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SubUrbia

  • 1996
  • R
  • 2h 1m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
12K
YOUR RATING
Parker Posey, Giovanni Ribisi, Steve Zahn, Amie Carey, Dina Spybey-Waters, Jayce Bartok, and Nicky Katt in SubUrbia (1996)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:16
2 Videos
37 Photos
ComedyDrama

A group of suburban teenagers try to support each other through the difficult task of becoming adults.A group of suburban teenagers try to support each other through the difficult task of becoming adults.A group of suburban teenagers try to support each other through the difficult task of becoming adults.

  • Director
    • Richard Linklater
  • Writer
    • Eric Bogosian
  • Stars
    • Giovanni Ribisi
    • Steve Zahn
    • Jayce Bartok
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Linklater
    • Writer
      • Eric Bogosian
    • Stars
      • Giovanni Ribisi
      • Steve Zahn
      • Jayce Bartok
    • 93User reviews
    • 48Critic reviews
    • 63Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos2

    SubUrbia
    Trailer 2:16
    SubUrbia
    SubUrbia
    Trailer 2:17
    SubUrbia
    SubUrbia
    Trailer 2:17
    SubUrbia

    Photos37

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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Giovanni Ribisi
    Giovanni Ribisi
    • Jeff
    Steve Zahn
    Steve Zahn
    • Buff
    Jayce Bartok
    Jayce Bartok
    • Pony
    Amie Carey
    Amie Carey
    • Sooze
    Nicky Katt
    Nicky Katt
    • Tim
    Ajay Naidu
    Ajay Naidu
    • Nazeer Choudhury
    Parker Posey
    Parker Posey
    • Erica
    Samia Shoaib
    Samia Shoaib
    • Pakeesa Choudhury
    Dina Spybey-Waters
    Dina Spybey-Waters
    • Bee-Bee
    • (as Dina Spybey)
    Kitt Brophy
    • Sooze's Mom
    Jonn Cherico
    • Shopping Channel Host
    Keith Preusse
    • Officer Chip
    Eric Park
    • Officer Gary
    William Martin Hayes
    • Scuff
    Bill Wise
    • George the Limo Driver
    M.J. Lin
    • Restaurant Hostess
    Peter Atherton
    • Extra
    • (uncredited)
    Prebble Q. Ramswell
    • Beauty (Driver of VW)
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Richard Linklater
    • Writer
      • Eric Bogosian
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews93

    6.711.5K
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    Featured reviews

    8jaredmobarak

    I don't need a limousine to know who I am. At least I know I don't know…SubUrbia

    Always having been a fan of Richard Linklater's work, it confounded me that his film after indie darlings Dazed and Confused and Before Sunrise has never been released on DVD. SubUrbia is the kind of movie you hear that fans of his work love, but never found a place in cinema history. Flipping through the movie channels on TV, I happened across the film and could not stop watching until it was over. Much in the same way as his other work, the movie is dialogue driven and concerning a small group of people talking about life and what comes next for them. He has compiled a very nice cast, all of who take their character and roll with it. It is a scary thing, post high school, deciding what to do with one's life. Having been stuck in the suburbs for so long, one begins to wonder if they can survive outside it.

    The compelling thing for me in Richard Linklater films is the general waxing philosophic feel they all seem to have. These are kids that are college age who have things to talk about, questions to have answered, and are not afraid to ask them when they are surrounded by those they trust. This group of friends is caught at a crossroads, not knowing if what they are doing is the right way to go. Many have tried their hands at something, but ultimately gave up to continue loitering around their corner convenience store. When one of their friends, who found success in leaving the small town of Burnfield becoming a rockstar, happens to come home for a show, the group's equilibrium goes off-kilter as they face what could be. Some feel that if they had applied themselves they could have been successes as well, while others see the shell of a man their buddy has become after being sucked into the machine. The return home opens everyone's eyes to the situation they are in and for better or worse changes the way they decide to continue living their lives.

