In pursuit of the real Hunter S. Thompson
June 29th, 2008 by missyolsenSource: Houston Chronicle (Original Article)
Jimbo, if he really existed, didn’t represent us well. The Houstonian appeared drunk and gullible just two paragraphs into The Kentucky Derby Is Decadent and Depraved, Hunter S. Thompson’s June 1970 story that first appeared in Scanlan’s Monthly.
Since Thompson didn’t find the American Dream in the decadent and drunken depravity inside the class-warfare-inclined confines of Louisville’s Churchill Downs, he kept looking.
Thompson’s book Hell’s Angels technically launched his career. But his true period of wild influence and wild times was bookended by two sporting events four years apart.
It started at the Derby in Louisville, a horse race Thompson barely bothered to address in a story that defined a style that would become his legend and undoing. It ended in Zaire in 1974. Soaked in alcohol and his own myth, he failed to attend a monumental boxing match and, worse, failed to find a story by not attending the fight.
Norman Mailer, a writer 14 years Thompson’s elder and thought to be past his prime, ended up owning the “Rumble in the Jungle,” where Muhammad Ali, a Louisville guy like Thompson, knocked out George Foreman.
Documentary filmmaker Alex Gibney calls it “a tremendous bungle.”
Gibney — who directed the Oscar-winning Taxi to the Dark Side as well as Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room — made Thompson as the subject of his new movie Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson.
Thompson’s larger-than-life persona already has been made into two feature films. Gibney chose not to propagate the myth. Instead Gonzo, which opens Friday at the Landmark River Oaks, makes the blustery Thompson very human. It projects a sliver of his life when he enjoyed equally formidable successes and failures.
Both made Thompson an icon.
Zaire wasn’t Thompson’s first taste of failure because he often aligned himself with underdogs who, as expected, lost. But it was his first, flightstips though not last, experience with ineptitude.
Gibney …continue reading