’60s. Magic Trip puts viewers on the
psychedelic bus, crowned Further, in search of America in transition. An
amateur home movie captures a cultural turning point.

Having already established his literary credentials penning One Flew
Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Kesey decided, “If Shakespeare were alive today,
he wouldn’t use a quill pen.” With no training in how to use a film
camera, Kesey and his crew decided to document their trip from
California to New York. Unfortunately, the resulting footage of legends
like Neal Cassady, Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg was largely out of
sync and out of focus. It lingered as an unfinished mess—until now.
Oscar-winning director Alex Gibney and Alison Ellwood waded through the
hours of footage to create a Magic Trip.

The film opens with psychedelic images of colorful, real life characters
like Mal Function, Gretchen Fetchen, Generally Famished and Stark Naked.
Surprisingly, though, the Merry Pranksters dress like preppy college
kids. They fly the flag, wear red, white and blue, and play trombones
and flutes. Their soundtrack is more soul classics than guitar jams.
Their “subversive” behavior seems downright innocent by subsequent
standards. So what fueled the Further?

Magic Trip’s most impressive sequence takes us inside Stanford
University labs, where the C.I.A. was conducting experiments using
L.S.D. Kesey dropped acid under the government’s eye. Soon an
All-American wrestler was obsessed with expanding consciousness. We hear
Kesey’s ravings on tape with appropriately eerie imagery. Bats,
hexagons, strobe lights and mummies flow from his mind’s eye. Magic Trip
also contains footage of the Prankster’s acid-drenched dip into an
Arizona pond. The first tie-dye shirts are created. The sixties as we
now remember them unfurl before our eyes.

Shades of the Vietnam War and Civil Rights marches sneak into the
narrative, but the journey feels remarkably free from such seminal
concerns. Some may see it as a self-indulgent trip, a summer long
boondoggle only available to suburban kids with sufficient funds. The
East Coast experiments of Dr. Timothy Leary feel stodgy in comparison to
the Pranksters’ free spirits. The sight of the psychedelic bus brings
out the best of New York City. Kids chase Further down the street, eager
to join the party.

By the time they arrive at the World’s Fair, the magic seems to have
dissipated. While Dupont promised “Better Living Through Chemistry,” the
World of Tomorrow didn’t offer nearly as much fun as promised. Even Jack
Kerouac seemed weary of the Pranksters’ antics. Having driven the group
across the country in a speed-fueled blur, Neal Cassady got off the bus.
Magic Trip suggests that the destination shifted from a physical place
to psychic space. The last third of the documentary follows the
migration of the acid tests from Kesey’s farm to Santa Cruz and finally
to San Francisco. Those curious how The Grateful Dead became the
ultimate jam band will discover “what a long strange trip it’s been.”

Directors Gibney and Ellwood are to be commended for assembling what we
had only imagined via Tom Wolfe’s Electric Kool Aid Acid Test. Magic
Trip is a loving tribute to Ken Kesey’s restless spirit. Yet, the
filmmakers’ respect for the man and the era push Magic Trip toward
museum piece rather than chaotic adventure. It evokes more of the Merry
than the Pranks. We see each stop along the journey, but those born
after the era may still wonder, “What’s the big deal?” Magic Trip will
inspire day-glo tinged nostalgia for some, a mystifying ‘much ado about
not much’ for others. It’s a colorful, cultural Rorschach test. The
Merry Pranksters mark the moment when the responsible ’50s crashed into
the free form ’60s. Establishment edged into anarchy. And we’ve been
arguing about whether it was the best of times or the worst of times
ever since.

--
http://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2011/02/sundance-review-magic-trip.html
Via InstaFetch

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