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'); document.writeln(''); document.writeln(''); document.writeln('Dazed and Confused'); document.writeln(''); document.writeln('
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Director: Richard Linklater
Screenplay: Richard Linklater
Stars: Jason London (Randy “Pink” Floyd), Rory Cochrane (Ron Slater), Wiley Wiggins (Mitch Kramer), Sasha Jenson (Don Dawson), Michelle Burke (Jodi Kramer), Adam Goldberg (Mike Newhouse), Anthony Rapp (Tony Olson), Matthew McConaughey (David Wooderson), Marissa Ribisi (Cynthia Dunn), Shawn Andrews (Kevin Pickford), Cole Hauser (Benny O’Donnell), Milla Jovovich (Michelle Burroughs), Joey Lauren Adams (Simone Kerr), Christin Hinojosa (Sabrina Davis), Ben Affleck (Fred O’Bannion), Jason O. Smith (Melvin Spivey), Deena Martin (Shavonne Wright), Parker Posey (Darla Marks), Nicky Katt (Clint Bruno)
MPAA Rating: R
Year of Release: 1993
Country: U.S.
Dazed and Confused Criterion Collection DVD
'); document.writeln('Dazed and Confused'); document.writeln(''); document.writeln('Richard Linklater’s Dazed and Confused gets the details right. In fact, one could argue that the film is primarily, if not completely, about its details. It has a narrative--to be more specific, there are many narratives, all of which take place entirely during the afternoon and night of the last day of school in a small town in 1976. Yet, the film’s richness, what brings you back to it again and again, is Linklater’s spot-on observations about the rituals of teenage life and his attention to the smallest details of time and place.'); document.writeln('

'); document.writeln('Linklater was himself a product of the 1970s, and he views the era not with the ironic disdain of a posturing postmodernist, but rather with the keen eye of an anthropologist. He understands and conveys the awkwardness of late-night first kisses, the silliness of eighth-grade slow dances, and the dizzy stupor of being drunk for the first time. He packs the frame with images that convey so much about his characters’ lives--the girl having the zipper on her skin-tight jeans pulled up by a friend with pliers, the way adolescent guys use the crudest vulgarities as terms of endearment, and the way teenagers cruise up and down the town’s main drag and always respond to the question “What’s going on?” with “Nothin’ much.” He observes the details of bathroom graffiti, the contrasting styles of male and female hazing, and the pathetic, wheezy noise a keg tap makes when it’s finally empty.'); document.writeln('

'); document.writeln('Yet, despite being an almost perfect time capsule, Dazed and Confused is not a one-note slice of sentimental nostalgia. In fact, Linklater has said that he did not want the film to be nostalgic--to be a view of the 1970s from the 1990s. Rather, he wanted it to look and feel like a film that was made in 1976, and in this respect he is entirely successful. There is never a hint of revisiting the past, but rather a sense of continuity. The more things change, the more they stay the same.'); document.writeln('

'); document.writeln('The film opens with a now-famous slow-motion shot of an orange Pontiac GTO cruising the high school parking lot to the opening chorus of Aerosmith’s “Sweet Emotion,” the first of many perfect marriages of sound and image. Not surprisingly, what many people remember and cherish about Dazed and Confused is the way it is fueled by its soundtrack. Again and again Linklater finds perfect period rock music to underscore the action. Sometimes it’s amusingly obvious, such as his use of Alice Cooper’s “School’s Out” as students empty their lockers and bolt from the school as the bell rings; sometimes it’s ironic, such as his use of War’s “Why Can’t We Be Friends” as senior girls haze the incoming freshmen girls; and sometimes it’s just perfect, such as the film’s final fade-out image of a rolling highway to the tune of Foghat’s “Slow Ride.”'); document.writeln('

'); document.writeln('Having established his visual and aural canvas in the first shot, Linklater then effortlessly introduces us to his universe of characters, which span the spectrum of teenage life. The center is held by Randy “Pink” Floyd (Jason London), the high school quarterback. Randy is the center because he associates with virtually everyone in the high school. His friends include not only other members of the football team, especially the hyper-horny jock Don Dawson (Sasha Jenson), but also free-wheeling slackers such as Slater (Rory Cochrane), whose perpetually high state embodies the film’s title. He is also friends with the school’s smart kids, particularly Mike Newhouse (Adam Goldberg) and Tony Olson (Anthony Rapp), whose specific brand of ironic detachment and sociological sharpness is completely wasted on most high school students.'); document.writeln('

