logo
‘Slauson Rec' Review: Shia LaBeouf Inspires Wannabes — and Frequently Turns on Them — in an Intimate Chronicle of His Theater Experiment

‘Slauson Rec' Review: Shia LaBeouf Inspires Wannabes — and Frequently Turns on Them — in an Intimate Chronicle of His Theater Experiment

Yahoo19-05-2025

Slauson Rec, drawn from several years' worth of intimate video recordings of an experimental theater company, is a sincere exploration of collective creativity. It's also the latest chapter in the Shia LaBeouf saga, the stuff of professional acclaim and offscreen headlines. Although LaBeouf isn't the author of the documentary, he is the architect of the project it chronicles. You might call him the brutalist.
First-time director Leo Lewis O'Neil, who also handled all the camerawork, was one of the 200 or so people who responded to LaBeouf's 2018 Twitter video announcing the formation of a free weekly theater workshop at the Slauson Recreation Center in South Los Angeles. Most were, like O'Neil, young and ardent admirers of the actor, who at that point was between movies and had a different kind of creative itch to scratch. Unlike the others, O'Neil wasn't interested in performing, but, 'desperate to be part of anything he did,' offered his services as archivist for the 'social science experiment,' as LaBeouf himself would later, ruefully, describe it.
More from The Hollywood Reporter
'The Chronology of Water' Review: Kristen Stewart Makes a Boldly Assured Directing Debut, Starring a Transformative Imogen Poots
Spike Lee Toasts 'Highest 2 Lowest' With The Hollywood Reporter and Threads at Cannes Bash
Ruben Östlund's 'The Entertainment System Is Down' Sells to Memento for France
Drawn from footage Lewis shot over a seven-year period, with most of it from the school's three-year run, Slauson Rec records the stops and starts, the anything-can-happen electricity as bonds form, ideas blossom and strangers take chances together. Lewis was there for the frustrations and breakthroughs, the elation when things clicked and, increasingly, the meltdowns. As time went on, he found himself in the midst of a slow-motion train wreck.
A significant portion of the film's running time involves LaBeouf, in all his mercurial splendor, losing his shit. He rants. He fumes. He storms off. On a couple of occasions he gets physical with members of the troupe. But this is no quick-hit gotcha. It's clearly a personal story for Lewis, who was new to L.A. and alone when he ventured to the rec center and found not just something to do but a family. Poring over the group's dynamics, he wants to understand what drove its leader. He might even want to help him exorcise the bad vibes. He bookends the main events with an interview with an older-and-wiser LaBeouf, married and raising a child with Mia Goth and copping to the 'god complex' that drove him to make others suffer for his art.
There's more than a little hyperbole in LaBeouf's mea culpa when he calls the unintended results of his behavior 'fascistic.' And the documentary's ample running time — two and half hours — might be interpreted as an endorsement of the epic significance that LaBeouf attached to his Slauson Rec Theater Company.
Yet the doc is by no means a slog. It's sensitively shot and sharply edited, and its energy flows. The same intensity that LaBeouf brings to his acting pours out of nearly every interaction he has in the film. Whether he's enraged or kvelling, he has such a compelling way with words, and such an animated physicality, that he's almost endlessly watchable. Almost. The dramatic exits lose their drama after a while. And there are quite a few of them, especially when rehearsals are in full swing for 5711 Avalon, the innovative pandemic-era production that would be Slauson Rec's biggest and last production.
Slauson Rec might be a more inviting and effective experience if it were expanded slightly and reshaped into a two- or three-part cable docuseries. We don't need nitty-gritty details, but a bit more info about the multimedia play 5711 Avalon would have been a welcome substitute for some of the repetitive instances of behind-the-scenes conflict, as watchable as they are. (It's not hard to imagine some of those sequences as grist for a future episode of Documentary Now! That's a compliment.)
Actors Bobby Soto and Donte 'Bo' Johnson, who met LaBeouf on the set of The Tax Collector, were his co-founders in the theater company, but there's no question that he's the head honcho, the raison d'être. Decades earlier, the charismatic maverick John Cassavetes had done something similar, pouring his own Hollywood money into a Los Angeles theater project. Unlike Cassavetes, LaBeouf had no famous actors in his troupe, and it would take a while before he focused on scripted material.
In the early months, workshop sessions are devoted to movement-based 'devised theater,' with an emphasis on improvisation and collaborative creation. The school's numbers dwindle as those seeking more conventional acting lessons fall away. Among the ones who stay, spirits run high, and there's a fevered excitement as the group plans its first public performance, with LaBeouf enthusing over 'probably the best thing I've ever been a part of.' In an interview conducted at his hillside aerie, the actor emphasizes his hunger to create with others. But it isn't long before harsh rebukes punctuate his encouragement. Notably, his first major tantrum happens on a day when he points out that he hasn't been to AA much that week.
Months earlier, the five-minute personal introduction that LaBeouf delivered to kickstart the group's first meeting revealed a narrative shaped by outsiderness, trauma, alcoholism and recovery — no surprise to anyone who has seen Honey Boy, the autobiographical feature he penned and starred in. That movie, shot and released around the same time as his Slauson Rec project was taking shape, revolves around LaBeouf's troubled relationship with his manipulative father. Now, under Lewis' vigilant eye, we see LaBeouf turning into an explosive paternal figure, one who declares his love 'conditional' and taunts the group with angry reminders of his beneficence. 'I'm doing everything!' he sputters in response to disappointing read-throughs.
In addition to LaBeouf's mounting volatility, there are tensions within the group over its role in the immediate community — a crucial question for the arts in general in a country of extreme economic disparity. Then comes the COVID shutdown, bringing that disparity to the fore without truly addressing it. But, with 5711 Avalon, LaBeouf & Co. tried. Born of the pandemic and very much about it, the play is set in a COVID testing site. Fueled by a Hollywood star's earnings, it's a play that focuses on frontline workers. It would be rehearsed and performed in a South L.A. parking lot, and when it opened in October 2020, famous people — Jaden Smith, Sean Penn — showed up for the drive-in experience.
O'Neil zeroes in on three castmembers who find themselves at the receiving end of LaBeouf's invective: Sarah Kaplan, Sam Walker and Ezekiel 'Zeke' Pacheco, an ambitious actor from South L.A. who books a role on Netflix's On My Block during rehearsals but remains committed to the play. Amid the underlying stress and uncertainty of the pandemic, LaBeouf is masked and dangerous, his outbursts a shocking mix of self-awareness and loss of control.
Though not a performer, O'Neil is clearly a full-fledged and well-liked member of the troupe, and the time he spends away from rehearsals with Kaplan and especially Pacheco, offering glimpses of their families, is fueled by profound affection. At one point during one of LaBeouf's parking-lot freakouts, O'Neil zeros in on a little kid in the next-door backyard, watching through the fence in alarm and amazement. You get a sense that the filmmaker wishes he, too, could toddle away and not give this grown-up but childish drama a second thought. But, finally, Slauson Rec is defined by gratitude and love no less than hurt and confusion. Pointing his camera at the man who bought it for him, he sees someone fumbling toward grace.
Best of The Hollywood Reporter
'The Goonies' Cast, Then and Now
"A Nutless Monkey Could Do Your Job": From Abusive to Angst-Ridden, 16 Memorable Studio Exec Portrayals in Film and TV
The 10 Best Baseball Movies of All Time, Ranked

