Slacker

  • États-Unis Slacker
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Résumés(1)

Quelques heures à Austin, Texas, un jour d’été en 1989. La caméra suit un passant puis l’autre, voyageant à travers les rues de la ville et multipliant de curieuses rencontres : jeunes excentriques, velléitaires et complotistes, personnages originaux et anticonformistes. (Splendor Films)

Vidéo (1)

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Critiques (3)

Goldbeater 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

français Une comédie très particulière de Richard Linklater, dans laquelle la caméra se balade d’un personnage à l’autre et raconte, de cette façon, une série d’histoires qui ne sont pas liées entre elles, mais offrent chacune des caractéristiques et un style intéressants. Dans chaque épisode, on suit un, deux ou plusieurs marginaux et leurs escapades dans les environs d’Austin, au Texas. Certains dialogues sont joliment construits, tandis que d’autres nous enchantent par leur fantaisie, ce qui fait qu’il est impossible de s’ennuyer. Et cette fin muette, presque grotesque, est un sans-faute ! Juste après la projection, je voudrais le voir une deuxième fois. [KVIFF 2018] ()

kaylin 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Richard Linklater is simply unique in his ability to tell stories. It doesn't really matter what he tells, but the techniques he finds in the film medium... That is simply unique. He is incredibly innovative, yet still true to himself. It doesn't matter if he films two characters after ten years, or if he films a movie for several long years to capture aging, or in this case, lets people go through and play short scenes just because it could have happened that way. In his execution, it always works and usually doesn't even get boring. ()

Annonces

Matty 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Slacker is a well-thought-out narrative experiment that does not bind the story to a single protagonist, but rather to the overall mood of paranoia (reminiscent of Rivetto's debut, Paris nous appartient) and several leitmotifs (media manipulation of reality, mistrust of public opinion). Just as the film’s characters do not live according to standard social norms, Linklater seeks an alternative to mainstream storytelling through his chosen structure comprising a sort of narrative relay (which he starts himself). Unlike his characters, who are either sociopaths conducting bizarre rituals (cutting photos out of a yearbook, throwing away things left behind by an ex-girlfriend) and carrying on paranoid conversations about a major conspiracy, or stoned slackers discussing Smurfs and Krishna, Linklater is relatively successful in his effort to capture the postmodern zeitgeist. By combining numerous different stories (which differ in the lightness of their themes and the characters’ degree of sanity) and many different media and formats (video, Super 8, 16mm), he succeeds in expressing the unfocused perception of Generation X, whose members flit among a tremendous number of stimuli, but are unable to dedicate themselves to any one thing. The film is thus constructed as a succession of diversions from a particular topic or someone’s story. The viewer’s desire for a coherent plot is thus never fulfilled, but our attention never falters nonetheless, because we have to get acquainted with other characters over and over again. Though human characters are used in a utilitarian manner (as bearers of meanings and functions) in every story, their subordination to the narrative is accentuated in Slacker by the fact that they are used like any other narrative means, such as editing or camera movement. Instead of obscuring the narrative structure and inducing the impression of documentary immediacy, multiple perspectives and the randomness in choosing what we will see next, the formulas that we have adopted by watching films with a traditional narrative force us to be more sensitive to how Slacker unfolds. From this perspective, its main content is not a portrait of a generation, but rather the very act of storytelling with all of its fixed (cause-effect model) and variable elements (independence from the main protagonist and the main storyline). 80% ()

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