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Film Waking Life

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liquidocean

Bluelighter
Joined
Nov 8, 1999
Messages
7,865
This movie blew me away in terms of perspective, orientation, animation, existential coffee-haus talk, and overall flow. I'm too lazy to talk about this movie unless other people have seen it, so shout out if you have. Here's a Salon.com article on it. - L/O
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Adults love cartoons for their colors, their energy and their musical movement. Here's one that doesn't devolve into adolescent foolishness.
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By Stephanie Zacharek
Dec. 4, 2001 | Although movies are largely a visual art form, it often feels like heresy to separate a movie's visual qualities from its content. That might be because as moviegoers, we're used to narrative formats. And they're popular for a reason: Aside from the fact that movies by experimental, nonnarrative filmmakers like, say, Chris Marker don't come to our local multiplex, the simple explanation is that most of us go to the movies because we like stories.
Richard Linklater's animated feature "Waking Life" does tell a story, but it's one made up of a cross-weaving of dream threads, a warp and weft of conversations that make sense sometimes in real-life logic and sometimes only in the shimmery, half-aware logic of our dreams. In that respect, it feels more like an experimental film than a strictly narrative one. At the same time, though, its visuals tell their own story, one that's connected to the movie's spoken dialogue but is also, somehow, floating free of it. Exhilarating, transporting, funny and haunting -- and at times maddeningly heady or narcotically logy -- "Waking Life" doesn't compare to any other movie experience I've ever had. It's the kind of thing that leaves you walking out of the theater vaguely dazed, wondering, "Did I really just see that?" -- but feeling more alive because of it.
The picture, which Linklater both wrote and directed, is a collagelike meditation on the nature of dreams, on the ways in which we proceed through our lives with varying levels of awareness (or a complete lack of it), and on the degree to which we're influenced by random elements like art or physics or language. It was shot and edited as live action; a team of more than 30 artists then "painted" it by computer. The result looks something like a moving paint-by-numbers: The colors quiver and vibrate within the outlines of the images, less a re-creation of real life than an artist's rendering of the vitality of everyday reality. "Waking Life" has a visual presence that's almost vocal, the way live cells wriggle slightly under a microscope, their silently noisy way of making sure we know that they're there.
All of that visual activity does work in the service of a story, albeit one that's a little hard to corral into a synopsis: The hero is played by Wiley Wiggins (a Linklater veteran who starred in "Dazed and Confused"), whose fate is foretold when, as a child, he experiences the feeling that he's floating off into the air: He keeps himself connected to Earth by grabbing onto the handle of the family car. We then reconnect with the grown-up Wiley as a student who finds himself trapped in a lucid dream -- in other words, he knows he's dreaming, but he can't quite find his way out of it. Every time he thinks he's waking up, he looks at his digital clock to find the numbers all liquid and swimmy, completely unhelpful in telling him anything so practical as the time.
This rangy, free-form dream becomes an odyssey that we see through Wiley's eyes: He drifts into a classroom where a teacher is ruminating on the nature (and beauty) of existentialism, and later finds himself drawn into the erotic gaze of a woman he saw only briefly in a train station. He drops in on conversations with philosophy professors and people who only wish they were: A rough bar-stool storyteller and various coffee-shop pundits; a bitter convict consumed with the desire for revenge; an ominously cheerful guy in a captain's hat who drives a taxi-cab-type vehicle that looks like a boat. (I warned you that it was hard to explain.)