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mikey Madison Replaces Sydney Sweeney in A24 Edgar Allan Poe Movie
Mikey Madison Replaces Sydney Sweeney in A24 Edgar Allan Poe Movie

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Mikey Madison Replaces Sydney Sweeney in A24 Edgar Allan Poe Movie

is being eyed to star in another project after her Oscar win for Anora. Madison won the Best Actress Academy Award for her performance as the titular character in Sean Baker's Anora, which was released in 2024. Since then, it was announced she will star in a new movie titled Reptilia that comes from director Alejandro Landes Achavarría. Now, Madison is in talks to star in The Masque of the Red Death, a reimagining of an Edgar Allan Poe story that comes from A24 and Charlie Polinger. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Madison would play twin sisters in The Masque of the Red Death. The story 'sees a mad prince take in the noble class into his castle while a plague devastates the peasantry.' One of those entering the castle is a 'long-lost twin' who then enters a 'decadent world of orgies, opium, power schemes, revenge, and decapitations.' Sydney Sweeney was previously going to star in the movie; however, she dropped out due to scheduling conflicts. The Masque of the Red Death is expected to begin production in either late 2025 or early 2026. The Masque of the Red Death will be Poling's second feature film following The Plague. That movie held its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival last month, stars Joel Edgerton, and was met with positive reviews from critics. A wide release date has not yet been set. Prior to starring in Anora, Madison played Maxine 'Max' Fox in FX's Better Things, which premiered in 2016 and ran for five seasons. She has also starred in movies such as 2018's Monster, 2019's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, and 2022's Scream, among other titles. A release date for The Masque of the Red Death has not yet been announced. The post Mikey Madison Replaces Sydney Sweeney in A24 Edgar Allan Poe Movie appeared first on - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More.

