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Dennis Hopper and the Natural Progression From Hippie to Conservative

Karina Longworth
By Karina Longworth posted 1 year ago
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California may have spent the last five years under the rule of a Republican movie star, but news that major industry players are anything but super-lefty liberals still seems to strike many as a surprise. Responding to a story in which it’s casually mentioned that Dennis Hopper is expected to attend the Republican National Convention, Defamer’s Kyle Buchanan writes, “Did we miss the memo that said the countercultural director of freaking Easy Rider was a Republican? We’d assumed his appearance in the right-wing Zucker film An American Carol was a strict paycheck gig…”

I’m not sure when the “memo” first went out, but Hopper has been a registered Republican for over 25 years. This 2005 interview is the most concise story that I could find on Hopper’s “conversion” from, as he puts it, being “probably as Left as you could get without being a Communist,” to believing in “the idea of less government, more individual freedom” and voting “on the straight Republican ticket.” In that story, Hopper mentions palling around with then-Senator John McCain, of whom he said, “That’s the kind of guy I’d like to be president.” (Hopper has since flirted with supporting Obama, but if he’s attending the RNC I imagine that attraction has cooled off.)

Hopper is the living embodiment of that old adage about how if you’re not liberal at 20, you don’t have a heart, and if you’re not conservative at 40, you don’t have a brain (and those of us who are socially liberal and fiscally conservative at 28 simply have no candidate). That 2005 interview says Hopper is “still part of the counterculture” because of his political beliefs, and that might be true if you consider him alongside other aging 60s icons. But in terms of that generation as a whole, simply moving from the far left to the middle right with age doesn’t make him much of an anomaly.

As far as An American Carol goes, the much fretted-over satire of Michael Moore from newly converted “9/11 conservative” David Zucker, Hopper’s participation might still been motivated more by a paycheck than by politics––after all, Paris Hilton’s in the movie, too––but it might be safe to assume that it was a small paycheck, considering that the independently financed and distributed film has a reportedly low budget, and Hopper is billed pretty far down on the cast list.

In terms of finding that perfect storm of the ideologically defensible sell-out, Hopper’s much-mocked side gig as an Amerprise spokesmodel actually makes a kind of sense. In one of these ads, Hopper even ties his former, Easy Rider-associated, counter-cultural hero self to his paycheck-cashing, Republican-voting current incarnation.

All of the ads are set to a brightly-orchestrated version of the Steve Winwood-penned hit “Gimme Some Lovin’,” which was a hit for Winwood and the Spencer Davis Group in 1967 (the year Hopper starred in The Trip, the acid-sploitation flick scripted by Jack Nicholson and directed by Roger Corman). In the “Flower Power” ad, Hopper stands in a field of sunflowers in front of a Rider-reminiscent Western backdrop. After telling us that those who say dreams “are like delicate little flowers” are “WRONG!”, there’s a cut to Hopper set far back in the field. “I want to make my own movie!” he says, well, dreamily. The ad closes with Hopper intoning, “Flower power was then. Your dreams are now.” The message: the world in which he made Easy Rider no longer exists. Grow up. Having money is no longer a contemptible spoil of The Man––you ARE The Man. Oh, and start a retirement portfolio with Ameriprise.

Hopper is the poster boy for the 60s cultural revolutionary who, when “the drugs that were free suddenly weren’t free anymore [and] the party was over,” put aside their youthful ideals and refocused their big appetites on power, wealth and mainstream commercial consumption. It’s not surprising that this icon of the anti-establishment has come over to the conservative side. What’s surprising is that more stars of his generation haven’t likewise decided that fortunes are more important to protect than hazy memories and followed him over.

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  • Molly Lambert said

    Did you see Land Of The Dead? lots of grist for this mill in that one. Also, it was horrendous.

    Not to mention that Peter Fonda ad for the Time/Life sixties jams compilation. I get embarrassed every time it comes on.

  • Slipstream said

    Dennis Hopper is the man. I have him as the voice on my GPS that I got from Navtones.com. He often helps me escape from tricky situations now!

  • MovieMan0283 said

    I know Hopper says he was a Leftist, and he probably was but if part of that image is based on the character he played in Easy Rider - well, that character is in it for the kicks, manifestly not for any greater good. It’s Nicholson’s comparatively straight lawyer who sounds the countercultural bells andwhile Fonda and Hopper only care about getting stoned and getting paid (Hopper’s character especially is actually pretty uptight socially). Of course this has little to do with what Hopper’s actual politics were/are, but I do think a lot of his countercultural cred relies on his performance in that movie (arguably as much as his direction of said film) so it is a little ironic.

  • Chris said

    Mostly you see that as a person matures, gets married, and has kids, they start a move towards a more conservative way of life as they begin to realize they don’t want their own children involved with the same kind of crap THEY themselves did as a youth…If, once you have children, you haven’t started the transformation, or begin it within a few years, you are destined to retain the immature childishness you had as a child OR similarly, you just have some level of mental illness….

  • anythingthatmoves said

    Awesome. The guy has got a mind of his own and with all that hollywood pressure to be part of the crowd. Mr. Hopper is impressive.

  • bababooey said

    i think hes smarter than this. hes simply doing this to act like a countercultarist to the counterculture. its a very calculated move to seem like hes somewhat “above” the supposed hollywood leftist establishment. Theres a hip New York artist/actor/director named Vincent Gallo who does the same thing to get a reaction from people. I doubt Hopper is really informed about how the rich dont pay their fair share of taxes or the devastating effects of Republican foreign policy on the worlds poor. Maybe someone should enlighten him!!!!!!

  • dan schoonover said

    How sad it is to find oui how weak some peoples convictions are. No wonder our country is in such sorry shape.

  • Fergus said

    Dennis Hopper today is proof that excessive use of LSD can lead to tragic consequences.

  • Dennis Hopper To GOP: We Blew It at WWW.PRESIDENTS”R”US.COM said

    [...] Hopper now free to drop his right-wing wierdo guise to don some other kind of weirdo guise and endorse Barack [...]

  • Bill Weeden said

    Check out Mad Dog Morgan on iTunes for Hoppers last true flower power film. Its a powerful performance, one of the best of the seventies. Apparently the one on iTunes is uncut too, which is rare, but cool.