Linklater
Symposium
Introduction
Richard
Linklater Interview
-Before
Sunset
1. Old Haunts
2. Mortal Beloved
3. A Confused Love Letter
4. Things to Come
-Slacker
-School of Rock
-Waking Life
-Dazed and Confused
1. That Old Feeling
2. Rock and Roll All Night
-SubUrbia
-It's Impossible to Learn to
Plow by Reading Books
-Live From Shiva's
Dance Floor
-The Newton Boys
-Before Sunrise
-Tape
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Thom Andersen Interview
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We
Are the Youth Gone Mild
Eric Hynes on Slacker
While the United States
and its allies mark the 60th anniversary of D-Day with
uncomplicated pride and gratitude, another major anniversary
is passing more quietly—it’s been 30 years since Richard
Nixon resigned from the presidency in the wake of the
Watergate scandal, and nearly 30 years since our nation’s
belated, belabored retreat from Vietnam. Watergate and
the failure of the antiwar movement still cast long
shadows—our current youth culture’s DNA carries more
than a trace evidence of attitudes and feelings developed
during that time, despite attempts by the current administration
to convince us the situation in Iraq is WWII: THE SEQUEL.
Though not wholly born of those times, we can credit
the late Sixties and early Seventies with our vast,
matter-of-fact distrust of our political leaders and
of the entire political structure, as well as our suspicion
that there’s nothing we can do to change or save a system
that’s inherently corrupt. We’re too wise to believe
that things could get better, and have grown to distrust
belief itself; that participation is tantamount to self-delusion,
and that keeping our distance from the hypocrisy is
the only way to remain clean and true to our ideals.
That our nation’s shift farther right is only further
proof that it was that way all along, and that activism
within the two-party system is and always was futile.
We can only sit back and wait for the barbarians to
come—a perfect time to revisit Richard Linklater’s Slacker.
Made about halfway between here and Watergate, Slacker
is acutely aware of the post-Sixties drift its characters
are riding. Also, despite maintaining a critical distance
from its subjects, it contributed to another decade
of white liberal anomie, its satire subsumed by the
winking alterna-angst that pervaded youth culture in
the Nineties. Through its assembly line of talking heads,
it described a generation of burnouts who seemed too
young to be so jaded, but were, in their defense, living
in a third consecutive Republican presidency. After
its release, there was a blip of optimism when a Democrat
won the election, but Clinton’s presidency was a false
positive—we were still sloping to the right—and it only
seemed to foster more disaffection. Why vote, what difference
did it make? By the time the Supreme Court ended the
2000 election, we rolled our eyes and acted as if we’d
seen it all before.
My feelings and observations about Slacker are
different today than when I first watched it on the
little TV/VCR in my dorm. Not that I didn’t appreciate
its free-floating, fly-on-the-wall non-narrative style,
nor did I mind feeling smart for going to college and
getting the copious references to Dostoyevsky, Nietzsche,
Scooby Doo, and the Smurfs. But I also distrusted anything
that I was supposed to like, especially Sixties culture,
(perennially popular on American college campuses and
a key ingredient in Slacker’s stew), fervently
avoided dieting on anything but contemporary music or
movies, and had an allergy to hippies. I’ve still got
that allergy, but can see the film a bit clearer now,
feeling further from its subjects—some of whom were
my contemporaries—and closer to its spirit. Finding
an appropriate distance from Slacker is essential
to acknowledging its achievement, which is due in part
to Linklater’s own careful negotiation of distance from
his characters and their ideas—which, more often than
not, are elaborate arguments for distancing themselves
from others.
Linklater found the perfect form for his subject, his
script and camera meandering from one lazy lecture to
another, the film itself a schizophrenic run-on sentence
full of schizophrenic run-on sentences. I admire any
work of art that finds the right vessel for its ambitions,
even if those ambitions are rather modest. But what
seemed modest, small even, about Slacker the
first time around, now seems crucial to understanding
recent American culture. Conversely, what seemed more
ambitious about Linklater’s Waking Life—a bolder,
technically astounding, and dizzyingly philosophical
retake on Slacker’s monologue-o-rama—looks much
smaller after only three years on the shelf. For all
their navel-gazing, the characters in Slacker
knew their past—they fought with it, often misread it,
and seemed limited to only the most recent, claustrophobic
past, but what they knew, they knew. Waking Life
knows history, too, but only Linklater’s history. Animated,
appropriately, to enhance the feeling of liminality
that its talkers contemplate, Linklater’s more mature
work focuses on metaphysical ideas, hewing close—even
while bouncing around the globe and switching speakers
and styles—to its central question about the nature
of reality. Actors and characters resurface from Linklater’s
previous films, and Linklater’s own opening monologue
from Slacker is recited practically verbatim.
It’s as if he looked back over his work and decided
that what made them unique and compelling—and of course
unified—were these questions of reality and impermanence.