The characters are played by an array of people and actors with whom Linklater has worked, or with whom he has some sort of personal relationship. One character is a professor whose class Linklater once audited. Kim Krizan, who cowrote the luminous "Before Sunrise" with Linklater, appears as a young woman bubbling over with theories on the uses and limitations of language. Julie Delpy and Ethan Hawke appear in a lovely vignette, reprising the characters they played in "Before Sunrise." We see them in bed, talking comfortably, their conversation starting out idly and dreamily and heating up into something that engages and inspires them -- an exchange that's a natural coda to their conversations in "Before Sunrise." (For those of us who love "Before Sunrise," it's also wonderful to see these two characters together again, to know that their relationship somehow lived beyond that one evening they spent together in the earlier movie.)
The dialogue in "Waking Life" consists of snippets of thought spun out into useless shaggy-dog ideas, as well as cogent theories that spread out so quickly and so fully that we can barely take them in. The characters serve up nuggets like these: "The idea is to remain in a constant state of departure while always arriving. It saves on introductions and goodbyes." "Which is the most universal human characteristic, fear or laziness?" "They say that dreams are only real as long as they last. Couldn't you say the same thing about life?"
Some of these people really know what they're talking about; others are simply reasonably bright folks who think way too much, and talk even more. It's up to us, as viewers, to decide which is which, and even then, I'd hesitate to declare anything finite. I've seen "Waking Life" twice: Some of the characters who seemed full of baloney on the first viewing made splendid sense the second time around -- and vice versa.
"Waking Life" threatened to drive me crazy both times: The talking often seemed endless, as if I were the one trapped in the lucid dream (an effect that must have been Linklater's intention, at least partially). But both times I felt myself lured deeply into the picture, almost against my will. And no matter how loopy the movie's dialogue sometimes made me feel, the look of it had me enraptured.
Fans of adult animation -- things like Walt Disney's stupefyingly dull Atlantis" or the even dorkier computer-animated "Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within" -- are always quick to point out that cartoons were originally made for adults, which is true. But defenders of contemporary adult animation have never been able to explain to me why these pictures are always so foolishly adolescent. I'm sorry to say that the lead character of "Final Fantasy" looks an awful lot like those shapely sword-and-sorcery babes that the more talented stoners used to scribble in the margins of their notebooks in junior high. Not that there's anything wrong with that kind of art -- but it's dumb to trumpet it as a new level of sophistication and maturity for cinema.
But "Waking Life" is something else again. Adults like cartoons (whether they're made for kids or adults is beside the point) for their colors, their energy, their almost musical sense of movement, and "Waking Life" wraps all those things in its embrace. As Wiley makes his way through a train station, we see it as a long, gorgeously appointed 3-D corridor divided into segments that shift and shimmer independently of one another -- a marvel of depth perception translated into art. When Wiley meets with a pointy-head grad-student type who's rambling on about the nature of human life (or some such), the view outside the window behind him shifts and changes magically. One minute we see a tropical paradise; the next, the leaning tower of Pisa. It's a brilliant (and funny) visual representation of the way our minds wander when they can't quite latch on to the information that's being presented to us -- especially if it's boring.
"Waking Life" swims along to a wonderful score by Glover Gill, performed by the Tosca Tango Orchestra -- it's the perfect marriage of music and animated movement. But even when there's no music playing in "Waking Life," the movie's lyricism is sustained by the way it looks and feels. The wordiness of "Waking Life" may drive you mad at times, but I prefer to think of it as a trick, a test, to see how fully awake and aware we are. Words are important, but life is about trusting the visuals, too. The truth is there, in the things we can see with our own eyes. Our job is simply to make sure we look.
 
