Filmmaker Richard Linklater has been what you could call a groundbreaking independent filmmaker for more than 20 years. Beginning with his 1991 feature Slacker, in which he not only helped to make the title of the film a part of the mainstream vernacular, but also ushered in Austin's unexpected hipster status, and continuing through Dazed and Confused, Waking Life, the gay-themed Bernie, and his beloved Before series (starring Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy), Linklater has been steadily working towards Best Director and Best Picture Oscars. He may have finally achieved that goal with Boyhood (Cinedigm/IFC).
Filmed over the course of 12 years, Boyhood clocks in at nearly three hours, but you'd never know it. The inventive and personal portrait of Mason (Ellar Coltrane), from grade-schooler to college freshman, features director Linklater's daughter Lorelei as Mason's sister Samantha, Patricia Arquette as Mason's mother Olivia and Ethan Hawke as Mason's father Mason Sr. Boyhood is such an intimate achievement, that the experiences of Mason's parents' divorce, Olivia's two unsuccessful remarriages, and the boy's maturation from a kid with a "horseshit attitude" (Olivia's words) to a philosophical and sensitive young man, feel completely authentic, not dramatized.
From bicycles to pick-up trucks, from underage beers to 'shrooms, from gutter balls to silver medals for photography, from first kisses to future romances, Mason's boyhood unfolds in ways audiences have never experienced. Linklater has earned the praise that is being heaped on him and now has the difficult task amazing us again with his next project, a challenge he will no doubt meet.