Like many of you, my introduction to Richard Linklater came
in high school with his first feature, Slacker, which,
to this day, is one of the first images that pops into my mind when I hear the
phrase “independent film.” Made on the cheap, using non-professional actors,
and told in an unusually structured, seemingly plotless way, it’s the kind of
movie that, especially at the time, when the new wave of American independent
cinema was quietly building steam on the down low, a 15- or 16-year-old kid
might spend weekends getting high on a couch in a buddy’s basement and
watching, dissecting the philosophical ramifications of each individual
segment, as well as the movie as a whole. Linklater’s follow-up feature,
Dazed and Confused, served a similar purpose, though in a
very different way.
Whereas Slacker is, in many
respects, the quintessential early indie movie, Dazed and
Confused is more of a mainstream translation of many of the
themes and ideas explored in the previous film, putting them on display in a
publicly accessible manner. I saw this in the theater, which, in my hometown, a
small Navy outpost in the Pacific Northwest, is somewhere you never would have
found a screening of anything like Slacker. At the
time, I didn’t even know it was the same director, and to be honest, I was
still forming my idea of what that meant and means, and these two films helped
drive that home.
Once I realized the authorial connection and learned the
same filmmaker was responsible for both films, I rewatched them—granted, this
has been more than 20 years at this point—and the similarities became more and
more pronounced. Dazed is obviously the more
approachable of the two—we’ve all been through a last day of school, moved on
to new, terrifying futures we only vaguely understand, and attempted to figure
out exactly where we fit in our worlds—but they share obvious strands of DNA.
It moves with a similar fluidity to Slacker.
The scope of Dazed is less sprawling and more
reined in, featuring a limited, closed-off world that keeps circling back on
itself, but that episodic nature that is key to both is still in play. Over the
course of one night—the traditional cinematic
one-night-that-changes-everything—you check in with various groups and sets as
they progress through the evening, interpreting their experiences,
internalizing them, and being changed in the process.
The parallels between the two films are never more apparent
than in the early going of Dazed, when the kids are
still at school, killing the last hours of the year when we all know that
nothing, at least in the spectrum of traditional education, is being learned.
There’s a whole wealth of knowledge changing hands, but ain’t none of it
written down in any textbook you’ve ever encountered.
Scenes from this stage of the film could practically be
lifted from Slacker, or at least be chaotic rants left
on the cutting room floor, as you flow seamlessly from one group to the next.
You have youthful philosophical observations like the “old age suppressing
youth thing,” an interesting take on gender dynamics with the women’s bathroom Gilligan’s
Island discussion (even if the Professor is sexy), and the
obviously bra-burning feminist teacher telling her students that as they
partake in all the bicentennial festivities what they’re really celebrating is
a bunch of “slave-owning, aristocratic white men didn’t want to pay their
taxes.”
Though at first glance they’re drastically different movies,
there is simultaneously an apparent progression from one film to the next. Slacker is
very much a movie about a concept, one that has, from the beginning, a clear
conceit that is readily apparent on the surface. You can’t escape it. Dazed
and Confused undertakes a similar endeavor, showing a variety of
vantage points on a number of issues, philosophical, political and otherwise.
While Slacker throws these
scenarios at you, one after another, beginning to end, often in rapid-fire
succession, Dazed lingers, offering multiple
perspectives, and allowing you to take your time and consider all sides of
these various excursions.
Ultimately, these digressions circle back on one another,
and Linklater forms them into a coherent narrative that resembles an updated American
Graffiti for a new generation. Much as George Lucas’ film,
released in 1973, is set in an idealized earlier time, so is Linklater’s
(released in 1993, set in 1976).
As the day begins, there is a very rose-tinted-glasses style
outlook on the whole scene, one that is, layer by layer, peeled away over the
course of the ensuing evening. For all the seeming importance placed on things
like playing football, chasing romantic partners, and finding some good
old-fashioned visceral experiences, there isn’t much in the way of
consequences. You may get your ass kicked a little bit, but there isn’t a lot
at stake. Whatever happens, you’ll be fine. And that includes Carl’s mom
pulling a shotgun on Ben Affleck.
It feels like every last moment means everything
sometimes—and indeed, at the time, it does—and Linklater looks back with the
knowledge that this is both the most and least important night in the life of
all of the characters involved. Sure, things will be totally different
tomorrow, but at the same time, things will be exactly as they were yesterday,
and the day before, and the day before.
This is never more apparent than as Dazed and
Confused draws to a close and the film takes a dark turn towards
what can only be described as adulthood. Mike (Adam Goldberg) gets into a fight
at the beer bust, Pink (Jason London) and the others get busted by the cops for
smoking weed on the 50-yard-line, and Mitch (Wiley Wiggins) comes face to face
with both his own sexuality and the authority of his awake-at-dawn mother. That
last one has to be a confusing juxtaposition in his mind.
But this also speaks to the fluid, unfixed nature of these
events and flexibility of memory. As they note, no one remembers who won a
fight, only that there was one, and this night will change as the participants
remember it and share the tale, focusing on one or another thread. For Pink,
this is just another night, one in a long series that he and his cohorts, both
on the football team and elsewhere, have experienced time and again, and likely
will in the future. One of the reasons Dazed and Confused holds
up so well over the years is that it’s easy to imagine this night playing out
in perpetuity; it’s a magical night, but also every night.
For Mitch, however, this is the best night of his life. He
won a baseball game, got his ass kicked, threw a bowling ball through a car
window, helped his friends pour paint on Ben Affleck, and cruised around and
got high with Matthew McConaughey. That’s a memorable evening for anyone, but,
as with Pink, the implication is that this is one in a long series of such
nights. He’ll always remember this and cherish this one because it is the
first, but what about the second, the third, the tenth, the 20th? Where will those
fall? The significance, with time, will start to dwindle and fade away. It’s
never going to be this good again.
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