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ROTATION:
Rob
Swift
Sleater-Kinney
Nirvana
Sonic
Youth
Pixies
Fugazi
Breeders
Three Mile
Pilot
Mogwai
DJ Shadow
Chuck
D
Black
Heart Procession
White Stripes
Built To Spill
Los Straitjackets
Jon Spencer
Blues Explosion
AND MUCH MORE!
"Ray
knows well enough that the monolith called film -- and by extension,
Hollywood -- was built upon what the French termed "trompe l'oiel",
a trick of the eye. And he tricks everyone, including his own viewers,
with this layered onion of a film until they're all left confused
and crying."
"You
can make nicely crafted things, whether they're poems, sculptures,
paintings, records, CDs, whatever. But they'll just be that -- nice.
They won't be unwieldy as personal expression often can be."
"What
do a toilet bowl and a woman's vagina have in common? They both
need to be cleaned with Lysol."
"There's
some thing in our psyche, this kind of right or privilege to resolve
our conflicts with violence. There's an arrogance to that concept.
To actually have to sit down and talk, to listen, to compromise,
that's hard work. To go for the gun, that's the cowardly act."
"In
a segment that seems designed to honor yet another one of rock and
roll's seminal yet fallen heroes, MTV just can't help talking about
why it, not Nirvana, mattered so much."
"For
white people, it will be different. They will be advised to refer
to the U.S. Federal Standard 595B Color Chart (or the Ralph Lauren
color chip guide at Home Depot) to determine the range of colors
permissible in a potential spouse."
"I
think that there's been a lot of difficulty in defining what is
American, what is considered American. There's a lot of difficulty
with acceptance within our community of foreignness at this time."
"That's
an issue I'm dealing with here: what is going to happen with this
next generation of kids? What is their culture but media culture?
What hasn't been sanitized and homogenized?"
"Word
comes that brother Cat Stevens refuses to lend his support to
our virtuous jihad. May this turncoat's Peace Train be laden with
explosives and rammed into the Mountain of Mohammed, peace be
upon him. "
No
matter how many times their songbites show up on Fox Sports, ESPN
or elsewhere, J5 has had to work hard to grab some proper respect
in a musical landscape now almost fully armored against anything
not involving Escalades, thug glamour, hordes of honeys shaking
ass, and more ice than Rakim wore on the cover of Paid in Full.
"It
is a great story that I lost 30 pounds for The Pianist and
learned to play Chopin and all that stuff. I didn't know it
was a story when I was doing it. I was just thinking, 'Oh shit,
I've got to lose all this weight in six weeks.'"
|
"Some Bigger Communication": An
Interview with Richard Linklater, Waking Life
by
Cynthia Fuchs
Richard Linklater's
movies feature lots of conversation, sometimes serving as plot, taking
you places that you don't quite expect, then turning again. The writer-director
of the groundbreaking Slacker (1991), as well as Dazed and
Confused (1993), Before Sunrise (1995), SubUrbia (1997),
and his not-so-well-received foray into Hollywood filmmaking, The
Newton Boys (1998), is famously laid-back, and he seems comfortable
with the whole cool-guy arty-filmmaker image. The Austin, Texas native
could pass for 20-something (he's really 41), laughs easily, and enjoys
thinking out loud, running ideas around. He likes to take his shoes
off, too.
In addition to
making films -- among them, he serves as Artistic Director for the Austin
Film Society, which he founded in 1985 as a venue for unusual, non-multiplex
films, from around the world. It was through this program that he met
Speed Levitch, the subject of Bennett Miller's 1998 documentary The
Cruise, who appears in Linklater's film, Waking Life, more
or less as himself. That is, Speed shows up on the Brooklyn Bridge,
with stars, clowns, splashes, and zaps flying around his head, holding
forth on what might be understood as the film's premise: "As one realizes
that one is a dream figure in someone else's dream, that is self-awareness."
Linklater sees Speed as "one of those exuberant seekers. We need more
of them. I'm kind of appalled who've seen that movie and come away thinking
he's a tragic character or that there's something sad about him. I'm
like, "What are you talking about?" I think he's just overflowing with
life. But to think that that's a bad thing, it's terrible. He's only
like 25 or 26, and what 25-year-old with that kind of brain is going
to have it totally together? I predict incredible things for Speed,
always."
