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f one wanted
to travel to New York through film, there'd be obvious roads to take:
The Godfather, for one; Scorsese's Mean Streets and Taxi
Driver; Breakfast at Tiffany's comes to mind too; and of
course every Woody Allen picture ever made. These are films in which
the city plays as big a part as the direction, characters, or plot --
movies whose strong sense of locale can practically transport you right
into the middle of the bustling berg. Texas too has an equally rich
history of films in which it serves as subject, and the state's expanse
-- Texas is bigger, wider, and more open to the sky -- is directly proportionate
to the number of tales it embodies, urban and rural, set inland and
on the coast, in the rolling hills and desolate desert. We even have
our own actors (at least, I like to think of them as belonging to Texas):
Sissy Spacek, Harry Dean Stanton, Sam Shepard, Frances McDormand, Matthew
McConaughey, James Dean, and Paul Newman among countless others. Heck,
Kevin Costner appears all over Texcentric film -- he'd easily replace
Kevin Bacon in our own Texas version of the six-degrees-of-separation
game.
So what follows is a primer of sorts -- a list to give your Yankee
friends, or one we can use to test the Californians as they cross our
border by the carload. Watching these films will give you a sense of
our beloved state, albeit a pretty romantic one. (For the unromantic
vision, tune in to the Mike Judge animated TV series, King of the
Hill.) Don't miss the chance to view them on the big screen (frequently
resurfacing at the Paramount in Austin, the Inwood and through the Dallas
Film Society in Dallas, the River Oaks in Houston, and the Crossroads
in San Antonio), but all are available on video.
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