    While a drama, there are many funny scenes. When a few of them begin talking about the reason Pony became a rockstar, to be able to tell the world his thoughts, to have someone listen to him, they say how rough it is to feel like no one can hear what they are saying. Through the entire conversation Giovannu Ribisi's Jeff is trying to be heard chiming in with his own ideas. The irony of the situation may be a bit heavy-handed, but it is also very true to form. Ribisi shines in this role as an intelligent youth who has never applied himself, always being content with hanging around his troubled friends. He soon realizes that the freedom he has is more important than selling out for fame and fortune, it is the people he cares about that keep him going, not the material things in life he could have. Steve Zahn is again brilliant in one of his earlier roles. He plays the idiot comedian to perfection while also evolving into someone who uses his cheery disposition for success. You begin to see that he knows exactly who he is and is in control at every moment. It's a shame he now only gets roles that are one-dimensionally that stupid guy there for laughs. It is also a pleasure to see Office Space alum, Ajay Naidu in a good role, touching on the bigotry of American small town life. The success his character is having, while not being American, prays on the jealousy of those who feel their heritage should entitle them to happiness. The lazy toughs around town would rather pick on the foreigners for working hard instead of doing the time themselves.

    Rounding out a very good cast is Dina Spybey and Nicky Katt. Spybey is great in a tough role. She is the lackey friend of one of the main group members and tries to fit in. It seems that every time she begins to connect, she is ultimately left alone. The depression her character feels comes through at all times; the despair of someone that troubled around you without knowing how to help is tough. There is so much going on this night that her anguish gets pushed aside until there is no turning back. Then there is Nicky Katt who makes the film. He is an intellectual trapped in the body of a jock who has partied and been king of the town for too long. He sees the world around him for what it is and hates himself for living amongst the grime. Toying with the emotions of his best friends, he seems to have a death wish to just end his suffering. No longer the star football player, the character of Tim can't apply his intellect constructively and instead uses it to help the others while self-destructing himself.

    Linklater is one of the most consistent directors working in and on the fringe of Hollywood today. His films always seem to have a message coming through them, trying to uncover a truth of life. Every one of his characters is true to themselves and connecting with humanity at every step. SubUrbia is so much like his other smaller films that I was surprised to see it was written by and based from a play from Eric Bogosian. I am a fan of his acting work, but after seeing this I might finally wipe the dust from my copy of Oliver Stone's Talk Radio and check it out. Also, maybe I will turn on the movie that started it all for Linklater, Slacker, and see the true evolution he has taken. Hopefully SubUrbia will find its own way to DVD, maybe even the Criterion Collection will release it to join the other Linklater masterpieces it already has.
    Scoopy

    Dead-on accurate

    Linklater is treading in some of his familiar water ... one night in the night of a group of adolescents dealing with that difficult period at the end of high school, when one stops being what one must be and starts being what one chooses to be.

    This film is not "Dazed and Confused", however, except that the two films share a spot-on accurate portrayal of familiar American characters. This movie is darker, preachier, deeper.

    This time, instead of the rituals of the last night of high school, the film centers around the return of a former crony who has made it really big as a rock star. He's their friend, and the nicest guy in the world - just a former geek who struck it big and realizes how lucky he is - nobody could hate him.

    And yet some do. Some hate him because he is a winner in the roll of the dice, and several of the gang are on their way toward becoming losers, and they know it. Their life consists of hanging around outside a convenience store.

    For all its concern with the accuracy of its portrayals, the film has a curiously innocent denouement. The most simple and naive members of the group end up heading off to look for their dreams, and the cynical and jaded can see that their lives will repeat infinitely in their home town. In a sense, the succcess of the gentle stoned guy injects an almost impossible hopefulness in an otherwise despairing ending. As Graham Greene once wrote, baseless optimism is so much more appalling than despair.

    Still, that was the choice of the filmmaker, and it wasn't an unfair one. Sometimes things do work out like that in real life, and this movie is all too close to real life. So close it can make you feel uncomfortable when you see yourself reflected in one character or another.

    This and "Dazed" establish Linklater as an outstanding filmmaker with an uncanny eye for real situations and characters. One hopes he will soon realize his great potential with something better than The Newton Boys
    Dale-31

    A great ensemble piece.

    This is a great story with a great cast of indie icons. Giovanni Ribisi does a convincing and sensitive portrayal of his troubling character and Steve Zahn continues to satisfy with his venue of off-the-wall characters. Indie queen Parker Posey pops up halfway through the movie, and even though, she's not in it that much, she still maintains her magnetic screen presence. Eric Bogosian's dialogue is a key element to making this film fantastic.
    8jotix100

    Before midnight

    Eric Bogosian has written and performed extensively for the theater. I have seen him as a solo performer, as well as his plays "Talk Radio" and "SubUrbia". Having admired his work on the stage, one wondered what kind of treatment those plays would get. Luckily, he was able to adapt them to the screen, himself. I had seen this movie when it came out, so when it showed on cable recently, I decided to take another look. While it's a work that perhaps was marketed as a comedy, this work is much more than that. This film dares to take a look at one of the most prevalent problems in the American society.