Harvey Weinstein's Team Wants the Jury to Believe He's a Scapegoat of #MeToo
Harvey Weinstein's Team Wants the Jury to Believe He's a Scapegoat of #MeToo

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Harvey Weinstein's Team Wants the Jury to Believe He's a Scapegoat of #MeToo

Closing arguments in Harvey Weinstein's rape trial concluded Wednesday with the defense team claiming the former mogul is being scapegoated as the face of the #MeToo movement. 'If this guy wasn't Harvey Weinstein, would we even be here?' Weinstein attorney Arthur Aidala asked the jury. More from The Hollywood Reporter Harvey Weinstein Will Not Testify In New York Retrial Harvey Weinstein "Seriously Contemplating" Testifying in Trial on Rape and Sexual Charges Harvey Weinstein Survivors Speak Out to Support Three Women Testifying Against Him In New Trial 'It's not because the defendant is Harvey Weinstein, it's because he raped three people,' Assistant District Attorney Nicole Blumberg said at the start of her summations. Weinstein is being retried on a criminal sexual charge and a rape charge related to respective claims from a former production assistant on Project Runway, Miriam Haley, who alleges he forced oral sex on her at his Manhattan apartment in 2006, as well as from aspiring actress Jessica Mann, who alleges she was raped by Weinstein in 2013 in a Manhattan hotel. Those charges were part of the 2020 trial, but Weinstein's conviction was overturned in April 2024. Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg said he would retry the former mogul shortly thereafter. Former model Kaja Sokola is the new accuser to this trial and has alleged Weinstein forcibly had oral sex with her in a hotel in 2006, resulting in another criminal sexual charge. The #MeToo movement has been in the background of this trial, in part, because witnesses referenced the 2017 New York Times article as the reason they came forward. But this trial has also had less fanfare and fewer protests than in 2020 and comes as some attitudes around #MeToo have been shifting. A number of women who say they had also been sexually assaulted by Weinstein put forward statements in support of the three witnesses in this trial, but added that there's now more 'cynicism' about the movement and that 'MeToo has fallen under the 'anti-woke' hammer.' Judge Curtis Farber is set to give charging instructions to the 12-person jury Thursday morning, after which time they'll begin deliberations. This comes after about six weeks of testimony and more than 20 witnesses from the prosecution as well as a few from the defense team. If he is found guilty on any of the charges, Weinstein will likely spend the rest of his life in prison. But even if he is not found guilty, Weinstein would remain in person for his 2022 conviction in California. His legal team has appealed that conviction. In his closing arguments, Aidala continued to position the encounters between Weinstein and the women as part of consensual and transactional relationships that would help them jumpstart their careers without them having to undergo formal education. 'They don't want to do the schooling, they want to cut the line,' Aidala said. 'They want to take the shortcut. And they think Harvey Weinstein's the shortcut.' Haley testified that Weinstein had helped her get the job on Project Runway, and that she had continued to pitch him about a television project after the alleged incident. Weinstein had helped Sokola work as an extra on the Nanny Diaries (though her scene was cut from the film) and he got Mann an audition for Vampire Academy (though the casting director testified that she was too old for the part). None of these projects got off the ground or turned into careers, and Aidala posited that if they had, the woman would not have taken part in the criminal trial. The alleged incident with Sokola happened after Weinstein said he had a script for Sokola to read in his hotel room, and after Haley accepted an invitation from Weinstein to attend the Clerks 2 premiere in Los Angeles and met him at his apartment before leaving. Mann, who testified she entered into a consensual relationship with Weinstein at one point, but did not consent to the sexual encounter in the Manhattan hotel, initially saw meeting with Weinstein as furthering her career. 'He never had any interest in their careers. He had interest in their bodies,' Blumberg said. Aidala also pointed to the fact that the three women had previously participated in a settlement fund for sexual assault claimants established after Weinstein's company went bankrupt, and received close to $500,000 each. 'They couldn't get what they wanted when Harvey was on top, so they figured out a way to get what they wanted when he was on the bottom,' Aidala said. In his closing argument, and throughout the trial, Aidala and the defense team have sought to undermine the credibility of the three women's testimony by pointing out what they say are discrepancies in their stories. Additionally, the three women remained in contact with Weinstein to some degree after the alleged incident, with some reaching out on business inquiries in warm messages, and with Mann continuing to meet with Weinstein, per emails Aidala showed to the jury again Tuesday. Blumberg has countered that the women 'knew it was necessary to stay on his good side.' She also pointed to Weinstein's power within the industry, showing photos of the former mogul with the Clintons and Michael Bloomberg, as reasons for why the women had stayed in contact and not immediately reported the alleged crimes. 'It's not the person who's sitting here in court today, in a wheelchair, it's that man who had influence over all of Hollywood,' Blumberg said, in one of the first direct references to Weinstein's health during trial. One of the large issues hanging over the retrial has been the Molineux rule, which led to the overturning of Weinsteins' conviction when the court of appeals ruled that the trial judge improperly allowed testimony from other women about uncharged allegations against Weinstein. In this trial, no women other than the complaining witnesses testified about sexual assault from Weinstien, but the three women did mention other sexual encounters with Weinstein that were not charged in the case and that they said were unwanted. This included Sokola, who testified that Weinstein had touched her vagina and put her hand on his penis to masturbate when she was 16. 'It explains the nature of the relationship. It explains the power dynamic that was going on,' Blumberg said about the other encounters. In addition to heated back and forths between the two sides, Aidala exhibited a large amount of showmanship during his closing arguments, which included references to his own sex life, imitations of the witnesses and a metaphor involving his grandmother's red sauce. Blumberg, in turn, began by saying 'I'd like to stay away from all the jokes, and bring you back to reality.' A large photo of a younger Weinstein and his then-partner Georgina Chapman was placed in front of the witness box, facing the jury, with Aidala repeating his statements from opening arguments in which he admitted that Weinstein had repeatedly cheated on his wife, but then said: 'There's a lot of real estate between immorality and criminality.' Before Blumberg's summations continued Wednesday, Aidala had moved for another mistrial, which he has been calling for several times across the past several weeks. 'This is number 11,' Farber told Aidala, denying the request, before he then denied Aidala's 12th, 13th and 14th mistrial motions related to the DA's closing argument. Best of The Hollywood Reporter Hollywood's Most Notable Deaths of 2025 Harvey Weinstein's "Jane Doe 1" Victim Reveals Identity: "I'm Tired of Hiding" 'Awards Chatter' Podcast: 'Sopranos' Creator David Chase Finally Reveals What Happened to Tony (Exclusive)

