The First Cut of “Easy Rider” Was Over Four Hours Long

The finished version is a lot shorter

Making "Easy Rider"

American actor & director Dennis Hopper and actor Peter Fonda during the filming of Hopper's directorial debut 'Easy Rider,' New Orleans, Louisiana, 1968.

By Tobias Carroll

Some influential films leave their mark on the industry with a bit of subtlety. That influence is there if you know to look for it, but it isn’t the kind of thing that makes the movie in question a household name. For others, though, the very title of a film can serve as shorthand for an entire genre or movement. There’s a reason why Peter Biskind titled a book on filmmaking history Easy Riders, Raging Bulls, after all — director Dennis Hopper’s 1969 film had an outsized cultural impact.

It was also almost a lot longer. Air Mail recently published an excerpt from the book Hollywood: The Oral History that covered the production of Easy Rider and the way certain figures factored into its development — including the low-budget films produced by Roger Corman.

Some of the most interesting pieces of information about Easy Rider concerns the time it took to make it. Editor Donn Cambern cited a figure of 11 months spent working on the film from the beginning of shooting. “The first cut on the movie was, like, four hours and 40 minutes,” he recalled. “Dennis [Hopper] just wanted everything, so we tried everything.”

While the idea of a much longer initial cut is far from unique, that still feels like a lot in light of Easy Rider‘s actual running time, which is just over an hour and a half. It’s one of a host of films that the production company BBS Productions, much of whose output was later collected on a box set from the Criterion Collection. Reading about the process of turning the Easy Rider that was filmed into the one audiences are familiar with is also a reminder of the behind-the-scenes work that goes into making films memorable — something that remains just as true today.

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