Waking Life

Cover Image

Waking Life

Director:
Richard Linklater
R, 99 Minutes
 

At A Glance

Film Synopsis

Director Richard Linklater presents this computer-animated, dreamlike, meandering film about a college-age man (Wiley Wiggins) who floats in and out of a series of philosophical discussions and ethereal experiences, meeting an interesting cast of characters along the way. Each character that Wiley meets engages him in an existential discussion. Wiley listens, observes, and occasionally responds. Then he glumly shuffles off to his next encounter.

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Average Rating

matt2648 rates it:

"Waking Life, Richard Linklater's successor to his first movie, Slacker, ..." more>

1 total member review>

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Details

Runtime:
99 min.

Genres:
Comedy
Drama
Animation

Country:
UNITED STATES

Language:
English/American

Color:
Color

Certification:
R

Plot Summary

Director Richard Linklater presents this computer-animated, dreamlike, meandering film about a college-age man (Wiley Wiggins) who floats in and out of a series of philosophical discussions and ethereal experiences, meeting an interesting cast of characters along the way. Each character that Wiley meets engages him in an existential discussion. Wiley listens, observes, and occasionally responds. Then he glumly shuffles off to his next encounter. At times, he wakes up in his bed and rubs his eyes, appearing to start a new day. But eventually viewers learn that Wiley is dreaming throughout the film, and is trying to learn to control his dreams--and accomplish lucid dreaming, or simply wake up. Visually, Waking Life is nothing short of fantastic. Linklater stays true to his Indie style--jerky camera, drifting gaze, and steady head shots that allow non-actors to talk straight into the camera. To achieve the floating feeling of the dream sequences, he first tried taking aerial shots from a helicopter, then opted for the smoother effect of a hot air balloon. He shot the film on digital video, edited it, then called on 30 animators to finish it. The characters in the film move and gesticulate like live action, but they are animated with odd color schemes and surreal lines that make them cartoony caricatures. Waking Life is a superb work that should be applauded for its atmospheric elements (lovely images of New York and Austin), its amusing bohemian dialogues, and its unique animation.

FEATURES:

Region 1
Keep Case
Anamorphic Widescreen -
1.85
Single Side - Dual Layer
Audio:
Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
Dolby Surround - Spanish
Additional Release Material:
Audio Commentary -
1. Richard Linklatter - Director, Bob Sabiston - Animator, Tommy Pallotta - Producer.
2. Animators (25)
Bonus Footage -
1. Live Action Footage
2. Audition Tapes
Deleted Scenes (Live Action Only)
Featurettes -
1. Sundance Channel Special
2. MAKING OF WAKING LIFE
3. Animation Software Tutorial
Bonus Features -
1. SNACK AND DRINK (Directed by Bob Sabiston)
2. WILEY WIGGINS TEST
Trailer -
1. Original Theatrical Trailer
Text/Galleries: 
Biographies

 

 

 

Cast & Crew

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1 total review
  • Wake Up

    Waking Life, Richard Linklater's successor to his first movie, Slacker, is a series of vignettes that discuss subjects of physics, language, after-life, existentialism, and dreams. There is no plot per se other than the fact that your following Wiley Wiggens through a sort of dream like trance that takes him ... read more