Cynthia Fuchs:
How did you come up with the idea this film?
Richard Linklater: Like everything I do, it came from real life.
Believe it or not, a movie that's so unreal takes all its cues from
personal experience. That really happened to me, it was a really formative
lucid dream, like in the movie, that series of false awakenings. It
seemed to go on for weeks and weeks, and got creepy near the end. So
the narrative structure is something out of my own experience. I'd been
thinking about it for years and years, how it would work as a movie,
and asking myself, "Does it really work as a movie?" It never did in
my head, but when I saw some shorts by Tommy [Pallotta] and Bob [Sabiston],
my friends, and then it clicked for me, "Oh, that story I've been thinking
about didn't quite work, this is the way it should work." It takes everything
to that necessary level. It's realistic, and yet it's imaginatively
constructed, a contradiction. And I thought, "Oh, that's what your brain's
doing, in dreams and in memory." There's no exact anything; it's all
a reconstruction, constantly. So if the film can be perceived at that
level, that's the right level to take in the story. A lot of this was
instinctual, looking for a way to encompass the contradictions, like
being awake in your sleep. Films are so much like dreams that I don't
think films about dreams work, so this film had to be about something
else. To me, it was about becoming aware in your dreams. And so the
film itself sort of becomes aware as it goes. So all those things are
on the same parallel track: you have what's going on in your brain as
you watch it, the character -- Wiley -- becoming aware of the story,
and the audience becoming aware of that same narrative at the same time
that he is, it sort of sneaks up on you and then takes over the whole
movie, in a way. But it's not an imposed narrative, it's an awareness
of what was always there. So the narrative becomes aware of itself.
And then the film [laughs] is actually aware of itself as a narrative,
a story, a film. And that's the Soderbergh joke at the end, that the
film is aware of itself as an economic entity.

Art
imitating dreams. "Believe it or not,
a movie that's so unreal takes all its cues from personal experience.
This really happened to me, it was a really formative lucid dream,
like in the movie, that series of false awakenings."
|
CF: So many
films give you a story, ask you to identify with a character, and haul
you out the other end, whereas here, you're asked to think about that
identification process, because it's so not smooth.
RL: Yes, to have a lead character who realizes that he doesn't
even know his own name, partway through the movie. You're rudderless,
but you're in the position he's in, you have a perspective. The film
is nothing but structure and perspective. It's like, "Okay, I don't
know my name," but what can you do about it? The film is linear, moving
through a projector at a certain rate. Time is moving whatever you know
or don't know. It tells you that you don't really need those hooks,
you don't need a character you can empathize with. You see so many movies
that give you ridiculous reasons to care about a character, like his
dog died. But all that is constructs. You can care about other things.
CF: It also
asks the audience to be responsible for their own responses.
RL: Mm-hmm. It's very much a film that you have to participate
in, because it's depicting that awareness of dreaming that by definition
kicks you into a conscious level. You watch a film passively, and all
of your personal stuff, ideally, goes away and you have this great two
hour experience of another world, and then, the lights come on and you're
back to your real world: "Oh god, I have an appointment in 15 minutes."
That's a good film experience. But I like the idea that you have to
be aware of what you're doing while you're doing it, again, analogous
to being awake in your dream. The film demands that you be aware of
it. I think it's there to help you in your awareness process, like all
these characters are there to help Wiley in his awareness process [laughs].
CF: Most
movies presume viewers all have the same experience -- even though it's
obviously not true. This one is upfront about the fact that everyone
will have a different experience.
RL: Yes, it's all about your own subjective experience. Just
like life, everything is sort of a construct visually, but I believe
that we're all in a mutually agreed upon reality. Some people go way
out there and say there's no reality at all, but that seems really egotistical,
to think you create your own, alone. I think we all create together,
just perceiving in slightly different ways. The reality is concrete,
it's real, but we see it individually.
CF: That's
a refreshing way to answer academic relativism, or some versions of
deconstuction.
