Los Angeles Times

This filmmaker lets himself dream

- — Robert Abele

From “Slacker” to “Boyhood,” filmmaker Richard Linklater offered an expansive, considerat­e and ruminative view of life’s great walkabout that has won many fans and made him cinema’s foremost wandering poet. It’s not surprising to find, then, in the voluminous behind-the-scenes footage from the documentar­y “Richard Linklater: Dream Is Destiny,” that on set he comes across more like a gatherer than a hunter, as if making a film isn’t about slaying some beast but harvesting the small riches in one’s environmen­t.

“Dream Is Destiny” directors Louis Black (a cofounder with Linklater of the Austin Film Society) and Karen Bernstein give illuminati­ve artistic context to their obvious admiration.

Interviews with the usual suspects — Ethan Hawke, Matthew McConaughe­y, Patricia Arquette — are judiciousl­y deployed. But the real gold is in giving plenty of voice to Linklater himself, since the Texas-based director not only enjoys revisiting his artistic progress (he hauls out journals to show), but is wonderfull­y articulate about how he’s processed each signpost, from the indie phenom “Slacker” through the unlikely “Before” franchise of walk-andtalk romanticis­m to “Boyhood,” an idea dreamed in minutes and realized over 12 years. Its subject enjoys the simple wonder inherent in characters who look into the distance. “Richard Linklater: Dream Is Destiny” does an extra-fine job of looking back with similarly rich and appreciati­ve curiosity.

“Richard Linklater: Dream Is Destiny.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 30 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Music Hall.

 ?? Matt Lankes IFC Films ?? ON THE SET of “Boyhood,” Richard Linklater, right, directs one of his regulars, Ethan Hawke.
Matt Lankes IFC Films ON THE SET of “Boyhood,” Richard Linklater, right, directs one of his regulars, Ethan Hawke.

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