Halloween Costume Guide
Raoul Duke arrives in Las Vegas with a trunk full of drugs, ostensibly to cover a motorcycle race, and spends most of the film hallucinating his way through hotel lobbies while narrating the collapse of the American Dream. The white bucket hat and yellow-tinted aviator sunglasses are the two items that make this costume readable from across a room, and the patch-covered Hawaiian-style shirt seals it. Johnny Depp played Duke in Terry Gilliam’s 1998 film, reportedly living in Hunter S. Thompson’s basement for months to prepare (IMDb). The film has held cult status long enough that this look gets recognized far more often than you might expect.
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The hat and glasses are what people read first, and both need to look slightly off rather than perfectly placed. A neat, centered bucket hat reads as someone wearing a hat. A tilted one, paired with yellow lenses worn indoors at a party, reads as someone who has been awake for a concerning number of hours. The shirt should clash with everything else on purpose, since Duke’s whole wardrobe looks like the result of packing in under five minutes while something was on fire nearby. If the cigarette holder slips out of your mouth every time you talk, that is also, weirdly, on brand.
At one point, Duke looks at the road ahead and announces, “We can’t stop here. This is bat country,” with the calm certainty of someone reading off a weather report. He is not talking about actual bats. He spends most of the film narrating increasingly alarming situations in this exact tone, treating hallucinated lounge lizards and a trunk full of illegal substances with the same flat seriousness most people reserve for traffic updates.
The cigarette holder will end up on the floor at least once
It is small, it is held only by your teeth, and it has no real attachment to anything. At some point during the night, it will fall out, probably while you are talking, possibly into a drink. Bring a backup if the exact prop matters to you, or accept that “Duke loses his cigarette holder” is now part of your costume’s plot.
Decide in advance whether you are explaining the fly swatter
To anyone who has not seen the film, a grown adult carrying a plastic fly swatter all night looks like a deliberate choice with no clear payoff, because it is. To anyone who has seen the film, it is one of the funniest small details you could include. You do not need to explain it to either group. Just carry it like it is doing important work.
Couples Idea
Excellent pairing and arguably the only correct one, since the entire film is built around these two characters bouncing off each other in increasingly bad decisions. The visual contrast works well too: Duke is lean and twitchy in his bucket hat and Hawaiian shirt, while Dr. Gonzo is described in the source material as a much larger man in his own distinct outfit. Dr. Gonzo has no dedicated CostumeRealm page, so that half is a build-from-scratch costume, but the pairing needs almost no explanation to anyone who has seen the film.
Duo Idea
Strong duo built around the film’s opening scene, where Duke picks up a hitchhiker and proceeds to terrify him with an extended, deeply specific description of the drugs in the car. Anyone who knows the film will recognize the reference immediately, and the scene itself is short enough that most fans remember it in detail even if they do not remember much else. The Hitchhiker has no dedicated CostumeRealm page, so this is a build-from-scratch costume, and a fairly easy one since the character is dressed plainly on purpose.
Group Idea: Fear and Loathing Cast
Might work, but every character besides Duke is a build-from-scratch costume, since none of them have dedicated pages here. This group only really lands at a party where several people have actually read the book or watched the film closely, which is a smaller crowd than you might think for a film this quotable. The upside is that the visual range across these five characters is genuinely wide, so if your group does have the right audience, it photographs well and covers a lot of the film’s most memorable moments.
Group Idea: Johnny Depp Characters
Strong group built on a simple, recognizable theme: every costume here is a different Johnny Depp role, plus Depp himself. Edward Scissorhands, the Mad Hatter, and Sweeney Todd all have dedicated CostumeRealm pages and strong individual recognition, even from people who have never seen Fear and Loathing. The visual range is wide enough that the group photographs well, gothic and pale, Victorian and theatrical, period horror, and 70s gonzo, and the “spot the actor” angle gives people something to talk about even if they only recognize two or three of the five.
The hat, glasses, and shirt are the three items worth getting right. Most of the rest of this costume is things you may already own or can find cheaply.
Duke’s whole personality is treating completely alarming situations with total calm, while treating completely normal situations as if they require urgent strategic planning.
The bucket hat, yellow-tinted sunglasses, and patch-covered Hawaiian-style shirt are the three items that make this costume instantly readable. Add chino shorts, the cigarette holder with fake cigarettes, and a brown leather attache case. The fly swatter and over-the-calf socks finish the look for anyone going for full accuracy.
Yes, broadly. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas has held cult status for decades, and Johnny Depp’s performance is widely considered one of his most iconic roles. The bucket hat, yellow glasses, and Hawaiian shirt combination is so visually specific that people recognize it even if they have never read the book.
“We can’t stop here. This is bat country.” is the line most people associate with the character, usually said right before something goes badly wrong. He also has a long, deeply specific monologue about drug-induced hallucinations involving his grandmother, which is funnier in context than it sounds out of it.
Johnny Depp played Duke in Terry Gilliam’s 1998 film adaptation (IMDb). Bill Murray played a version of the same character, under the same name, in the earlier 1980 film Where the Buffalo Roam, and Depp later voiced a brief Duke cameo in the 2011 animated film Rango.
Yes, mostly. Raoul Duke is a thinly disguised version of Hunter S. Thompson himself, the gonzo journalist who wrote Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (Wikipedia). Thompson used the name Duke as a pen name and alter ego for years before the book made the character famous.
Thompson said in interviews that he combined Cuban revolutionary Raul Castro’s first name with John Wayne’s nickname, “The Duke.” Some literary researchers think he may have actually borrowed the name from a Canadian newspaper article about a shop manager named Raoul Duke Duquette while researching his earlier book Hell’s Angels. Thompson was known for collecting names and phrases he liked, so both stories may be partly true.
Yes. The women’s costume set covers the bag, hat, and shirt and shorts in one piece, paired with bangle bracelets instead of the men’s wrist accessories and white hi-top sneakers instead of low-tops. The core identifying items, the hat, the glasses, and the Hawaiian shirt, stay the same across both versions.
Who played Raoul Duke in the 1998 film Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas?
What does Raoul Duke say right before things go badly wrong?
Raoul Duke is a thinly disguised version of which real writer?