    Richard Linkletter was perhaps the right choice for directing "SubUrbia" since he has a keen eye for the "slackers" in our society. These individuals are perhaps puzzling to a lot of other cultures, but it appears there's a trend among young people all over that come from homes where parents and children inhabit different worlds.

    The phenomenon of the American suburban youth is well presented in this movie where there is no parent authority around to supervise what these kids are doing. The culture of hanging out without any purpose, or meaning, is a problem in that in most cases, leads into drugs, sex, and alienation from what is known as normal society, thus creating people like the ones this movie is portraying.

    In a way, Hollywood films have added to this anti hero sub culture, so prevalent in the country. When there are no strong figures either at home, school, or government, young people tend to gravitate toward friends who they feel comfortable with, shying away from reality and responsibility.

    It is the convenience store owner, a Pakistani, who puts things in perspective. While these kids are wasting their time, he is working on his degree and will make something out of himself, which is a theme that has been explored by other great American writers, like Arthur Miller, in "A Death of a Salesman". The same American dream, where everything is possible, is wasted in these young people. At the same time, it's the immigrant who wants to make that dream a reality in his life because he has experienced hard times in his own country.

    Mr. Linkletter's choice of a cast is brilliant. He gathered the talents of Giovanni Ribisi, Parker Posey, Amie Carey, Nicky Katt, Steve Zahn, Jayce Bartok, Dina Spybey to give life to these lost souls in search of identity in the heart of the American counter culture that is generated by the boredom of the suburbs and the erosion of the family in this country.
    7Monster-17

    Really Enjoyable Movie

    If "Dazed and Confused" was the 'high' then "SubUrbia" if most definitely the 'down'. It's basically the flipside of "Dazed and Confused", where youthful hedonism has been replaced by 20-something boredom. It's a post-college movie where characters have found themselves unfulfilled in every capacity. It's a pack mentality, where you hang-out with the same gang from high school only to find you've out grown each other and resent one another's ambitions because you know you yourself lack the impetus to do anything constructive with your life. These characters are losers in every respect, clinging on to their high school way of life, reluctant to take initiative and move on. They constantly put each other down, bicker and make efforts to humiliate, yet the depressing thing is they have no one but each other. This is a quality film that remains one of Linklater's most under appreciated efforts. No one has the ability to present young characters with the insight, skill and craft Lanklater possesses. He is truly one of America's finest filmmakers working today and "SubUrbia" is a great film that still holds up.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Sonic Youth wrote "Sunday" for this film in 1996. A re-recorded version of this song appears on their 1998 album "A Thousand Leaves."
    • Quotes

      Jeff: Nothing ever changes, man. Fifty years from now we're all gonna be dead. And there will be another group of people standing here drinking beer, eating pizza, bitching about the price of Oreos and they'll have no idea we were ever here and fifty years after those suckers will be dust and bones and there'll be all these generations of suckers, all trying to figure out what the fuck they're doing on this fucking planet and it'll all be full of shit. It's all so fucking futile.

      Tim: If it's all so fucking futile, what the fuck are you so fucking upset about, fuckhead?

    • Crazy credits
      Filmed entirely on location in Burnfield, USA (Burnfield was the fictional city.)
    • Alternate versions
      The opening and closing 2001 Warner Bros. Pictures logos are shown in the Warner Archive DVD print.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Dante's Peak/SubUrbia/The Beautician and the Beast/Rosewood/The Whole Wide World (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      Town Without Pity
      Performed by Gene Pitney

      Written by Dimitri Tiomkin and Ned Washington

      Courtesy of Highland Music by arrangement with Rhino Records

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    FAQ18

    • How long is SubUrbia?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 16, 2017 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Suburbia
    • Filming locations
      • Austin, Texas, USA
    • Production companies
      • Castle Rock Entertainment
      • Detour Filmproduction
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $656,747
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $69,365
      • Feb 9, 1997
    • Gross worldwide
      • $656,747
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 1m(121 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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