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The Play-by-Play:
A
Scene-by-Scene Walkthrough
he
following is a scene-by-scene
description of Waking Life.
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1.
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A young man (Wiley Wiggins) asleep on
a train dreams of a boy (is it him?) and a girl playing with a
hand-held paper puzzle that opens to reveal the words, "Dream is
destiny." Later, the boy observes a shooting star and floats off the
ground, his hand resting for a moment on the door handle of a car.
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2.
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The young man, our unnamed
protagonist, arrives at a train station and leaves a message on a
friend's answering machine while a mysterious woman watches. He hitches
a ride in a car that looks like a boat, whose driver, dressed as a sea
captain, tells him, "The ride doesn't require an explanation, only
passengers." In the back seat, the other passenger remarks, "There's
only one instant, and it's right now, and it's eternity." The young man
has no destination in mind, so the other passenger instructs the driver
where to drop him off. There, he finds a note in the middle of the
street telling him to "look to the right." A vehicle speeds toward him
from that direction, but the instant before he is struck, he awakens in
bed.
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3.
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After the protagonist has milk and
cereal, Waking Life takes its first look at free will. The
protagonist visits the University
of Texas, where
Professor Robert Solomon shows up to repeat something Linklater
remembers him saying in a class he once audited. It's an argument that
existentialism is not at all a fatalist and depressing philosophy, as
it is so often characterized. Solomon notes that Jean Paul Sartre once
said in an interview that he never felt a day of despair in his life.
Instead Solomon argues that existentialism is hopeful and optimistic
and even empowering--though it holds that the universe is absurd and
meaningless--because it asserts that we have free will. "Your life is
yours to create," says Solomon, criticizing "the postmodernists" for
regarding people as purely social constructions. "What you do makes a
difference… It's always our decision who we are."
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4.
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Waking Life visits with a woman
who discusses language, which she argues was born from our desire to
connect meaningfully with one another. This "spiritual communion" is
what we live for, but tricky because words mean different things to
different people. If she says the word "love" (the word appears above
her head) to another person, its meaning to that person is based on all
his associations and experiences with love, not hers. "How do we know
we're communicating," she asks. "Words are inert--they're dead, you
know?"
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5.
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An excited, fast-talking scientist--at
least he seems like a scientist--makes a complicated argument that
evolution is moving faster and faster, or "telescoping." First came
biological evolution, then anthropological evolution. Now we are
experiencing a new kind of evolution, which is proceeding on two
levels--digital (artificial intelligence) and analog (biotechnology).
This will lead to the development of a "neo-human" no longer restricted
by time and space. According to him, evolution today has become an
"individually centered process," and must feature a voluntary rejection
of destructive impulses like violence and war.
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6.
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The protagonist awakens in bed again,
and finds that he cannot read his alarm clock. Thus clued in that he's
still dreaming, he floats off the bed and finds himself walking down
the street with a guy who launches into a speech about how, in the
modern world, humans have become passive observers who are drawn to
chaos and destruction. We must reclaim significance. Therefore, he
says, "I feel that the time has come to project my own inadequacies and
dissatisfactions into the sociopolitical and scientific schemes. Let my
own lack of a voice be heard!" He achieves this by calmly pouring
gasoline over his body and setting himself on fire.
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7.
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Waking
Life broaches the subject of dreams and the collective unconscious.
The movie floats over to an apartment where Ethan Hawke and Julie
Delpy, reprising their characters from Linklater's Before Sunrise,
talk in bed after sunrise. Delpy sometimes feels like she's observing
her life from the perspective of an old woman--that her waking life is
actually that woman's memories. Hawke brings up Timothy Leary, who
noted that we continue to have brain activity for six to twelve minutes
after death. If hours of dreams can take place between clicks of the
snooze button, is it not possible that we could experience our whole
lives in those six to twelve minutes? Could that dream be our
afterlife, or maybe even our real life?
They discuss reincarnation. Rejecting it on mathematical
grounds (if the world population has doubled in the last 40 years, then
we cannot all have had past lives), they theorize, "Reincarnation is
just a poetic expression of what collective memory really is."
