The life of drugs and crime is an easy life to slip into. In Easy Rider, was a perfect depiction of America in the late 1960s. The film came from the book, On the Road by Jack Kerouac. The book covered included anything from causal sex to all kinds of drugs, while also questioning the American system of pop culture. Throughout the movie, Easy Rider, there were countless examples of the true portrayal of American culture through themes of racism, hippie culture, drugs, and casual sex. This movie caused a lot of criticism for going against everything in Hollywood, but gained a huge following because of the true events in society being represented. Easy Rider was an open road movie that, when it released, left a lasting impression on Hollywood forever. Billy and Wyatt, in Easy Rider, were meant to portray hippies on motorcycles. ‘Hippie Culture’ started to become an important role in America in the 1960s. The movement started in San Francisco, California and spread into all parts of the world. The biggest hippie influence happened in America and gained a huge following because of their alternative, rebel lifestyle and radical principles. The clothing and appearance of the characters in the film were the epitome of the hippie culture, wearing the following, throughout the movie: trousers, biker gloves, …show more content…
Wyatt tries to save him by placing his bike jacket over his chest trying to stop Billy from bleeding out. The jacket was iconic because it had the American symbol on it. Hippies were outcasts in America and were so alienated they were seen as a disease within American society. Wyatt was killed on his way to find help for Billy by the same men. In the last scene, Wyatt’s motorcycle is on fire, showing the journey is over. Disagreement with the choices people is fine, but threatening them and killing them is unjustifiable because they are