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HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentThe analog fix: Nostalgia in Linklater’s 'Apollo 10 1/2' and Paul Thomas Anderson’s 'Licorice Pizza'
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The analog fix: Nostalgia in Linklater’s 'Apollo 10 1/2' and Paul Thomas Anderson’s 'Licorice Pizza'

Richard Linklater’s ‘Apollo 10 1/2’, about growing up near NASA in the 1960s, has the director’s best signature touches. Plus, two recent American films tell us why nostalgia is comforting as well as engaging.

April 10, 2022 / 11:34 IST
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An autobiographical fantasy, Richard Linklater's 'Apollo 10 1/2' is set in 1960s Houston, US.

Few American directors can match Richard Linklater’s language of irrigating desiccated memory. Most of the 20 films that precede his latest, Apollo 10 1/2 (Netflix), are free range narratives that leisurely expand the ruses, rumination and existential quandaries of growing up and living in American suburbia - mostly Texas, in the era in which Linklater grew up there. Boyhood (2014), also set in the 1960s, for which he won the Best Director Golden Globe, took him 12 years to make.

The setting for this rotoscoped animation film—more 2D, more handmade, and with much sharper edges than his earlier two animation films Waking Life (2001) and A Scanner Darkly (2006)—is a Houston suburb close to the NASA headquarters around the time that the Apollo 11 mission takes off.

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His narrator-protagonist Stan (Milo Coy as the child, and Jack Black as the narrator and adult Stan) is the youngest of a family of six siblings. Their father has a clerical job at NASA and his mother is an inventive housewife rooted in the 1960s’ middle-class virtues of frugality and steeliness.

Linklater created 'Apollo 10 1/2' with head animator Tommy Pallotta.