A group of suburban teenagers try to support each other through the difficult task of becoming adults.A group of suburban teenagers try to support each other through the difficult task of becoming adults.A group of suburban teenagers try to support each other through the difficult task of becoming adults.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
- Bee-Bee
- (as Dina Spybey)
- Extra
- (uncredited)
- Beauty (Driver of VW)
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaSonic Youth wrote "Sunday" for this film in 1996. A re-recorded version of this song appears on their 1998 album "A Thousand Leaves."
- GoofsLeashes on 'wild' dogs are clearly visible.
- Quotes
Jeff: Nothing ever changes, man. Fifty years from now we're all gonna be dead. And there will be another group of people standing here drinking beer, eating pizza, bitching about the price of Oreos and they'll have no idea we were ever here and fifty years after those suckers will be dust and bones and there'll be all these generations of suckers, all trying to figure out what the fuck they're doing on this fucking planet and it'll all be full of shit. It's all so fucking futile.
Tim: If it's all so fucking futile, what the fuck are you so fucking upset about, fuckhead?
- Crazy creditsFilmed entirely on location in Burnfield, USA (Burnfield was the fictional city.)
- SoundtracksTown Without Pity
Performed by Gene Pitney
Written by Dimitri Tiomkin and Ned Washington
Courtesy of Highland Music by arrangement with Rhino Records
This film is not "Dazed and Confused", however, except that the two films share a spot-on accurate portrayal of familiar American characters. This movie is darker, preachier, deeper.
This time, instead of the rituals of the last night of high school, the film centers around the return of a former crony who has made it really big as a rock star. He's their friend, and the nicest guy in the world - just a former geek who struck it big and realizes how lucky he is - nobody could hate him.
And yet some do. Some hate him because he is a winner in the roll of the dice, and several of the gang are on their way toward becoming losers, and they know it. Their life consists of hanging around outside a convenience store.
For all its concern with the accuracy of its portrayals, the film has a curiously innocent denouement. The most simple and naive members of the group end up heading off to look for their dreams, and the cynical and jaded can see that their lives will repeat infinitely in their home town. In a sense, the succcess of the gentle stoned guy injects an almost impossible hopefulness in an otherwise despairing ending. As Graham Greene once wrote, baseless optimism is so much more appalling than despair.
Still, that was the choice of the filmmaker, and it wasn't an unfair one. Sometimes things do work out like that in real life, and this movie is all too close to real life. So close it can make you feel uncomfortable when you see yourself reflected in one character or another.
This and "Dazed" establish Linklater as an outstanding filmmaker with an uncanny eye for real situations and characters. One hopes he will soon realize his great potential with something better than The Newton Boys
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Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $656,747
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $69,365
- Feb 9, 1997
- Gross worldwide
- $656,747
- Runtime2 hours 1 minute
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1