Part of my coverage of the 13th Chicago Critics Film Festival
LOAFERS **1/2
IDEA: A group of friends in Chicago navigates the choppy waters of post-college life.
BLURB: Each generation discovers on its own terms how to become adults, and each generation makes movies about itself doing it. Following in the footsteps of such post-college-malaise American indies as Slacker, Kicking and Screaming, and Hannah Takes the Stairs, Zach Schnitzer’s Loafers presents a group of mostly white, middle-class twenty-somethings who don’t know what they’re doing and self-medicate with a whole lot of weed and alcohol. Schnitzer’s loafers (of which he is one) are not dyspeptic eccentrics or academics but generally average, good-natured young folks struggling with the mundane problems of being an adult: romantic relationships, family, jobs, and friendships, and the strain put on these things by the caprices of everyday life. Made on a shoestring budget, Loafers has the warm lo-fi feel of a personal project put together by a bunch of close friends, and the cast — especially Dan Haller, Melissa Marie, and Ruby Sevcik — have real naturalism in front of the camera. An emotional outpouring in an alley late in the film, between Marie and Sevcik, is a highlight, the actresses showing formidable rawness in sustained close-ups. Elsewhere, Loafers is more scattershot or slapdash, as in the few-too-many boilerplate party scenes or the sequences on Chicago streets where camerawork, editing, and sound show their seams in patching up obvious production deficiencies. For a true DIY film, though, it’s easy to admire Schnitzer and crew’s go-for-it attitude, not to mention their emphasis on healthy male friendship, a rarity on screen in this or any generation.