But this does Slacker, at least, a disservice.
What I find compelling about Slacker—even though
I still find most of its characters intolerable—is not
the regurgitated ideas, but the fact that these people
have retreated to those ideas. I stop listening to the
specifics of their arguments and start hearing a chorus
of justifications for tuning in and dropping out. With
Waking Life, Linklater seemed to have joined
them. He wasn’t the only one (and who better to illustrate
the trend?), but some Slacker-like satire could
have helped. Still, I loved Waking Life in 2001,
but that was when we were all still sliding down the
postmodern rabbit hole.
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Before I say “we” again,
I should specify that I’m talking about the people usually
depicted in Linklater’s films, who, I assume, are the
same people that see his films: left-leaning, mostly
white college graduates in their twenties and thirties
(Linklater himself is now in his early forties). I have
to admit that upon hearing about new Linklater films,
my first response was often revulsion. It does appear
that he, more than any other director, got things right
about us. He located flashpoints of unified mood and
behavior for an otherwise religiously individualistic
culture. We were not a people that worried over or even
considered “the collective.” Rather, we collectively
strove to receive our entitlement. As Slacker
morphed from satire to cultural trend, liberal white
disaffection hit the mainstream. So did Linklater. Though
set in 1976, his second film, Dazed and Confused,
looks a lot like 1993, and without a war to protest
or a Nixon or Bush to unseat, all we had to worry about
was how many brain cells we could live without and whether
or not to blow off school. Before Sunrise tracked
our ubiquitous tours of Europe (how did we afford our
rock & roll lifestyles?) that promised romance and sparklingly
fleeting international conversation. School of Rock
felt good after years of debating whether or not to
actually pursue a career, and it was good to know that
my trivial knowledge of progressive rock was useful,
let alone compelling, to another generation of (this
time multicultural) college-bound nerds. Though somewhat
self-congratulatory, School of Rock at least
nudges slackers back into society, and without excising
their rebelliousness. It’s been a long time since we
unironically formed a band and made a lot of noise.
Which is, finally, a long way from the complacency depicted
in Slacker. But, as different as they are, Slacker
and School of Rock are Linklater’s most political
films. While Rock depicted a return to engagement
at its most basic level, Slacker depicted a culture
born of disengagement that borrowed activist language
to argue for irrelevance. One by one, Sixties-era leftist
causes are belittled and reconfigured. Rather than fight
for workers’ rights, the slacker thinks that workers
are stooges, and not workingis rebellion. One
calls himself an “anti-artist.” Another has “given up
not only on my own people, but mankind entirely.” An
old tool for political campaigning—the car megaphone—is
used for anarchic ramblings. Characters disassociate
themselves from others by employing collective designations
such as “humans” and “mankind” to claim philosophical
distance from the world around them. But along with
these perversions of progressive politics, there’s also
ample evidence of how radicalism always had its dark
side, and how its condescending tendencies foreshadowed
our drift into cynicism. Many voices in Slacker,
like the forebears that they quote and echo, know the
realtruth. They may not be talking about The
Man, or instructing factory workers—or Russian peasants,
for that matter—on what they should want from their
lives, but they do know that JFK wasn’t felled by a
single bullet, and that nothing the media says is ever
true. That some are truly enlightened and we should
all strive to be so enlightened. That the political
system is a sham, and that subversive messages can be
found in children’s cartoons. In the years since Slacker’s
release, such sermons still pervade, and their tenor
has hardly changed. They still sound self-satisfied,
and are still spoken for the benefit of the speaker
rather than for the deluded, unschooled masses. We hoard
our knowledge, and make it our identity.
What is truth, anyway? What is real? Few things identify
us, our education, our media-savviness, our postmodernist
bone structure, more than our comfort with these questions.
The Matrix felt so right, it was as if we’d half-written
it ourselves. And while we fumble about in the dark,
laughing at those who think they can see, truth keeps
happening. Reality, despite all its complications, really
does exist. We often feel entitled to pretend it doesn’t.
To pretend it’s all in our heads. But we really do have
a history, and change is truly necessary. At the risk
of repeating our mistakes or making things worse, where
do we go from here? The final sequence in Slacker
stunned me—I didn’t remember it from my first viewing.
A group of young people are horsing around in a convertible,
filming each other with Super-8 cameras. We see what
they’re filming, and it’s a jumpy, zany, energetic affair.
Suddenly it’s a Richard Lester film, like A Hard
Day’s Nightor Help!—Sixties culture at its
most promising and seductive. While he’d alluded to
it all along, Linklater allowed himself this last, quick,
direct equation. With a break from the past that is
both rebellious and responsible, a young man flings
the old camera into the lake, yet its beautiful, blurry,
and exciting moving images continue for a few moments
longer. Someone must have retrieved the film.
(Slacker
will be released on DVD by the Criterion Collection
this fall) |
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