Slacker premiered at Austin's Dobie Theater on July 27, 1990.
Orion Classics acquired
Slacker for nationwide distribution, and released a slightly modified
35mm version on July 5, 1991. It did not receive a wide release but went on to become a
cult film bringing in a domestic gross of $1.2 million ($ in today's dollars). In his review for
The New York Times,
Vincent Canby wrote, "
Slacker is a 14-course meal composed entirely of desserts or, more accurately, a conventional film whose narrative has been thrown out and replaced by enough bits of local color to stock five years' worth of ordinary movies".
Owen Gleiberman of
Entertainment Weekly gave the film an "A−" rating, writing, "
Slacker has a marvelously low-key observational cool ... the movie never loses its affectionate, shaggy-dog sense of America as a place in which people, by now, have almost too much freedom on their hands". In his review for the
Washington Post,
Hal Hinson wrote, "This is a work of scatterbrained originality, funny, unexpected and ceaselessly engaging".
Rolling Stones
Peter Travers wrote, "What Linklater has captured is a generation of bristling minds unable to turn their thoughts into action. Linklater has the gift of a true satirist: He can make laughter catch in the throat". In his review for the
Austin Chronicle, Chris Walters wrote, "Few of the many films shot in Austin over the past 10 or 15 years even attempt to make something of the way its citizens live.
Slacker is the only one I know of that claims this city's version of life on the margins of the working world as its whole subject, and it is one of the first American movies ever to find a form so apropos to the themes of disconnectedness and cultural drift". On
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 82% based on 45 reviews, and an average rating of 7.3/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "
Slacker rests its shiftless thumb on the pulse of a generation with fresh filmmaking that captures the tenor of its time while establishing a benchmark for 1990s indie cinema." On
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 69 out of 100, based on 16 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
American Film Institute recognition: •
AFI's 100 Years... 100 Laughs - Nominated
Home media Slacker was released on
VHS in June 1992 by
Orion Home Video. An estimated 7,000 copies were shipped (it was also released on
LaserDisc, but a reliable estimate of units shipped is lacking). A book also titled
Slacker containing the screenplay, interviews, and writing about the film was published by
St. Martin's Press, also in 1992. The film was re-released on VHS on March 7, 2000, by
MGM. The film was released to
DVD worldwide on January 13, 2003. A two-disc
Criterion Collection boxed-set edition was released on August 31, 2004, in the US and Canada only. The set was designed to embody the film's "eccentric Austin personality" and look as if the designer slacked off and hastily put together the illustrations for the set. It has many "extras", including a book on the film and Linklater's first feature film, ''
It's Impossible to Learn to Plow by Reading Books, released on home video for the first time. Entertainment Weekly'' gave this edition an "A−" rating. ==Impact and legacy==