As evidence of the existence of collective memory, Hawke
and Delpy discuss how the same results in science and art seem to pop
up independently and simultaneously across societies and cultures
throughout history. Hawke brings up a study that compared a group's
performance on brand-new New York Times crossword puzzles
versus ones that were a day old. According to Hawke, people's scores
went up dramatically (20%) on the day-old crossword puzzles, which
suggests that once thousands of people have done a crossword puzzle, it
becomes easier for others, because the knowledge is "out there" in
humanity's collective mind.
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8.
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Waking Life's most unsettling
scene is that of an enraged prisoner (Charles Gunning, from Linklater's
Slacker and The Newton Boys) swearing
revenge on the "motherfuckers" who threw him in jail by putting cigars
out in their eyes and pouring molten lead up their asses.
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9.
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Here we meet a man who mentions St. Augustine
and St. Thomas Aquinas. In their day, people who doubted free will did
so on the grounds that God knows everything in advance. Today, free
will is similarly called into question by physical science. Our bodies
are mostly water (he says, as the animation shows his body actually
filling up with water), and our body's actions are controlled by
electrical impulses. (He could also have added that brain chemistry
affects our mental states and therefore our decision making.) Is
everything we do, he wonders, governed by physical laws at the atomic
and subatomic level? Quantum physics, which shows that events at the
subatomic level are probabilistic but random, does not offer a solution
because we cannot accept that everything we do and are is random any
more than we can accept that it's all predetermined. We must find room
for individuality, he says, because who we are must be a product of the
free choices we make.
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10.
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Next is a half-crazed conspiracy
theorist (Alex Jones) in a car screaming about "freedom from systems of
control" through a public address system mounted on the roof. Society
is based on systems of control, which are all based on fear and
dehumanization, and we must not submit to them. There is no difference
between Democrats and Republicans, he yells, who lay out the same
"buffet of lies."
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11.
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An older man with a white beard argues
that our quest is "to be liberated from the negative, which is really
our own will to nothingness." He concludes, "To say yes to one instant
is to say yes to all of existence."
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12.
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Waking Life returns to the
subject of dreams. The protagonist sits with a guy who talks excitedly
about how liminal experiences are becoming more common; i.e.,
experiences that punch through the veil of ordinary perception
to…Something (the collective unconscious, the Divine, Enlightenment, or
whatever word you wish to use). We are in a radically subjective
universe, he says, and each individual act leaves a mark on it.
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13.
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In a café, two women talk about
aging. One remarks that when she was younger, she had a desire for
certainty in life, a desire to "get there." But the older she gets, the
less in a hurry she feels: "While technically I'm closer to the end of
my life than I've ever been, I actually feel more than ever that I have
all the time in the world." They bring up Benedict Anderson's concept
of "imagined communities." Showing a photo of herself as a baby, one
woman remarks that we learn and grow over time, and our physical bodies
regenerate fully every seven years. To connect herself to this baby,
she needs to create a story. Their common identity is only imagined in
her mind, and yet that imagined common identity is what has allowed her
to remain essentially herself.
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14.
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The next stop is a movie theater with
a chimp projectionist. While Akira Kurosawa's Dreams plays on
the screen, the chimp reads from some notes. "Our critique began with
doubt… Our past appeared frozen in the distance… Art was not the goal
but the method to locate our special rhythm…" He then eats the notes.
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15.
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Louis Mackey declares that the gap
between Plato and Nietzsche and the average human is greater than the
gap between the average human and a chimp. The Greeks were just as
advanced as we are, he states, and asks why so many of us don't reach
our potential. What is "the most universal human characteristic," he
wonders. "Fear, or laziness?"
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16.
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At a bar, a young couple sits at a
table, and the man is writing a novel. In response to the woman's query
about what he's writing, he says there is no story. There are just
"people, gestures, moments, bits of rapture, fleeting emotions . . . In
short, the greatest story ever told." He then observes that he's
"reading it first," then writing the novel.
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17.
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At the counter in the same bar, a man
relates an anecdote to the bartender about how a gun once saved his
life, and expresses gratitude for his Constitutional right to bear
arms. Then they shoot each other.
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18.
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After the bloodbath, the protagonist
wakes up again, or thinks he wakes up. Wanting to tell someone about
his strange dream, he calls his friend, who is still not home. Turning
on the television, he channel surfs. In between white noise and idiotic
drivel, a man peddles enlightenment. On another channel, Professor Mary
McBay discusses lucid dreams and dream travel.
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19.
