logo
‘Slauson Rec' Review: A Documentary About Shia LaBeouf's Acting Class — and His Anger Issues — Is More Appalling Than Fascinating

‘Slauson Rec' Review: A Documentary About Shia LaBeouf's Acting Class — and His Anger Issues — Is More Appalling Than Fascinating

Yahoo20-05-2025
'Slauson Rec,' a documentary starring Shia LaBeouf and his mental trauma, is not a good movie. But it's a timely artifact of one of the things movies are now up against — a pathological and vampiristic celebrity culture that sucks all the air out of the room. In 2018, LaBeouf posted a video on Twitter announcing the formation of a free weekly theater workshop that would meet every Saturday at the Slauson Recreation Center in South Central Los Angeles. Hundreds of people showed up for it, lured by the magnet of LaBeouf's name. One of them was Leo Lewis O'Neil, a young man who wasn't interested in being an actor but who volunteered to record the workshop on camera. Over the next three years, he shot hundreds of hours of footage of LaBeouf and his followers doing their experimental theater thing, writing and rehearsing several 'plays' they presented in a nightclub and, ultimately, in a dusty parking lot.
The movie O'Neil has put together out of this footage, which premiered last night at Cannes, is by any real-world standard a slovenly and undisciplined piece of work. 'Slauson Rec' is two-and-a-half hours long, and it's little more than an endless dispiriting diary-like ramble. Yet it also functions as a vérité exploitation film, since the only thing in it that's actually interesting is watching Shia LaBeouf parade himself as a kind of acting guru and mentor, only to descend into an increasingly furious and abusive and unhinged place that leaves us with the profound question, 'What in the fuck's name is going on here?'
More from Variety
Wes Anderson Mocks Trump's Movie Tariffs at Cannes: 'Can You Hold Up the Movie in Customs? It Doesn't Ship That Way'
Wes Anderson Powers Satyajit Ray's 'Aranyer Din Ratri' Rescue for Cannes Classics
BrLab Unveils New Dates, Co-Pro Forum and Regional Spread Ahead of 15th Anniversary Edition (EXCLUSIVE)
Let's be clear: Shia LaBeouf is not just someone in deep need of anger-management therapy. He's an extraordinarily gifted actor (I was reminded of this just a couple of weeks ago, when I reviewed his forceful performance in the David Mamet film 'Henry Johnson'), and he's also the definition of a charismatic person. In 'Slauson Rec,' whether he's being supportive or hellacious, you can't take your eyes off him. He's got a stare of burning intensity and a hyper-articulate blunt showmanship that grows out of that quality. (He also has a penchant for sporting facial hair that looks like it came out of a costume shop.) In the documentary, he is always on, always making everything about him, with the underlying conviction that he's the most arresting person in the room.
Early on, we give him the benefit of the doubt, since he seems to be employing his charisma in a generous way (volunteering his time to inspire a bunch of people in South Central). His volatile acting-coach showmanship feels like it's part of a tradition, stretching all the way back to Lee Strasberg and Stella Adler and incorporating the exhibitionistic ethos of the let-it-all-hang-out, acting-as-self-actualization thing that defined the experimental theater movements of the late '60s and '70s. The Slauson Rec theater experiment, as LaBeouf explains it, is an attempt to gather people together and give them a club, a community, an artistic laboratory, a family. And in the eagerness of the participants to go along with whatever LaBeouf says, we feel the desperate hunger they have to belong. LaBeouf isn't just showing them how to act. He's giving them hope.
From the start, though, you may wonder what, exactly, he's out to accomplish creatively. He talks a good game, like a theatrical cult leader, but he has the participants doing 'devised theater,' which after a while seems to come down to a kind of ritual group body-tapping and choreographed aerobics. It looks like they're doing an elaborate series of warm-up exercises, which is fine in the early weeks, when they're just getting to know each other. But once they've been at this for months, it starts to become clear that LaBeouf doesn't really have a plan. He's just throwing stuff against the wall, using his heady psychodramatic acting-coach jargon and tough-love 'I'm doing this for you!' personality to turn anything and everything into an 'encounter session.' And given that these are not professional actors, or even (in most cases) people who aspire to be, LaBeouf's words to them, full of deadly serious jabber about empathy and ego, are pumped up with an intensity that feels overdone and inappropriate.
And that's before he starts blowing his fuse. Once the pandemic hits, the Slauson Recreation Center tosses the group out (at this point, they've melted down to about 50 people), and they wind up rehearsing with masks under the hot L.A. sun in an anonymous dusty parking lot surrounded by a chain-link fence, with two tables under a red tent. The place becomes their sunlit prison (and ours). They've already put on one 'play,' which looks, from what we see of it, like a glorified hip-hop open-mic night. Now they're writing and rehearsing a follow-up, some sort of multimedia action-theater piece entitled '5711 Avalon,' though the film never gives us a halfway coherent idea of what it is.
Yet the more sketchy and aimless the Slauson Rec troupe becomes, the more LaBeouf seizes onto the notion that the members are not living up to what they're supposed to be doing. They're disappointing him (but only because he cares so much). He targets one member, a 22-year-old kid named Zeke, who seems like the sweetest guy, and LaBeouf starts to torment him like a drill sergeant who has picked out his patsy. 'Don't play that fuckin' James Dean shit with me, dude,' he says. He also says things like, 'I love you if you make my life better. If you make my life worse, I don't love you. That's how I'm built' and 'This is really the last of the refinements! You really need to pay attention to this shit' and 'I said giggle! What fuckin' version of what the fuck I said is what the fuck you did?'
LaBeouf declares in the movie that he's an alcoholic, and he talks, at one point, about how he's always beating himself up in his own brain. But that's not exactly reassuring. He's got his shirt off a lot, baring the wall of chest tattoos he got to make the movie 'The Tax Collector,' and we start to notice that he's shouting all the time, as if the fate of the world were hanging on how effectively he can get this ragtag bunch of people to act. Yet we can't even tell the difference between if they're doing it well or doing it badly.
And that's part of what's so destabilizing about LaBeouf's rants, his tantrums, his meltdowns. It's not just that he's being abusive toward these people (at several points physically). It's that the whole damn spectacle of it starts to feel pointless. The 'point,' of course, is that we're getting to watch a well-known star in a state of breakdown. And the tabloid perversity of 'Slauson Rec' is that even when he's acting out, being a total dick to these hapless people who have put their trust in him, the movie is busy turning his self-destruction into theater.
Just when we think his abuse of poor Zeke can't get any worse, LaBeouf turns his attention to Sarah, a troupe member whose mother is sick. He starts to berate her, and after her mother has died he informs her that he wants her to stop playing the role in their play she's been playing, because he has decided that she's 'not right for the part.' In this meaningless shambolic parking-lot-theater mess? That he would say that is worse than harsh — to our eyes, it's sadistic. And it just makes us think: Why are we even watching this?
I would wager that the commercial prospects for 'Slauson Rec' will fall somewhere between dim and zero. The filmmaking, which just drags on (with helpful titles like 'Day 56,' followed by 'Day 57'), saps the energy right out of you. Yet the movie has the clueless arrogance to present itself as a redemption narrative — not for the members of the Slauson Rec troupe, but for Shia LaBeouf. After he is hit with a legal accusation of domestic abuse, he simply abandons the troupe. He doesn't show up one day, and that's it, it's over. But the film ends on an interview with LaBeouf, conducted more recently, where he sits in a chair in the tasteful home he shares with Mia Goth and their child, and he goes back over the Slauson Rec experiment and admits that he'd gone off the deep end. He admits that his behavior was untenable, and that he had a 'God complex.' He now feels bad about all of it. LaBeouf delivers this confession with an eloquent conviction that's a little uncanny. But listening to it, you realize that one thing hasn't changed, and that it may be the most unnerving thing about him: He's still acting.
Best of Variety
The Best Albums of the Decade
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Here Are All Of The Funny Tweets That Went Viral This Weekend
Here Are All Of The Funny Tweets That Went Viral This Weekend

