Review of Dazed and Confused (1993) by Cord M — 29 Nov 2018
Graduating and incoming high school students get into trouble on the last day of school in summer of 1976.
It knows what the 70's were like. Despite being made in the 90's, Director Richard Linklater's depiction of the 1970's is a true love letter to an era filled with kids hanging out in the back of an El Dorado's truck bed while sipping beers and shooting the breeze. Each locale, hairstyle and song choice is pitch perfect and perfectly illustrates what it feels like graduating high school, and the friendships we potentially have to leave behind as we grow into adulthood.
Fun performances by stars before they were big. One of the more fun aspects of Dazed and Confused is seeing the cavalcade of celebrities on screen before they were household names and had Oscars sitting on their mantle. You get to see Ben Affleck as a paddle-swinging jock bully, Milla Jovovich as a free-spirited, groovy chick and most famously Matthew McConaughey as a loitering, ultra-creep that loves high school girls because "[he] get[s] older, they stay the same age. Yes they do.".
You don't watch it, you live it. Linklater creates a film with an innate ability to capture real moments in an honest way with the simplicity of the narrative-high school kids hang out and get into trouble on the last day of school in May of 1976. These characters feel like people you know and share genuine experiences/dialogue, and pull you into their world instead of feeling like a spectator. You become a fly on the wall of a mellow summer night filled with friends, joints and an absence of smart phones or selfie sticks. It will make you feel like you're living in the wrong era.
This review of Dazed and Confused (1993) was written by Cord M on 29 November 2018.
Dazed and Confused has generally received very positive reviews.
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