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Waking Life explains more about lucid dreams. The
protagonist finds himself in a large room, where several conversations
take place. A woman observes that dreams are real only as long as they
last--"couldn't you say the same thing about life?" We believe there is
a difference between dreaming and waking states, but our neural
activity makes no distinction between dreaming and waking perception.
Thus, life is itself a form of dream travel.
A man in overalls strumming a ukulele picks up the train
of thought. The worst mistake we can make is to think we are alive, he
says, when really we're just asleep in "life's waiting room." The trick
is to combine waking rational abilities with the infinite possibilities
of dreams.
Finally, a hefty guy announces that his purpose is to
help people become lucid, because "you can have so much damn fun in
your dreams," and, of course, "Fun rules!" Everyone is sleepwalking
through their waking states or wake-walking through their dreams. You
have to realize you're dreaming in order to take control. One tipoff
that you're dreaming, he reveals, is to try adjusting light levels,
because (for some unknown reason) it is difficult to do in dreams. As
he leaves the room, the protagonist flicks the light switch. Nothing
happens. He's still dreaming, and floats off.
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20.
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The protagonist
visits another movie theater, where he watches two men discussing film
theory onscreen. One of them is filmmaker Caveh Zahedi. He talks about
film theorist and critic André Bazin, who believed that film is
an inferior narrative medium. Instead, what film does best is capture
and reproduce moments of reality. Because Bazin equated reality with
God, capturing the reality of a moment means capturing God. Bazin
called this a "holy moment." Zahedi also quotes François
Truffaut, who commented that the best scripts don't make the best films
because if the script is too good, the filmmaker ends up slavishly
following it.
The conversation turns to real life, in which every
moment is a "holy moment." But, Zahedi remarks, you can't walk around
through life being completely open and in the moment all the time. We
close ourselves off from the miracle of existence in order to function.
In one of Waking Life's funnier moments, the two then decide to
have a "holy moment." They stare at each other intently, comment that
"everything is layers" (the moment, the awareness of having the moment,
etc.), and turn into clouds.
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21.
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Four youths (including Adam Goldberg
and Nicky Katt) march around the streets shouting things like, "Society
is a fraud!" and, "Comfort will never be comfortable if what we seek is
not on the market!" We must reject restraints and limitations because
the consumer society oppresses more authentic desires, they say. But,
after encountering an old guy stuck on top a telephone pole for no
apparent reason, they conclude that they're just like him, "all theory
and no action." The youths then encounter a "Mr. Debord," who quotes
Robert Louis Stevenson: "Suicide carried off many. Drink and the devil
took care of the rest."
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22-23.
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As the protagonist walks by a train, a
bearded guy jumps out of a box car and asks, "Are you a dreamer?"
Though there are not many anymore, he says, he tries to dream every
day. "Don't be bored," he advises, because the most exciting time to be
alive is right now. Next the protagonist walks with a man who advocates
exercising the mind as fully as possible, experiencing all your
emotions and memories. But his final departure is scheduled, he says,
as his body slowly loses form and disintegrates.
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24.
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Descending into a subway station, the
protagonist bumps into a woman. As they move around each other, she
asks him to do it again. Comparing society to an ant colony, where the
purpose of everything people do is to keep the world buzzing in an
efficient manner, she says, "I want to see you and you to see me." The
protagonist agrees that he doesn't want to be an ant, and compares
their encounter to something D.H. Lawrence once wrote about two people
on a road, who instead of just passing each other by, decide to open
themselves "to the confrontation of their souls."
The confrontation between their souls occurs at a
café. She describes an idea for a soap opera--she wants to do it
in front of an audience that can participate and choose what it wants
to see. The protagonist asks her what it's like to be a character in
his dream. What's remarkable about this dream, he continues, is that
he's being exposed to all sorts of information and ideas that he
never came up with or read. They must be coming from somewhere
external. Where are they coming from? She tells him that he's having a
lucid dream, and that he can therefore do whatever he wants--just like
in life. He observes that this dream is unlike any other dream. It
feels like it's the dream, as if he's being prepared for
something.
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25.
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Whatever the protagonist being
prepared for, it's probably not hyperactive Timothy "Speed" Levitch,
the next stop on the tour. New York City
guide Levitch, the subject of the 1998 documentary The Cruise,
is still cruising the Brooklyn
Bridge.