'); document.writeln('One of the primary misunderstandings of Dazed and Confused is that it celebrates characters who do nothing with their lives. In fact, the film differs sharply from most teen comedies in the way it observes and underscores the failure of those characters who never mature. This is embodied primarily in Fred O’Bannion (Ben Affleck), a returning senior who takes particularly sadistic pleasure in dishing out the painful hazing ritual of paddling to incoming freshmen. He is the film’s bully, but he is also the film’s joke because his single-minded cruelty is made possible only by the fact that he failed his senior year of high school.'); document.writeln('

'); document.writeln('We can see this in David Wooderson, as well, who is played with perfect comedic pitch by Matthew McConaughey in his feature debut. Wooderson, who graduated two years earlier but still hangs out with high school kids, is a perfect case of arrested development. Having achieved his high point in life in his teens, he refuses to exit the building; he remains top dog by hanging on to that which others grow out of. His line about his love of high school girls--he gets older while they stay the same age--is both hilarious and slightly creepy. In his own mind, Wooderson is a king, but like O’Bannion, he’s a bit of joke, too.'); document.writeln('

'); document.writeln('On the other hand, we have Randy, who is having a personal crisis because his coach wants him to sign a form pledging not to drink or do drugs or engage in any activity that might jeopardize his commitment to being on a state championship team. Everyone else is signing the pledge and then disregarding it, but Randy can’t get past the hypocrisy of it. Thus, despite being a teenager who does typically inane adolescent things, he has a deeper maturity and sees the world in a way many of his friends do not (he also has a meaningful sense of empathy, which we see in his relationship with an incoming freshman whom the other seniors have made their primary target for torture).'); document.writeln('

'); document.writeln('Dazed and Confused was Linklater’s third feature film, but his first for a major studio with a multi-million-dollar budget. He was known primarily for Slacker (1991), an ultra-low-budget indie about intriguing denizens on the social margins of Austin, Texas. Like his protagonist Randy, Linklater was in something of a bind in producing Dazed; he had been given the keys to the kingdom, so to speak, by the studio, yet he was intent on doing the film his way.'); document.writeln('

'); document.writeln('By most measures, the production was a mess (constant pressure from the studio, shortened production time, etc.), but it wasn’t enough to curb the energy and vitality that Linklater and his young, almost entirely unknown cast brought to the film (not surprisingly, the casting director was Don Phillips, who also brought together an incredible, then-unknown cast 10 years earlier for Fast Times at Ridgemont High). The cast’s lack of experience mostly plays well on the screen; there is an inherent naturalness to the fresh-faced ensemble, although it sometimes slips into amateurishness (Wiley Wiggins, who plays the eighth grader whom Randy befriends, is a very self-conscious actor who is rarely convincing when he needs to be).'); document.writeln('

'); document.writeln('More than 10 years after it was made, Dazed and Confused plays exactly as it did in 1993, which is its greatest strength. Its acute sense of time and place and the way characters interact with each other never fades or becomes dated. Linklater set out to make a film that was, in its own way, timeless, and the passing of years has only reinforced his against-the-odds success.'); document.writeln('

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Dazed and Confused Two-Disc Director-Approved Criterion Collection DVD

Aspect Ratio1.85:1
AnamorphicYes
Audio'); document.writeln('
  • English Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround'); document.writeln('
  • English DTS 5.1 Surround
  • Subtitles English
    Supplements'); document.writeln('
  • Audio commentary by writer/director Richard Linklater'); document.writeln('
  • Making Dazed, a 50-minute documentary by filmmaker Kahane Corn'); document.writeln('
  • Audition footage'); document.writeln('
  • Deleted Scenes'); document.writeln('
  • Character interviews'); document.writeln('
  • Cast and director interviews'); document.writeln('
  • Behind-the-scenes footage'); document.writeln('
  • Original theatrical trailer'); document.writeln('
  • 72-page book featuring new essays by Kent Jones, Jim DeRogatis, and Chuck Klosterman, plus character profiles, and memories of the film from cast and crew
  • Original film poster designed by Frank Kozik'); document.writeln(''); document.writeln('
  • DistributorThe Criterion Collection
    SRP$39.95
    Release DateJune 6, 2006