RL: Yes, Waking Life sort of rejects all of that, the
idea that if all subjectivity and society are illusions, then where
are you? I wanted to gather around, to come to a reemergence of another,
more tangible subjectivity and responsibility. It's interesting to have
gone through it, and it was important to confront. But if you think
of it politically, and on all other levels, and I had to reject it.
Like the character who seems like a professor, the teacher, says early
in the movie, that it's excuses, once you see yourself as just a product
of all these forces. I feel more connected than that. Everyone's on
their own subjective path. I always fall back on Ralph Waldo Emerson
and Thoreau, really staunch individual types, like the Beats. I'm attracted
to them.
CF: I'm wondering
about the guy in jail, who follows the Ethan Hawke-Julie Delpy scene.
RL: I didn't want the film to operate on any one level; I wanted
it to be light and dark, positive and negative, mostly positive and
not cynical, but I liked that it would have both. To me, he was kind
of scary. I grew up in a prison town, in Huntsville, Texas, and the
idea of people behind bars always got to me, festering in their own
subjectivity. His rage is so ferocious, but so imagined at the same
time. That's how it is increasingly, when you put people in cages, for
things that maybe they shouldn't be there for, because there's other
ways to deal with them, you're creating a lot of that, super-negative
energy that's going to come back in other ways.

The
dark side of dreaming. "I grew up in
a prison town, in Huntsville, Texas, and the idea of people behind
bars always got to me, festering in their own subjectivity. His
rage is so ferocious, but so imagined at the same time."
|
CF: How do
you think about the connections between memories and identity, as opposed
to strictly "experiences"?
RL: That has always fascinated me. This film that I have coming
out next month, Tape, is all about that, about how an event ten
years in the past relates to three people in the present, how they remember
it differently. The notion of memory, and the idea that our minds are
constructing the past, that there isn't an exact anything. Your brain
isn't a videotape, it's a theatrical production, and you're redressing
the sets, changing costumes, changing emphases. It changes over time.
No one goes through the world thinking they're bad. This other film,
Tape, involves someone being forced to apologize for something he did
ten years before. It asks, what that means, to say you're sorry.
CF: And of
course, it has to do with who you imagine yourself to be in the present,
based on misremembered events.
RL: Well, countries misremember their histories, for whatever
purposes. And we do it individually, casting ourselves as the victims
or the heroes. It's dangerous, writing your own story. It's not a very
healthy way to go through the world, to think that how you were treated
by your family is who you are. You have to think about what's on your
mind now, what's the interest for you in maintaining that story? What
are you focusing on in your life now, because that's really more important
than what happened 25 or 30 years ago, if you really want to be responsible
about it. But most people don't [laughs]. But they're encouraged not
to, because then you have a society full of people who are damaged,
who aren't fully in control, instead of fully politicized.
CF: This
movie will play differently for people who have seen your previous work,
than it will for people who come in cold. So it works as a "memory"
for those viewers.
RL: Right, fever dream! Personally, I just kind of opened it
up, and it's about film history, too. I just saw my own creations float
back in, with something to offer this movie. Julie and Ethan, from Before
Sunrise -- what they're saying is incredibly relevant to Waking
Life, it's some of the key thoughts that fit into the film. But
it doesn't mean anything literally, and you don't have to know them
to know what's happening in the film. I wasn't too precious about it.
CF: What
are your thoughts on the shaky animation style?
RL: Well, it's the way the computer interpolates the between-strokes.
You're doing like 12 frames a second, and that breathing is one quality
of it. I liked the look, it seemed active to me, and we shot it handheld
too, so it has an extra layer. I've never seen a handheld animated film,
much less one that has like, 30 different animation styles. So, like
the actors are different, so are the artists, and it was like granting
individual status to these animated characters, another contradictory
notion in this film full of contradictions. It was more real in that
way.
CF: For the
first couple of minutes, you're disoriented, watching it, and then you
settle into it.
RL: Yeah, your eye accepts visual stimuli pretty easily. I don't
think the ear gets used it. I always tell filmmakers, if they're doing
low budget, that the brain adjusts to whatever, black and white, grainy
film, like you're in a dream state. If that's the way it's going to
look, you just go with it. But your ear is less forgiving. If it's a
bad soundtrack, or you can't hear dialogue, that's more bothersome.