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Here Are All Of The Funny Tweets That Went Viral This Weekend

BuzzFeed does not support discriminatory or hateful speech in any form. We recognize that X is no longer a safe platform. Despite this, it remains a discussion hub where reasonable, intelligent, and funny voices can still be found. And those are the ones we plan to highlight. For some reason, the best tweets always seem to happen on the weekend. Here are some funny ones that recently came across my timeline. Be sure to follow these users if you liked their tweets, too! Related: 1. 2. @chumblings / DreamWorks Pictures / Via Twitter: @chumblings 3. 4. 5. Related: 6. 7. @shawntifying / Warner Bros / Via Twitter: @shawntifying 8. 9. Related: 10. 11. 12. @ShawnMansfield / Via Twitter: @ShawnMansfield 13. 14. Twitter: @idkcloudy Related: 15. 16. @ExtremeBlitz__ / AMC / Via Twitter: @ExtremeBlitz__ 17. 18. 19. Like reading funny tweets? Here are 18 that went viral last weekend, in case you missed them. Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds:

21 Of The Funniest Posts About Cats And Dogs This Week (July 19-25)
21 Of The Funniest Posts About Cats And Dogs This Week (July 19-25)

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

21 Of The Funniest Posts About Cats And Dogs This Week (July 19-25)

Woof — it's been a long week. If you feel like you've been working like a dog, let us offer you the internet equivalent of a big pile of catnip: hilarious posts about pets. We Shih Tzu not. Each week at HuffPost, we scour Bluesky, Instagram and X, formerly Twitter, to find the funniest posts about our furballs being complete goofballs. They're sure to make you howl. (And if you want more, no need to beg ― you can check out last week's batch right here.) Related... 23 Of The Funniest Posts About Cats And Dogs This Week 30 Of The Funniest Posts About Cats And Dogs This Week 24 Of The Funniest Posts About Cats And Dogs This Week

