Metacritic Film

Waking Life

Starring Wiley Wiggins, Ethan Hawke, Julie Delpy, Timothy 'Speed' Levitch, Nicky Katt, and Peter Atherton

MPAA RATING: R for language and some violent images

Fox Searchlight
Drama
99 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters October 19, 2001

In this animated drama, a man walks through what may be a dream, flowing in and out of scenarios and encounters with strange characters. (Fox Searchlight)

WRITTEN BY
Richard Linklater

DIRECTED BY
Richard Linklater

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

82 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Chicago Tribune
The film is truly special, truly different -- a wondrous talky roundelay about and for people who love life.
100 Entertainment Weekly
An amazing thing -- a work of cinematic art in which form and structure pursues the logic-defying (parallel) subjects of dreaming and moviegoing.
100 New York Magazine
An astounding, one-of-a-kind movie.
100 Film Threat Chris Barsanti
If there is justice in this world, this is the movie that will get people talking again about the excitement of film.
100 Chicago Sun-Times
I have seen Waking Life three times now. I want to see it again -- not to master it, or even to remember it better, -- but simply to experience all of these ideas, all of this passion, the very act of trying to figure things out.
100 Portland Oregonian
Not only does this film make you think, it makes you want to think. Few films -- few works of art of any stripe -- can claim that.
100 Boston Globe
Intriguing, arresting, delightfully refusing to be pigeonholed.
100 Baltimore Sun
A beautiful display of celluloid bungee-jumping.
90 Chicago Reader
Exciting and innovative feature.
90 Washington Post
A smart cartoon about the life of the mind. It's about the fuzzy border between dreaming and living. It's thoughtful, provocative, liberating and fun.
90 Slate
One of the most inspired cases of the medium embodying the message ever captured on celluloid.
90 Rolling Stone
That Linklater pulls off the innovative feat with hypnotic assurance is nothing short of amazing.
90 Salon.com
It's the perfect marriage of music and animated movement. But even when there's no music playing in Waking Life, the movie's lyricism is sustained by the way it looks and feels.
90 The New York Times
So verbally dexterous and visually innovative that you can't absorb it unless you have all your wits about you. And even then, you may want to see it again to enjoy its subtle humor and warm humanity.
88 Philadelphia Inquirer
A smart, sensuous and sensory mind trip that caroms around a universe of thought.
88 New York Daily News
Linklater's ravishing new movie represents a bold leap into the possibilities of technology.
80 The New Yorker
For the battered American independent cinema, Linklater's movie is the highest form of life seen in the last couple of years. [12 Nov 2001, p. 138]
80 Mr. Showbiz
Like being jacked directly into Linklater's alpha waves, and the experience is bracingly new to movies.
80 Los Angeles Times
The effect is dazzlingly beautiful and surreal.
78 Austin Chronicle
The pictures are gorgeous, and the words, well, if you listen hard enough, the words say exactly what one needs to hear: that is, to wake up and live.
75 Miami Herald
Might have been unbearable if Linklater hadn't filled it with so much self-deprecating humor, undercutting the pretentiousness whenever it threatens to become too thick.
75 Christian Science Monitor
Few American filmmakers put more faith in the ability of words to stimulate mind and heart.
75 New York Post
A breakthrough animated film -- a trippy cross between "Yellow Submarine" and "My Dinner With Andre" that will leave some audience members struggling to stay awake and others reaching for a toke.
70 Variety
Audiences looking for something fresh and different, not to mention a head trip, will find it in Waking Life.
70 New Times (L.A.)
While much of the film is as scattershot as life itself, there are a few superb sequences involving lucid dreaming that really get down to business.
70 LA Weekly
Individual artists were assigned their own characters and given free rein -- characters and locations shift on a dime from naturalistic to baroque -- with the result that the movie's formal imagination surpasses and redeems the banal tedium of some of the dialogue.
67 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
I'd like to think it's all a joke, that far from a dream this is actually Linklater's idea of a nightmare.
60 Washington Post
It's a cult movie in search of a cult. It'll probably find one. It certainly looks and feels like no other movie ever made.
50 San Francisco Chronicle
Leaves an impression, while its specifics fade almost immediately.
40 Village Voice
Waking Life doesn't leave you in a dream, specifically the dream of Linklater's previous films, so much as it traps you in an endless bull session.
40 TV Guide
All talk and no action. Never, however, has pedantic navel-gazing been so beautifully drawn.

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