I admit that I haven't been giving Richard Linklater his due, and I've taken him for granted. Last year he made two excellent comedies that were wholly unlike each other, and I realized that he was well overdue for one of these posts. One of my longstanding issues with Linklater's work is that he's best known for a couple of lovingly nostalgic films about his school days, but his experiences in high school and college in no way resemble my own, so I always found it difficult to relate. However, there was one of his early films that did feel very much like my college experience.
"Slacker" is an experimental film that consists of a series of barely connected vignettes with a sprawling cast of various people in Austin, Texas, inhabiting a neighborhood on the edge of the UT campus. They are of all backgrounds, colors, and creeds, and include a few familiar faces if you're from the area, but can generally be described as oddballs. I love how scroungy and youthful this movie feels, with the POV jumping from fascinating character to fascinating character in a variety of environments. Linklater himself starts off the chain of vignettes, an anonymous guy in a T-shirt telling his troubles to a taxi driver. Each new scene feels like a chance encounter that you absolutely might have, just walking through an eclectic college town, trying to mind your own business.
In the commentary track Linklater recorded for the movie, he claims that "Slacker" was made so he could play with structure, so the content was often a secondary concern. He relied on his cast and collaborators to fill in the individual stories, incorporating anecdotes from people's pasts, half-remembered third-hand gossip, conspiracy theories, and a few subtle references to classical literature and cinema. There wasn't a traditional script, and much of the dialogue was improvised. The subject matter veers from alien abductions to world politics to love lives to dietary concerns to Uncle Fester from "The Addams Family." It doesn't make sense on paper, but the in media res vignettes, with no beginnings or endings, do form a coherent narrative in the mind of the viewer, because this is the way that we actually experience life.
Linklater describes the film as taking place on the margins, a place for self-discovery, for discourse, and for expression. The characters are fictional, though some are based on real people, and everyone we see is an actor. Many were specifically recruited because they fit the profile of "slacker" - the misfit nonconformist who doesn't easily slot into regular society, but still has plenty of opinions to share. Linklater never meant for the term to have the negative connotations it would pick up later. The characters do not have names, and are credited by memorable descriptors like "Been on the moon since the '50s," "Sidewalk psychic," and famously "Pap smear pusher." While the specifics may have been negotiable, the vibe was always very deliberate.
"Slacker" is probably best remembered for kicking off the '90s indie wave, specifically a generation of filmmakers who self-financed their first features and embraced DIY methods and aesthetics. It was made with a $20 thousand budget and shot with no permits, and certainly looks like it. However, "Slacker" got the attention of key critics, was embraced by younger audiences as a cult film, and made enough money to inspire other Gen X filmmakers to try and replicate its success.
As for Richard Linklater, he's well known for never giving up his particular, collaborative, rule-breaking approach to filmmaking. I strongly considered writing this entry about one of his decades-spanning projects like the "Before" trilogy and "Boyhood," or maybe one of his animated films like "Waking Life" and "Through a Scanner Darkly." Or I could have gotten meta and talked about Linklater making a film about one of his filmmaking heroes, Jean-Luc Godard, inventing the improvisational style of filmmaking that Linklater put to use in "Slacker" and many of his other films.
However, in the end I'm writing about "Slacker" because I genuinely like the film and I get the film in a way that I don't quite get most of his others. I guess I just relate more to these characters and their experiences, which is to say that I guess I'm a slacker too.
What I've Seen - Richard Linklater
Slacker (1990)
Dazed and Confused (1993)
Before Sunrise (1995)
Waking Life (2001)
School of Rock (2003)
Before Sunset (2004)
A Scanner Darkly (2006)
Bernie (2011)
Before Midnight (2013)
Boyhood (2014)
Everybody Wants Some!! (2016)
Last Flag Flying (2017)
Where'd You Go, Bernadette (2019)
Apollo 10½: A Space Age Childhood (2022)
Hit Man (2023)
Blue Moon (2025)
Nouvelle Vague (2025)
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