The Hamilton Spectator

Netflix’s ‘Have a Good Trip’ is only a mild high

- MARK KENNEDY

We can’t take trips these days for obvious reasons. But Netflix is offering a trip into the mind with a gentle new documentar­y about the world of hallucinog­ens.

Donick Cary’s “Have a Good Trip: Adventures in Psychedeli­cs” uses celebritie­s recounting their trips on LSD or mushroom to counteract built-up fears about psychotrop­ic drugs — even offering tips about how to use them better — all against the backdrop of trippy ’60sstyle cartoons with rainbows and unwinding tongues.

This is a clearly pro-psychedeli­c film, not too preachy and not too pointed, with lazy science. There are really only two authoritat­ive voices in the film and they both endorse investigat­ion into hallucinog­ens — the alternativ­e medicine guru Deepak Chopra (“We’re on a trip right now. Life is a trip,” he says) and UCLA psychiatry professor Dr. Charles Grob. There are no dissenting voices.

So if you prefer your drug advice from celebritie­s, this is the film for you. David Cross, Nick Kroll, Ben Stiller, Natasha Lyonne,

A$AP Rocky and Sarah Silverman are among those talking about their trips, both bad and good. Silverman found herself in the passenger seat of a car driven by a man so high he’d forgotten how to drive.

That leads to one of the film’s several drug tips, made to look like those “The More You Know” PSA: Don’t drive while tripping. Control your setting. Don’t ever look in the mirror. (“You can see through your skin,” Silverman warns.)

We learn that Lewis Black once got so high he forgot his own name and flipped through a dictionary for what seems like hours looking for clues. Rosie Perez tripped so bad once in the late 1980s that she was eventually doing the backstroke on a dance club floor.

These stories are often delightful — and enhanced by great cartoons or recreation­s acted by many of those interviewe­d — but are we sure we need celebrity insights here? Rob Corddry has played a satirical journalist on “The Daily Show” but we’re not sure he’s the guy who should be dispensing advice about how the national scientific community handles testing on acid (“We blew it,” he says, minus an expletive).

Two of the best anecdotes are by terrific storytelle­rs who are no longer with us — TV host and chef Anthony Bourdain and actress Carrie Fisher, both for whom the film is dedicated. (Which makes you wonder how long this film has been on the shelf ).

Bourdain talks about his attempt to mimic Hunter S. Thompson by going on a road trip with a buddy to the Catskills with “a pretty dizzying array of controlled substances” — Quaaludes, weed, coke, beer, gin, hash and LSD. They picked up two hitchhikin­g exotic dancers and that’s when things took a turn.

Fisher confesses she took a lot of LSD over her life, including once in a park where she witnessed a talking acorn who insisted on showing her his choreograp­hy. “I never saw anything that wasn’t there. I just saw things that were there misbehave,” she notes, brilliantl­y.

Some celebritie­s have clearly thought deeply about their trips, like Sting, who while high on peyote in the English countrysid­e, helped a cow give birth. “For me, the entire universe cracked open.” And Reggie Watts uses this poetic metaphor for hallucinog­ens: “It’s like a stepladder to look over a brick wall that’s a little bit too tall for you.”

There are intriguing moments when the thread to a better movie is revealed, as when Perez confides that her LSD trip prompted her to seek out therapy to help ease her Roman Catholic guilt. Sting also reveals that some of his trips have helped him write songs. Really? Which ones?

And the filmmaker has employed another marvellous offkilter figure in Nick Offerman, pretending to be a scientist. “Don’t get me wrong, drugs can be dangerous,” he tells us. “But they can also be hilarious.” But Offerman is neither in this film — and so he is wasted. Like this film — wasted but not in a good way.

“Have a Good Trip,” a Netflix release, is rated TV-MA for drug substances and language. Running time: 85 minutes. One and a half stars out of four.

 ?? NETFLIX THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Nick Kroll in a scene from “Have A Good Trip: Adventures in Psychedeli­cs.” It’s not too preachy and not too pointed, but has some pretty lazy science.
NETFLIX THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Nick Kroll in a scene from “Have A Good Trip: Adventures in Psychedeli­cs.” It’s not too preachy and not too pointed, but has some pretty lazy science.

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