Skip to main content

The Manual may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site.

Kurt Vonnegut: ‘Unstuck in Time’ in New Documentary

Documentarian Robert Weide (far right) watches as director Don Argot edits 'Unstuck in Time,' the Kurt Vonnegut documentary.
Documentarian Robert Weide (far right) watches as director Don Argot edits ‘Unstuck in Time,’ the Kurt Vonnegut documentary. IFC Films

“Billy Pilgrim has come unstuck in time.”

Recommended Videos

So goes a key aspect of the plot of Kurt Vonnegut’s Slaughterhouse Five, one of the most influential books of the second half of the twentieth century. The counterculture, campus fans, and critical audience that was growing with the author’s first books exploded with the author’s magnum opus. Vonnegut’s deliberately frail and fragmentary tale of Billy Pilgrim, a salve to the author’s own bewildered survival of a POW camp and the 1945 firebombing of Dresden, helped to define a generation. Besides a perfunctory biography, however, Vonnegut’s own life hasn’t received a critical visual examination — until now.

Now, opening in November from IFC Films, Unstuck in Time recounts Vonnegut’s extraordinary life and the 25-year friendship with the filmmaker who set out to document the author almost 40 years ago. 

In 1982, Robert Weide was just another adolescent enthralled by Vonnegut’s novels. Writing to the author, Wiede was surprised to get a letter back.

“Holy crap. It’s him,” Weide says in the preview.

At 23 years old, Weide proposed creating a documentary about the author’s life. Surprisingly, Vonnegut agreed. In 1988, Weide commenced filming, thinking it would take a few months to raise the needed financing, and figuring he could complete a film within the year. That was 33 years ago.

Instead, the pair struck up a decades-long collaboration that grew into an enduring friendship and finally coalesced into, Kurt Vonnegut: Unstuck in Time. Filled with rare archival footage and interviews with Vonnegut, family members, and colleagues, Weide’s broad portrait offers an intimate look into the life and work of one of America’s literary giants. 

Related Guides

“I was always filming on and off with him over the years,” says Weide in the trailer.

Weide’s intimate relationship with the author took him through Vonnegut’s Indianapolis hometown — his boyhood homes, grade school, high school, and other youthful landmarks, to Iowa City, where Vonnegut was a Writer’s Workshop professor in the mid 1960s, even to Vonnegut’s 60th high school reunion.

Unstuck in Time dives into the author’s reminiscences upon his upbringing and his creative output, spanning his childhood, his experience as a World War II POW, his marriage, family, and divorce, and his long years as a struggling writer who worked first as a publicist for General Electric and then as a car salesman to support his family, and through his eventual superstardom, beginning in 1969 following the publication of the antiwar Slaughterhouse-Five.

The documentary covers an almost two decade odyssey where Weide examines Vonnegut’s legacy and the author’s impact on his own life.

Vonnegut died on April 11, 2007. Almost 15 years after his death, Kurt Vonnegut remains one of the most popular literary figures of the 20th and 21st centuries. Readers from one generation to the next continue to find their lives transformed by the author’s cutting comic and cosmic insights. In Unstuck in Time, the audience gets to experience a Vonnegut that extends far beyond the printed page.

Unstuck in Time opens for Video on Demand via IFC Films and in theaters on Nov. 19. You can view the preview below.

Read More: Retracing the Late Anthony Bourdain’s Steps in ‘World Traveler’

Matthew Denis
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Matt Denis is an on-the-go remote multimedia reporter, exploring arts, culture, and the existential in the Pacific Northwest…
One of the biggest video game franchises of all time is finally headed to theaters
The movie doesn't have a cast yet, but will hit theaters in exactly two years.
Link in 'Tears of the Kingdom.'

Video game adaptations are all the rage in Hollywood these days, and The Legend of Zelda is apparently the next franchise up. Variety is reporting that Sony Pictures will debut a live-action Legend of Zelda movie on March 26, 2027. The movie will be co-produced by Nintendo, and Wes Ball, who directed Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes and the Maze Runner movies, remains attached to direct.

The film was first announced in November of 2023 by series creator Shigeru Miyamoto.
“This is Miyamoto. I have been working on the live-action film of The Legend of Zelda for many years now with Avi Arad-san, who has produced many mega-hit films,” Miyamoto wrote at the time. “I have asked Avi-san to produce this film with me, and we have now officially started the development of the film with Nintendo itself heavily involved in the production. It will take time until its completion, but I hope you look forward to seeing it.”
We don't know exactly what this movie will be about, although it's a good bet that part of the quest will involve Link's quest to save Zelda from some sort of peril.

Read more
‘Tulsa King’ is coming back for a third season with another new showrunner
The series is one of the most successful shows in the history of Paramount+
Sylvester Stallone in Tulsa King

The executives at Paramount have been pretty open about how much Tulsa King has meant for the company's TV success, so it's perhaps no surprise that the show is set to return for a third season. The show is already filming its third season in Atlanta and Oklahoma, and The Hollywood Reporter is reporting that Dave Erickson will take over as the show's sole showrunner for the third season.

Erickson is also serving as showrunner on Mayor of Kingstown, another Taylor Sheridan series, and recently signed a multiyear overall deal with MTV Entertainment Studios. Terence Winter and Craig Zisk, who essentially split showrunning duties on the second season, with Winter serving as the writer and Zisk as the producer, don't seem to be returning for the next season.

Read more
The Lumon building from ‘Severance’ is just a short drive from New York City
The building was built in the 1960s, and was abandoned in 2007 before being revived in 2013
The Severance Building.

If you've actually watched Severance, you probably know that the Lumon headquarters where Mark and his friends go to work every day isn't exactly the most welcoming building. If you're the kind of person that just has to know whether you're secretly severed, though, you can visit the real-life location where the exteriors of the Lumon headquarters are filmed.

As it turns out, the building is the Bell Works building in Holmdel, New Jersey. It was once the home of Bell Labs, the research arm for AT&T. The building is now home to multiple business, and according to reporting in Curbed, it was first designed in 1962 by architect Eero Saarinen and was opened as a mid-century office space.

Read more