Yeah, the animation was amazing!
plus there's Mitch from Dazed and Confused, always a bonus...
 
The animation was interesting at first, but the "philosophizing" was just too much like Philosophy 101. Not a deep thought in the whole movie, just aimless sophomoric ranting.
I actually walked out half way through because it was so boring.
 
OH GOD......i just saw thirty minutes of this movie at my friends house..........the philosphizing is surfacey and sometimes awful, but they do talk about Sartre, and the animation looks like ACID....like fucking ACID...that is, the way things float and bounce and leave tracers and trails....fucking beautiful.....the philosophizing is reminiscent of the kind of banter i would scare my friends and family with during my "acid winter" last year...and it makes the film that much more beautiful.....and i've only seen thirty minutes of it.......
 
I call it psudo-intellectualism.
It works at times, doesn't at others.
but don't rob yourself of the experience, go check out this movie!
I have been a fan of "lucid dreaming" for years(lucid dreaming since i was 5)
 
This film is amazing. I love the way they do rotoscoping with different styles throughout the movie to emphasise points.
OK, so the philosophy wasn't anything groundbreaking, but its just supposed to make you think, not give you all the answers!!
 
I just rented this, watched it alone, and have no one to discuss it with. :(
lib
 
one of my professors has been talking about this movie a lot... it sounds interesting. i'll have to go out and rent it sometime soon.
 
I saw this today in school. I was completely amazed with it. It held my attention in ways no other movies can. It dove deep into the parts of reality we could not hope to truly understand.
I would recommend this to all
 
One of the most thought-provoking movies I've seen in a long time.
Partly because it is the first movie Ive seen to really tackle the topic of 'dream consciousness'. And done with enough insight to make me believe that Linklater has actually had some experience with the subject.
Also, enough philosophy packed in there to give u something new to think about for the first 50 times u watch the movie.
There is a line in there about self-awareness which actually kinda inspired my sig.
 
i would have to say this movie is better than most of the movies out there. it's worth watching. the proffesor (sp) that plays himself is the author of the next book i'm reading for class...as a phil/art history student, i found it interesting, although simple, and if i wasn't interested in philosophy...the movie woulda probably sucked.
so go see it if you khow anything about philosophy, even if it isn't much, because the movie is good.
 
Even if you have no interest in philosophy, you should go see this movie because of the animation. It was dope. :)
 
Firstly I'd just like to say I loved the movie the animation was great and use of real people, actors and such was also marvelous.
However I don't know much about philosophy it is something I'm taking an intrest in and am planning on doing alot of my own research and stuff in the near future (time I need more time).
My question is to those people who found it rather simplistic to follow, I mean I would say I understood apx 60% of the 'theories' discussed but sometimes I was just .... well bamboozled at what was being said.
So do you have any prior knowledge in philosophy
or are you just smarter than the average bear ?
O' does anyone have any references to some good texts and such that you can suggest for me trying to expand my knowledge in the matter.
Thank You Chris
 
In terms of quantum physics / quantum psychology and holistic theory, rent Mindwalk.
 
The content in this movie was boooooooooring, and im a gigantic fan of having good, deep conversation.
The filming though was great, it's not quite animation though, they filmed the whole movie 1st and then went back and painted over each frame.
It is a bit like being on drugs though, and it's more fun when you actually are.
 
to me, this movie reminded me of a film version of the novel sophie's world, in that it offered a condensed overview of various philosophical views. obviously, sophie's world is much more of a history lesson, covering the great philosophers of our time on earth, where as waking life offers a few contemporary outlooks, mainly focussing on existentialism.
even though it did seem to be a pretty basic overview, i did still get lost at times. however, i'd much rather come out of a film trying to figure out its various meanings than be left with an over-simplified (and generally boring) plot.
i liked the way the story meandered from one 'philosopher' to the next, and of course, i loved the animation (though it did seem to make the actual dialogue even *more* difficult to focus on!). either way, it's definitely one of those movies that you just *should* see, in a similar way to bowling for columbine; go on, it'll be good for you, whether you like it or not.
 
I like Linklater and i liked the rotoscoping animation but the movie was disappointing. I heard Linklaters got a new flick comin out though.
 
i love music, poetry or film that really exercises the mind, and this film surely does that, great insights into conciousness, dreaming, political statements (i love it how one guy pulls the monk protest) and my favorite lecture was the one about human evolution. and where it is going, its talks about us evolving into neo humans and so on, evolving from anolog to digital, or is it a mould of the 2, yeah, when he talks about us and biotechnology, ahh, endless.
imout.
 
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