Latest News:

【seductive eroticism】

Still Slacking After All These Years

By Dan Piepenbring

On Film

Everyone’s talking about Richard Linklater’s Boyhoodat the moment—as well they should; it’s a remarkable film—but in honor of the director’s birthday, you should revisit his first feature, Slacker, which is freely available on YouTube.

The Criterion Collection’s site has a few insightful essays on Slacker, too. There’s “Freedom’s Just Another Word for Nothing Left to Do,” by Chris Walters, which was written in and about 1990, but feels right at home in 2014:

The all-but-total decay of public life has atomized others into subcultures of which they are the only member, free radicals randomly seeking an absent center as the clock beats out its senseless song.

The movie buries its treasure here, in the crevasses of its drollery and craziness. Nothing in the current climate is more permissible than mocking or reducing such people; Slackercelebrates their futility as a sign of endurance and mourns the passing of time by marking it with emblems of affection and empathy, the only prizes worth having.

Or Ron Rosenbaum’s “Slacker’s Oblique Strategy,” originally published in the New York Observer, which makes a seemingly outlandish but ultimately shrewd claim:

Slackeris at heart a very Russian film. Not just in its obvious kinship to Oblomov,Ivan Goncharov’s great nineteenth-century Russian novel, the classic celebration of the luxuriant pleasures of lethargy and the sensual delights of the contemplative life. There’s another Russian link, to Turgenev and his novels of the “superfluous man.” (And, to make a cross-cultural comparison, there’s a link as well to the seventeenth-century British pastoral “poetry of retirement” tradition, whose varieties are best limned in a volume with the lovely title The Garlands of Reposeby the scholar Michael O’Loughlin.)

But on a deeper level, the true Russian kinship is less with Goncharov or Turgenev than with Dostoyevsky, to a novel likeThe Brothers Karamazov:the kind of novel that is unashamed in its preoccupation, its obsession, with ultimate philosophical and metaphysical questions.

And remember, in closing, the wise slogan proffered by one of Slacker’s many hitchhikers: “Every single commodity you produce is a piece of your own death!”

Related Articles

  • The Dark Web: What is It and How To Access It
    2025-06-26 20:57
  • Pro 'Overwatch' team is dominating their competition in the most unlikely ways
    2025-06-26 20:56
  • Thinx founder responds to reports of her company's terrible work environment
    2025-06-26 19:27
  • These delicious cakes are actually disgusting vegetables in disguise
    2025-06-26 19:16
  • What cracked the Milky Way's giant cosmic bone? Scientists think they know.
    2025-06-26 19:16
  • NVIDIA to partner with Bosch and PACCAR for self
    2025-06-26 19:14
  • Ugh, Facebook, don't give us even more tabs
    2025-06-26 18:59
  • The internet finds a brilliant way to troll Sean Spicer and his green tie
    2025-06-26 18:58
  • The 10 Biggest Changes of the Last 10 Years in Video Games
    2025-06-26 18:58
  • RIP Siri? You can use Alexa in Amazon's app now, and it's really smart
    2025-06-26 18:28

Popular

Top Reads

Recommendations