Jessie J Reveals Early Breast Cancer Diagnosis
Jessie J Reveals Early Breast Cancer Diagnosis

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Jessie J Reveals Early Breast Cancer Diagnosis

Jessie J has revealed that she's been diagnosed with 'early breast cancer.' The 'Price Tag' singer shared the news in a Tuesday Instagram post where she said she received the diagnosis before releasing her new single 'No Secrets' from her upcoming sixth studio album. More from The Hollywood Reporter Aging CEOs, Ambitious Nepo Babies and a Tech Revolution: Succession in the Music Biz Cynthia Erivo to Discuss the Making and Meaning of Her Second Studio Album, 'I Forgive You,' In TalkShopLive Show Billy Joel Tells Howard Stern: "I'm Not Dying" 'Before 'No Secrets' came out, I was diagnosed with early breast cancer,' she said. 'I'm highlighting the word 'early.' Cancer sucks in any form, but I'm holding on to the word early.' View this post on Instagram A post shared by Jessie J (@jessiej) The Grammy nominee added that she 'just wanted to be open and share it' partly 'because selfishly I do not talk about it enough, I'm not processing it because I'm working so hard.' Jessie J also noted that she wanted to open up about the health diagnosis because 'I also know how much sharing in the past has helped me with other people giving me their love and support and also their own stories.' She continued, 'And I know the press are going to say crazy stuff but you know what, to get diagnosed with this as I'm putting out a song called 'No Secrets' right before a song called 'Living My Best Life,' which was all pre-planned before I found out about this,' she said, before adding, 'I mean you can't make it up.' The English singer rose to prominence in the early-to-mid 2010s with hit tracks including 'Domino' and 'Bang Bang,' which she collaborated with Ariana Grande and Nicki Minaj on the latter track, too, which earned Jessie J her sole Grammy nomination. Best of The Hollywood Reporter Most Anticipated Concert Tours of 2025: Beyoncé, Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar & SZA, Sabrina Carpenter and More Hollywood's Most Notable Deaths of 2025 Hollywood's Highest-Profile Harris Endorsements: Taylor Swift, George Clooney, Bruce Springsteen and More

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store