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Richard Linklater

Auteur de School of Rock [2003 film]

35+ oeuvres 2,255 utilisateurs 37 critiques

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Crédit image: Richard Linklater

Séries

Œuvres de Richard Linklater

School of Rock [2003 film] (2003) — Director — 422 exemplaires
Dazed and confused (1993) — Director/Screenwriter — 252 exemplaires
A Scanner Darkly (Widescreen) (2006) — Director/Screenwriter; Directeur — 187 exemplaires
A Scanner Darkly [Graphic Novel] (2006) — Auteur — 163 exemplaires
Boyhood [2014 film] (2014) — Director/Screenwriter — 160 exemplaires
Before Sunrise (1995) — Director/Screenwriter — 150 exemplaires
Before Sunset [2004 film] (2004) — Director/Screenwriter — 131 exemplaires
Slacker: A Screenplay (1992) 85 exemplaires
Waking Life (2003) — Director/Screenwriter — 74 exemplaires
Before Midnight [2013 film] (2013) — Director/Screenwriter — 63 exemplaires
Bad News Bears [2005 film] (2005) — Director — 60 exemplaires
Bernie [2011 film] (2011) — Director — 46 exemplaires
Me and Orson Welles [2008 film] (2009) — Director — 46 exemplaires
Fast Food Nation (2007) — Director/Screenwriter — 46 exemplaires
Where'd You Go, Bernadette [2019 film] (2020) — Directeur — 42 exemplaires
Slacker [1991 film] (2004) — Director/Screenwriter/Cast — 31 exemplaires
Everybody Wants Some!! [2016 film] (2016) — Directeur — 27 exemplaires
The Newton Boys [1998 film] (1999) — Director/Screenwriter — 24 exemplaires
The Before Trilogy (The Criterion Collection) (2017) — Directeur — 24 exemplaires
Tape [2001 film] (2002) — Director — 17 exemplaires
Last Flag Flying [2017 film] (2014) — Directeur — 12 exemplaires
Boyhood: Twelve Years on Film (2014) 9 exemplaires
Woodshock [1985 short film] — Directeur — 2 exemplaires
SubUrbia (1996) 1 exemplaire
Ultimate Party Collection — Directeur — 1 exemplaire
Everybody Wants Some 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Spy Kids [2001 film] (2001) — Actor — 207 exemplaires
Spy Kids Triple Feature 3-Movie Collection (2013) — Actor — 16 exemplaires

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Pretty decent but I really thought I had bought the real novel
 
Signalé
Melman38 | 5 autres critiques | Apr 12, 2023 |
This film shows the essence of rock'n'roll better than any other film I know of. Black is great, of course, in a role that had to be written for him, but what makes the film work is the kids. I also credit the scriptwriters for not making the crisis point in the film worse than it had to be. I must also note that Joan Cusack, whom I have found annoying in every other role I've seen her in, is really great here. Highly highly recommended. Laugh out loud funny.
 
Signalé
datrappert | 2 autres critiques | Apr 1, 2023 |
review of
Philip K. Dick & Richard Linklater's A Scanner Darkly - A Graphic Novel
by tENTATIVELY, a cONVENIENCE - July 30, 2015

A Scanner Darkly was the 1st Philip K. Dick bk I read. It wd've been recommended to me by my friend Lamar "Chip" Layfield. I'd read a fair amt of SF as a child & a teen, authors like Robert Heinlein, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Isaac Asimov, & Arthur C. Clarke. Then I decided it wasn't serious enuf literature & stopped reading it. Reading A Scanner Darkly over a decade later might've been my 1st delving into it again, giving SF a 2nd chance. I wasn't impressed.

Not much longer after that, that all changed. The 1st movie that I noticed based on A Dick bk was Ridley Scott's Blade Runner (1982). I loved it. Starting in 1984 I spent the next yr reading about a Dick bk a wk. I was hooked.

Blade Runner wasn't really the 1st of the Dick movies, there had been a 1962 tv show episode based around Dick's short story "Impostor", but Blade Runner marked the 1st of high-quality works based on Dick & I was excited about all of them. Paul Verhoeven's Total Recall (1990) was the next important milestone for me.