Early in the film, there's some pretty radical imagery, like when Wiley's
walking through Grand Central Station, but there are chandeliers and
a lot of planes, and some lady behind me was like, "Oh fuck! Is the
whole movie going to be like this? I didn't take my Dramamine." I do
think the voice is important too, it's specific, you need that little
human touch. I think we'll always be around. [laughs] And in this movie,
it wasn't just the voices, it was the atmospheric sounds too. We had
the bus go by, kind of the messiness of documentary-type sound. Most
animated films are just so clean, which makes sense, because they're
made in studios, controlled environments. You don't want a bus going
through Shrek, you know! [laughs] Well, I'd like a bus to go
all the way through Shrek.

Getting
all vertiginous on cinema's ass. "Early
in the film, there's some pretty radical imagery, like when Wiley's
walking through Grand Central Station, but there are chandeliers
and a lot of planes, and some lady behind me was like, 'Oh fuck!
Is the whole movie going to be like this? I didn't take my Dramamine.'"
|
CF: Speaking
of buses, can we talk a little about travel, as it shows up in most
all of your movies?
RL: Journeys and seeking do come up in my films, but I don't
think about it that much. I guess when you're traveling you get those
kind of poignant moments. Everything is heightened, and I think that's
why there's an addiction to travel. You're very aware of the culture
and yourself. It's an interesting place to be in your mind, things often
take on a more poetic resonance, and if you're seeking, it keeps you
sensitive. You can do that and never leave the room: it's an operating
system for some people. This whole movie's such a journey, he's traveling
in his mind, and everything he meets is helping him to become aware.
If you're human, you don't even have any choice. You're kind of on until
you're off.
CF: And that's
another question: choice.
RL: It's one of those questions that you dig into and it's always
fascinating. Something as random as that little cootie-catcher or whatever
you call it, it seems to have a fate to it, depending on what number
and color you choose. But if he had said "7" instead of "15," then what?
These are really fundamental questions you ask yourself at an early
age, but you never really answer them, you just circle around to it
again. Free will, that's a good one, that's right up here with God.
Depending on your religious views, those questions can go hand in hand.
I love the athletes who thank God. It's like, if you hit a home run,
then God was with you but not the pitcher? I'd like to see someone once
say, "No thanks to God, except for creating the universe. But beyond
that, we know you haven't done shit for about 15 billion years!" [laughs]
It seems so basic, for such an important aspect of our lives. To say
"God" is the Big Mac reason, so generic. There's a lot to dig into there,
but to really discover an area, you have to dig deep, and it's dark,
and there are unsafe places. So it's easier not to do that.
|
PICK
UP OFFICIAL WAKING LIFE ART HERE
|
 |
CF: And isn't
it all about storytelling anyway, making sense of what happens to you?
RL: Certainly. That's what our brains do, we're very comprehensible,
pattern-seeking, storytelling creatures. We take limited visual data
and create sense out of stuff that fundamentally makes no sense. But
that's how we're able to move on and achieve anything in the physical
world, I think, we're able to ascribe a lot of meaning to something
that maybe has none. Or you have to at least acknowledge that, when
you search for meaning, that there is none, that it's a completely random
coincidence, biologically speaking. But whatever it takes, to keep us
going. Storytelling, that's why we're here. It's communicating, a way
to share our experience. Art's a tip of the iceberg in terms of how
we get to know one another. It's the way the tribe breaks out and shares
culture, it's kind of amazing. And that's the thing, film is the most
incredible way to communicate, and it's so new. It's so huge. I think
we're still grappling with that possibility, that you can reach billions.
Maybe only Titanic's done that. That's why I think that it doesn't
make sense when filmmakers say, "I only did it for myself and my friends."
If you're in the film medium, you have to, on some level, be hoping
for a bigger communication.
Cynthia
Fuchs is film-tv-viddy editor at PopMatters.com
and Associate Professor of English/Media/African-American studies at George
Mason University.
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