Spout's Scavenger Hunt
Advertisement

Slacker
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Rate this movie.

Buy it now on DVD
Starting at $14.83
trailerWatch trailer

Rent it, watch it, find it

Advertisement

Directed by Richard Linklater.
One of the key American independent films of the 1990s, Richard Linklater's feature debut is an audacious look at the twentysomething culture in the college town of Austin, Texas. Set over the course of a 24-hour period, the film is a collection of short, unconnected glimpses into the dropout subculture, touching base with a variety of musicians, students, street people and general eccentrics. While there's no real plot to speak of, Linklater's eye for nuance and gift for dialogue are superb, and the portrait he paints is so uncannily accurate that the term "slacker" was almost immediately co-opted as a media buzzword, one interchangeable with the similarly-overused "Generation X." Regardless, the film is an evocative reflection of a community and its culture and remains a definitive artifact of its time and place. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide
[more]

Reviews and discussions

Write a review

SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Siskel + Ebert + Roeper, Online ...
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"I’ve spent the morning playing around with AtTheMovies.com, a new site which serves up every existent episode of Siskel & Ebert and Ebert & Roeper online, for free. Just from a QA standpoint, it looks like there are a few bugs to work out: the above image is a screenshot of Siskel’s head from their Slacker review; the entire clip has that big black rectangle taking up half its frame. I also had a bit of trouble navigating from clip to clip; something about the way the site uses flash makes it difficult to get to a clip you’ve previously watched without searching for it all over again. But tech issues aside, watching the clips can be a lot of fun. It’s amazing to see Ebert casually parceling out historical context in a review of something like The Lost Boys, which he actually seriously considers on its own merits before ultimately giving it a thumbs down for being “too ambitious.” Can you imagine a contemporary TV critic praising the star of a teen vampire flick for his “good, tough ... " [More]
SpoutBlogSpoutBlog Transformers and Gen-X Nostalgia
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Over at PopMatters, Charles Moss has posted a lengthy consideration of Michael Bay’s Transformers as a “Generation X” phenomenon. An excerpt: Brian Goldner, Hasbro’s chief operating officer, realized that most of the boys who played with Transformers in the ‘80s are now adult men. He knew that we would be suckers for it. And we are. We’ve become nostalgia-loving adults who find it comforting to revel in childhood as a sign that we don’t take ourselves as seriously as our parents, the baby boomers, had. It’s not that we have refused to grow up, but like the transforming toys we loved so much, the transformation from childhood to adulthood is one which we want to take our time making, figuring out the right twists and turns, making sure every piece of our lives is in place. Oddly, though Moss’s piece has much to say about slackers, it’s got nothing to say about Slacker. Moss credits Kevin Smith with bringing “Generation X out of the fanboy closet with 1994’s Clerks, which started a s ... " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Waking Life: An animated Ph ...
by Risselada in Philosophy of Film
liked it.
"Those darn prepositions. It's easy to get hung up on them.I think it would be easier to criticize a movie like this if it seemed to carry more pretense. Richard Linklater has said that the construction of the movie is just ideas and scenes that he either could never find ways to fit into other films or were meant for other films but never made the final cut. It's a hodge podge script-wise, and it's that way stylistically. Almost every scene was animated by a different artist. It's really just a series of short films that are loosely connected. Luckily the plot that connects them is just as mysterious and ethereal in a way. This is as opposed to some other films like Kill Bill Vol. 1 and Kill Bill Vol. 2 which seemed like a bunch of stylistically different short films but were often forced too hard into a more tangible narrative. Or if you look at theme as opposed to style, it's opposed to the Matrix movies, especially Reloaded and Revolutions which tried ... " [More]
JaybrielJaybriel SLACKER
by Jaybriel in Jaybriel Blog
hasn't rated it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Man, Salon just posted a piece on the movie Slacker (http://www.salon.com/ent/movi es/feature/2006/07/05/slacker/ ), and it really hit me a little hard. I was in college at the Wisconsin when I saw Slacker, and I think I enjoyed it more than any film I had ever seen at that point, and possibly more than any I've seen since. That is not to say I think it's the best film ever made (though I think it's in the running), but more that it was the exact right film for me at the time. I was living in a co-op with 30 other people, all working a little this and that (I worked at a record store, and as a courier for the art department of Wisconsin public radio), consuming various chemicals, going to school, contemplating art, and, well, slacking off. My life was never as easy or purely dedicated to slacking as the movie, but then movies aren't actually real, they just seem that way, right? And in this case the movie absolutely felt like the best parts of my real life. I was a little sad ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
History may be written by the winners, but in movies like Slacker we learn that life's lovable losers often have a far more engaging story to tell. The spiritual anomie afflicting the generation of the then-29-year-old director Richard Linklater provides the backdrop for this meandering and essentially plot-less tale. These college-aged people in Austin, Texas have the freedom and resources to do just about anything, but they choose instead to do nothing. There is a morbid attractiveness to their subversiveness. In most cases, their non-participation in life is a well thought-out stance: "Withdrawing in disgust is not the same thing as apathy," as one of the slackers informs us. Like others before them (beatniks, hippies, punks), this generation of twenty-somethings need time to sort things out. The movie's titular characters represent America's subconscious; these are the midnight neuroses that we keep bottled up in our waking hours. Comparisons to such filmmakers as Luis Bunuel and Max Ophuls are apt, as Linklater's stream of consciousness direction follows a winding road that leads to no particular place at all. Ironically, this studied attempt to appear unscripted and spontaneous succeeds mainly because it is so carefully plotted. Thankfully, Linklater clearly identifies with his subjects, and celebrates their wackiness without resorting to a bitterly ironic pose that would have distanced us from the characters. The film's 97 minutes -- made for $23,000 -- provided more filmmaking bang for the buck than just about any film of the early 1990s; Slacker's no-budget breakthrough success prefigured other Sundance discoveries such as Robert Rodriguez's El Mariachi (1992) and Kevin Smith's Clerks (1994). ~ Dan Jardine, All Movie Guide
 



Spout's Scavenger Hunt

Community ratings

mavens
Spout mavens
are neutral about it.
most people
Most people
are neutral about it.

Other opinions

Puhnner
Puhnner
loved it.
billhr
billhr
loved it.
Karina
Karina
loved it.
PammyK
PammyK
is not interested.
csymeonides
csymeonides
is not interested.
marincat
marincat
is not interested.