I'd already been familiar w/ Richard Linklater b/c of his Slacker (1991) wch interested me b/c of the subculture represented but also b/c he used the PXL-2000 camcorder wch I'd used extensively. Here's a link to a website that indexes some of them: http://idioideo.pleintekst.nl/Philosopher.html . I liked Slacker so when Linklater made a purportedly rotoscoped version of A Scanner Darkly I was intrigued.

It's somewhat vague to me now but as I recall I was disappointed by Linklater's movie. 1st, I probably wasn't impressed by the 'animation'. I was long-since familiar w/ rotoscoping, a technique in wch drawings are based around individual frames of film & then animated. In its original form, where filmmakers wd project the film using an analysis projector & draw on pieces of paper that the film was based on, there was a labor-intensiveness that cd produce very rich results. My friend Steve Estes had dome great things w/ the technique.

Knowing how labor-intensive ir was, I'd get some cynical amusement when I'd see a rotoscoped film that wd start off very ambitious & detailed & gradually dissolve into lazier & lazier drawings made more & more minimal as the filmmaker broke down under the workload.

Linklater's movie didn't strike me as 'real' rotoscoping at all. It seemed more like using computer filters to 'posterize' color than it seemed like the result of actually making drawings. Maybe I'm wrong, maybe Linklater had a whole assemble-line of cell-animators. Whatever the case, the result has a homogeneity to it that reeks of computer generalizing rather than hand-touches. I much prefer the animation/pixillation of such greats as Norman MacLaren, Robert Breer, Jan Svankmajer, Walerian Borowczyk, & Wladyslaw Starewicz, to name a few. Anything that has a highly uniform frame-to-frame registration just seems visually dull. Furthermore, it seemed to me that Linklater's A Scanner Darkly was a bit too much yet-another-aren't-stoners-funny? movie w/o really getting into the tragedy of Dick's take on the down side of drug culture.

NONETHELESS, when I saw that the movie had been made into a graphic novel & that I cd pick it up for 6 bucks I 'just had to add it to me PKD collection. THEN, it sat there & collected dust b/c why the fuck wd I want to read the graphic novel version when I'd already read the bk at least twice & quite possibly seen the movie that many times too?

As I've no doubt written elsewhere, when I was a kid I read comic bks & Mad Magazine & its spin-offs: Cracked & Sick. Then there was Famous Monsters of Filmland. By the time I was a teenager National Lampoon came along. All were picture-heavy. Comic bks were 'looked down on' b/c they seemed to be targeted to, & reinforcing of, the minimally literate. There didn't seem to be much of an appreciation for their involving 2 art-forms, they were commonly seen as failed literature w/ the art hardly even worth mentioning. They certainly weren't glorified as "Graphic Novels".

That wasn't really fair. Culture snobs objected to their hybrid nature, the text wasn't full-blown literature, the images weren't paintings in & of themselves. Now it seems that the graphic novel has become 'respectable'.. but have comics? Maybe they're still not. Whatever.

I read thru A Scanner Darkly - A Graphic Novel in a few hrs. Alas, I find myself in agreement w/ my archetypal stuffy critic above: I didn't really get the literate experience from it that Dick offers, I didn't find the art outstanding, it just seemed like the easy-reading experience, an intellectual-lite beer. Still, I have some respect for the whole process that went into its making, it's all very 'professional'. Still, wd I recommend it over the bk or the movie? Nah. I'd recommend the predictable (from my critical perspective): read the actual PKD bk, maybe check out the movie, but, nah, don't bother w/ the graphic novel, it's so stylized & diluted that it's not worth it.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
tENTATIVELY | 5 autres critiques | Apr 3, 2022 |
This is a pretty lovely styling of Phil Dick's ragged tale; the tale itself has a tragic hilarity, dragged up as it was from Dick's own drugged up life and poured into a typewriter at warped speed driven by bennies.

Maybe only 3 stars because 1. Dick never had the time to do it right . . . but if he had, he maybe wouldn't have done it at all. This is just fate but it makes ragged prose. and 2. buffing the surface of this tragic artifact somehow obscures it. I think.
 
Signalé
AnnKlefstad | 5 autres critiques | Feb 4, 2022 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
35
Aussi par
2
Membres
2,255
Popularité
#11,372
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
37
ISBN
109
Langues
3

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