He reiterates the same ideas about participating in life and free will
raised by others, but in his own unique way. "The ongoing wow is
happening right now!… We are the authors of ourselves… Life is a series
of flabbergasting moments… Doubt is an exam for our vitality... Life
understood is life lived." Though life is full of paradox, he loves the
paradoxes, too. In fact, "on really romantic nights of self," he goes
"salsa dancing with his confusion." Levitch also quotes Thomas Mann
(who said he'd rather participate in life than write a hundred stories)
and Federico García Lorca ("The iguana will bite those who do
not dream.")
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26-28.
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The vignettes are shorter and faster
now. In a largely red canvas, the protagonist walks with a bald guy
through a parking lot who tells him he has not yet met himself. "You
only see an image, a mental model of yourself." Then he encounters the
woman who watched him in the train station at the beginning of the
movie. She leans forward as if to kiss him, and he wakes up in bed. Or
not, because he still can't read his alarm clock, which means he's
still dreaming. He turns on his television and channel surfs again.
Professor Mary McBay talking about lucid dreams again, and eventually
the surfing lands him on director Steven Soderbergh (Traffic, Erin
Brockovich) recounting an anecdote about directors Billy Wilder
(Some Like It Hot, The Apartment) and Louis Malle (Atlantic
City, Au revoir les enfants) that makes fun of movies about dreams.
According to the story, Wilder once asked Malle what his next movie,
budgeted at two and a half million dollars, was about. Malle explained
that it's sort of a dream within a dream. "You just lost two and a half
million dollars," responded Wilder. Then a passing old man says to the
protagonist, "As the pattern gets more intricate and subtle, being
swept along is no longer enough."
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29.
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The protagonist next visits the Circle
A convenience store, featured in subUrbia. The cashier
resembles the captain of the boat-car at the beginning of Waking
Life, but he denies being the same guy. He relates an amusing
anecdote about his previous customer, to whom he gave a lecture about
punching holes in the plastic wrapping of a burrito before microwaving
it, because he was tired of cleaning up all the "burrito doings."
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30-32.
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Following the Circle A, the
protagonist visits with a woman (Mona Lee, who played Wiggins' mother
in Dazed and Confused) in a restaurant booth, who says, "Life
was raging all around me and I loved every moment of it… Connecting
with the people, that's all the really matters." Then an elderly woman
in a garden (Edith Manniz, who is Sabiston and producer Tommy
Pallotta's landlady) draws a portrait of the protagonist. Another
passerby mutters that Kierkegaard's last words were, "Sweep me up."
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33.
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Things slow down at a music club as Waking
Life approaches its conclusion. The musicians from the beginning of
the film, who have been playing the soundtrack, perform while couples
dance round and round. On the second floor, the protagonist finds
Linklater himself (who also plays a passenger in the boat-car in scene
2) at a pinball machine. He tells Linklater about his false awakenings,
and with a note of desperation, he says he's starting to think he's
dead, in the post-death dream state discussed by Delpy and Hawke.
Linklater responds with a long story about noted science-fiction author
Philip K. Dick, who once wrote things into a novel, believing them to
be pure fiction, only to learn later that they actually happened.
According to Linklater, Dick theorized that time is an
illusion and he had somehow seen through it. Being religious, Dick
guessed that we are all actually existing in the past, and that someone
has created time to distract us from the fact that God is imminent.
Linklater then recounts a life-changing dream of his
own, in which he meets Lady Gregory, the patron of Irish poet William
Butler Yeats. She tells him that Dick was right about time being an
illusion, but wrong that we are existing in the past. Instead, there is
only "this instant." In this instant, God extends an invitation to us,
an invitation to join him. Time is created by us postponing the
invitation, saying "No, thank you; no, thank you." Lady Gregory
concludes, "Life is the journey from the no to the yes." Then Linklater
realizes that everyone in his dream is dead, and that he's actually
visiting the land of the dead.
At the end of their conversation, the protagonist asks
Linklater how you wake up--how you really wake up. "It's easy,"
says Linklater. "Just…wake up!"
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34.
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The protagonist awakens in bed.
Outside, he walks down the street on a beautiful fall day. Soon he
begins to float again, his hand resting for a moment on the door handle
of a car, just like the boy in the beginning of the movie.
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