Elon Musk is about to ruin Vine just like he's ruined everything else
Elon Musk is about to ruin Vine just like he's ruined everything else

Android Authority

time2 days ago

  • Android Authority

Elon Musk is about to ruin Vine just like he's ruined everything else

Short-form video is everywhere in 2025. From TikTok to Instagram, YouTube to Snapchat, you've got no shortage of options to turn to when you're looking to scratch this particular itch. But the landscape wasn't always this vast, and not all the early pioneers of short-form content made it through that evolution unscathed. While Snapchat was arguably the first snowball to get rolling here, it wasn't long before it was followed by Vine. And before Vine even had a chance to release its mobile apps, it found itself acquired by Twitter. That early Twitter interest really helped drive the platform's success, and the limitation of its six-second clips encouraged creativity from a new generation of creators, with many now-prominent names first finding success on Vine. A few years later, though, everybody was basically doing their own take on Vine, with many social platforms introducing native support for short-form video. And right as Twitter started deprioritizing Vine, blocking new uploads ahead of shuttering the service entirely, TikTok emerged to essentially steal Vine's crown. That's basically been the world we've lived in for the past eight years, with Vine relegated to our memories of short-form-video nostalgia. But 2025 is a messy, weird year, and anyone with an iota of power can quickly find themselves getting away with just the worst ideas they're able to think up. So of course that includes Elon Musk. Yesterday, on nuTwitter, Musk ominously posted his intention to bring Vine back 'in AI form.' That phrasing alone should be sufficient to send a small chill down your spine. Bringing things back that already ran their course can be a fraught enough proposition on its own, but when that effort immediately seeks to also transmute that nostalgia into something new… this is practically shoving a red flag down our throat. Pogs didn't save ALF, and AI won't save Vine. Easily the biggest question here is what 'Vine but AI' would even look like. At a high level, it's not hard to think about what Musk and his fellow AI advocates might picture a tool like this offering when there's no other limiting factors in play: a system that takes user input (or better yet, just knows what they want based on past analytics) and endlessly churns out generative short-form video content in response. To a certain mind, that probably sounds perfect — no creators to worry about, no trends to chase, just users saying what they want and the service making it appear. Of course, while that's currently not so far-fetched an idea that we don't even have to talk about it, it's also nowhere near anything approaching economically viable. Pogs didn't save ALF, and AI won't save Vine. Tools like Google's Veo 3 might make it feel like an AI-powered bottomless video spigot is out there waiting for us to open, but right now such solutions are far too slow and power-hungry to be practical on any kind of scale like we'd need for a public video app. OK, so what else could AI-Vine be? Well, the next best (worst?) version would probably be a hybrid between what we just described and the Vine of the past, only using AI to generate boatloads of videos across all manner of popular subjects in advance, and then serving them up to users later. This has the benefit of at least sounding remotely practical. Why is there a basket directly above the middle of the court? Just like this Veo 3 clip, don't expect anything you see in AI-Vine world to make any sense. Would creators be involved at all? So far we've been talking about systems where Musk's AI would be responsible for basically all the content being served up, but that doesn't necessarily have to be the direction a project like this would go. Maybe 'Vine in AI form' would be pretty much the same as OG Vine, but now explicitly embracing creators who lean heavily on AI, as we've started seeing YouTube do. On our sliding scale of likelihood, this one sounds maybe the most practical yet, but also a bit underwhelming — less 'AI form' and more 'just like every other video platform in 2025.' Which would also have us wondering what's the point of even doing this at all. Maybe that's the most frustrating component of this discussion. We've been splitting hairs over exactly what an AI-ified Vine would look like, but the anxiety we're feeling that drives this is less about Vine in particular and more about the depressingly widespread appeal of AI content. Perhaps it's just that Vine was from an era where creators were constantly hustling to make a name for themselves in that then-nascent space. Those attempts didn't always work; just like now there was plenty of low-effort, cringe content out there. But others were discovering what really played, building up audiences of fans and bringing us back to Vine again and again. Those creators have all moved on, though, and if Vine were to reappear today, maybe the only way to avoid a massive content vacuum really would be tapping in to AI tools to build up a new video library. Discerning viewers aren't likely to find a Vine like that particularly appealing. But if Musk's disastrous influence on Twitter has taught us anything, it's that even services that are deeply unappealing to users with taste don't have to worry when they have the vast depths of the internet to tap into. There are absolutely legions of people out there who would love nothing more than spending their days watching one AI-generated six-second video after another. And I hope they never get what they want.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store