Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Richard Linklater | ... | Should Have Stayed at Bus Station | |
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Rudy Basquez | ... | Taxi Driver |
Jean Caffeine | ... | Roadkill | |
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Jan Hockey | ... | Jogger |
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Stephan Hockey | ... | Running Late |
Mark James | ... | Hit-and-Run Son | |
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Samuel Dietert | ... | Grocery Grabber of Death's Bounty |
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Bob Boyd | ... | Officer Bozzio |
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Terrence Kirk | ... | Officer Love |
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Keith McCormack | ... | Street Musician |
Jennifer Schaudies | ... | Walking to Coffee Shop | |
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Dan Kratochvil | ... | Espresso Czar / Masonic Malcontent |
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Maris Strautmanis | ... | Giant Cappuccino |
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Brecht Andersch | ... | Dostoyevsky Wannabe |
Tommy Pallotta | ... | Looking for Missing Friend (as Tom Pallotta) |
Presents a day in the life in Austin, Texas among its social outcasts and misfits, predominantly the twenty-something set, using a series of linear vignettes. These characters, who in some manner just don't fit into the establishment norms, move seamlessly from one scene to the next, randomly coming and going into one another's lives. Highlights include a UFO buff who adamantly insists that the U.S. has been on the moon since the 1950s, a woman who produces a glass slide purportedly of Madonna's pap smear, and an old anarchist who sympathetically shares his philosophy of life with a robber. Written by Rick Gregory <rag.apa@email.apa.org>
I walked into Richard Linklater's SLACKER not knowing for sure what to expect. I think that is the best way to experience this film. I wouldn't exactly put this film under 'Comedy', if I ran my own video store. I would invent the category 'Post-Film School Experimental Piece' and place it under that. Because that is just what it is, but don't let that repulse you. It is very interesting and has the power to warp you in what seems like one shot throughout a day and night in a college town of Austin, Texas.
The true life preserver of this film is the sure directorial hand and witty script of Linklater. I enjoy the matter-of-fact philosophy within the dialogue of Linklater movies, (DAZED & CONFUSED, BEFORE SUNRISE)it is especially heavy here. It's fun watching the weirdos in this movie, like the video-obsessed droid who prefers taped sequences over reality or the chick with Madonna's pap smear (eewww!!) But it's almost frightening when you come upon a character very much like yourself.
But the movie most successfully gives us a town populated by characters we actually believe are living their aimless life in front of us. Minute-by-minute plays that intricately connect into a long string of slacker beads. These characters belong to the counter-culture where neurosis comes naturally and there are hardly skeptics anywhere. Where conversations find the metaphysical levels of funny postcards.
Later in the future, we will trip upon this movie again and find it more as being a time capsule of the early 90s than a semi-experimental comedy by a director most known for his insights of the sub-culture living inside their own heads.