    VIDEO & AUDIO
    Although not a major improvement over the previously available “Flashback Edition” from Universal, Criterion’s transfer of Dazed and Confused does offer a superior image. The high-definition transfer was taken from a 35mm interpositive and supervised by both Richard Linklater and cinematographer Lee Daniel. The use of the MTI Digital Restoration System has given Criterion a much cleaner image, one that is virtually flawless. The image is well-rendered, with good detail and an acceptable level of sharpness that doesn’t lose its film-like look. Colors are strong and black levels are good. The audio offers both a Dolby Digital 5.1 and a DTS 5.1 surround track, both of which, not surprisingly, strengthen the film’s consistently perfect use of period 1970s rock music, all of which sounds fantastic in six-channel sound. Both remixed soundtracks were available on the “Flashback Edition,” and I would suspect they are the same mixes.'); document.writeln('
    SUPPLEMENTS
    The back of the DVD case sleeve announces that this is the “Director-Approved Definitive Special Edition,” and judging by the breadth and depth of the supplements, it’s hard to argue with such a description. Dazed and Confused has already been released on DVD by Universal in two incarnations, but neither of them come close to approaching what Criterion has put together here.'); document.writeln('

    '); document.writeln('The first disc has an excellent screen-specific audio commentary by writer/director Richard Linklater. Linklater has an easy-going, informative speaking style, and he offers some great bits of info, especially about the film’s autobiographical nature and the fact that the iconic opening shot of the GTO came to him under the influence of drugs (dental drugs, that is--he was having tooth work done at the time). The first disc also contains 17 deleted scenes (totaling about 25 minutes) in anamorphic widescreen (there were previously 9 available on Universal’s “Flashback Edition”). Several of these scenes are in an unfinished state, suggesting they were cut early in the editing process. Most of them are extensions of existing scenes, while some are little more than outtakes. The first disc also contains the original theatrical trailer in 1.33:1.'); document.writeln('

    '); document.writeln('The second disc is divided into three sections. The first is an excellent 50-minute making-of documentary titled Making Dazed by Kahane Corn. It fluidly mixes production footage and interviews from 1992 with new interviews conducted with Linklater, producers Sean Daniel and James Jacks, and numerous members of the cast. There are some great insights into the complicated and tense production (such as Jacks going ballistic over Linklater’s inclusion of too much profanity), and Parkey Posey tells a great story about how she came up with the classic line “Wipe that face off your head” (apparently she heard it in a bad translation of a Bertolt Brecht play). The second section of the disc contains 23 minutes of audition footage of the 12 major characters, which shows just how well cast the film was (plus it’s just plain fun to see future mega-stars like Ben Affleck and Matthew McConaughey in early test footage).'); document.writeln('

    '); document.writeln('Finally, there’s “Beer Bust at the Moon Tower,” which is subdivided into “Character Interviews” (13 interviews totaling 40 minutes), “Cast and Director Interviews” (47 minutes total), and “Behind the Scenes Footage” (13 clips totaling 30 minutes). All of this can be played individually or in random order, if that’s your thing. The character interviews are particularly interesting because they show how seriously Linklater and his actors took character development, which goes a long way toward explaining why Dazed and Confused is head and shoulders above so many movies of its ilk. The cast and director interviews were done mostly during the 1992 shoot, although there is a 2003 interview with Linklater, Matthew McConaughey, and casting director Don Phillips. Much of the behind-the-scenes footage shows rehearsals and shooting, but there is also a substantial bit on the 2003 10-year reunion in Austin, Texas, and the outdoor screening of the film sponsored by the Alamo Draft House (which yours truly was lucky enough to attend, although I didn’t see myself in any of the shots).'); document.writeln('

    '); document.writeln('And, in typically comprehensive Criterion fashion, the insert book (designed to look like a spiral notebook, natch) is an impressive 72-page affair containing new essays by Kent Jones, Jim DeRogatis, and Chuck Klosterman, plus character profiles and a reprinted interview with members of the cast and crew from a 2003 issue of Texas Monthly. There is also a folded original film poster designed by Frank Kozik for those of you who still own a black light.'); document.writeln(''); document.writeln('

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    '); document.writeln('Overall Rating:

    (3.5)'); document.writeln('

    '); document.writeln('Thoughts? E-mail James Kendrick'); document.writeln('

    '); document.writeln('All images copyright © Universal Pictures and The Criterion Collection

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