The Last Picture Show

1971 "Anarene, Texas, 1951. Nothing much has changed…"
8| 1h59m| R| en| More Info
Released: 03 October 1971 Released
Producted By: Columbia Pictures
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

High school seniors and best friends, Sonny and Duane, live in a dying Texas town. The handsome Duane is dating a local beauty, while Sonny is having an affair with the coach's wife. As graduation nears and both boys contemplate their futures, Duane eyes the army and Sonny takes over a local business. Each struggles to figure out if he can escape this dead-end town and build a better life somewhere else.

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Reviews

Actuakers One of my all time favorites.
GrimPrecise I'll tell you why so serious
Smartorhypo Highly Overrated But Still Good
Intcatinfo A Masterpiece!
harbor21usa This is a great picture based upon a great book.The title of both gets immediately to the heart of things.The book establishes the probability that after Sam the lion & Lois Farrow, Sonny Crawford, of the following generation, is the most intelligent person in Anarene, the fictional Texas small town.For me, the premise of author Larry McMurtry's novel is the source of the greatness of this coming-of-age story. As everyone knows, the title refers to the closing of The Royal, the movie house in downtown Anarene. The location is becoming a ghost town as Mrs. Mosey, the theater's operator, reveals to best buddies Sonny & Duane her intention to shutter the place after one last unspooling of "Red River." It's the night before Duane goes off to fight in Korea.The deeper, subtler meaning of the title refers to the process of growing up mentally, which means seeing beyond Hollywood-fueled fantasies about what life is supposed to be in favor of clear-eyed visions of what is your own real life in actuality.At the center of the story is the trio of Sonny, Duane & Jacy, the girl. There's a late-blooming triangle of competition between the two boys seeking the love of Jacy, their (and everyone else's) dream girl in the flesh. Duane gives everything he's got to the winning of Jacy, whereas Sonny, who never expected to get his chance with her, finally does, but only after falling in love with Ruth Popper, the forty-year-old abandoned wife of the macho but gay high school physical education teacher.Jacy is the villain of the story because she's a very smart schemer who tries, almost diabolically, to realize in the flesh the dreamy scenarios that fill her head in the wake of countless trips to the matinée. Her real life is her enemy because it keeps refusing to conform itself to her Hollywood-laced mental picture of how things are supposed to be. She's the most beautiful girl in town and she's a seductress and yet, actually, she doesn't even like sex, that is, not real sex as sharply distinguished from what she's seen in the movies.Duane, a mostly good-natured guy with strength & athletic prowess, in accordance with the standard movie scenario, figures to be the best match for Jacy. Throughout most of the story, he's got a white-knuckle grip on this dream & his insane jealousy where Jacy's concerned turns him into a violent loose cannon who almost wrecks his bff connection to Sonny.Sonny cherishes the same sort of dreams that animate Jacy & Duane, except that his sharp mind makes him too observant of what's in front of him to be as completely enchanted (and distracted) as the other two. This openness to immediate reality over celluloid dreams delivers him into a real life love relationship with Ruth Popper, a good & vital woman who outperforms Jacy in every important category of womanhood.Picture Jacy & Duane facing the prospect of an unfashionable lover more than twenty years their senior. Neither would consider saying yes because the reality is too far removed from what they've seen on screen. Sonny almost makes the same mistake with Jacy until he sees that her marriage proposal was just a temporary movie scenario playing in her head. Awakened from the picture show in his head, Sonny returns to his lover in real life, Ruth Popper.
jvance83 I saw this for the first time at least 15 years after its release quite by accident and was very pleasantly surprised. I've never seen a film that struck so many chords of reality.Sam's soliloquy at the tank ("Bein' a dried up old bag of bones, that's what's ridiculous - getting' old.") is as bittersweet an observation of the fruits and futilities of life as anything I have ever seen or read - from Sophocles to Shakespeare to Donne to Dickens - it doesn't get any better.The leads all perform with a subdued expressiveness that leaves one hanging on every word they say, expecting some profundity in every statement. There are a few scenes I could do without and some of the characters are inadequately fleshed out but this is a movie I can watch over and over again, thinking to myself "Man, I wish I had said that!"
SnoopyStyle It's the small town life in the dusty Texas town of Anarene in the early '50s. There isn't much to do other than to go to the movie theater. Sonny Crawford (Timothy Bottoms) and Duane Jackson (Jeff Bridges) are best friends on the hapless football team and everybody complains about it. Duane is dating virginal Jacey Farrow (Cybill Shepherd) the daughter of the town's oil baron. Her cheating mother Lois (Ellen Burstyn) tells her to pursue somebody more capable. Lester Marlow (Randy Quaid) invites her to a naked swimming party. Sonny is bored with his girlfriend Charlene Duggs and he breaks up with her. He starts an affair with the unhappy wife of the high school coach Ruth Popper (Cloris Leachman). Sam the Lion (Ben Johnson) is the owner of the local café, pool hall and movie theater.It's an aimless rambling teen coming of age movie. In that way, the movie brings out a sense of place. It has a lot of good separate story lines weaving around in this town. There are some very memorable scenes. It is a little too slow at times. It's the style of that era but 2 hours is too long of a running time. The one thing that is sorely missing from director Peter Bogdanovich is a truly fitting soundtrack.
evening1 A dark tale about man's struggle to find an emotional home for himself, even as life erodes and can cease at any instant.The setting is a wind- and tumbleweed-swept Wichita Falls, TX, in the early Fifties, and we experience this allegory through the peregrinations of high school seniors and the adults who try to influence, manipulate, or just plain control them.Man is portrayed as scarcely more than an animal here -- a creature who prowls, stalks, and ruts, and whose copulations are almost entirely bereft of genuine feeling or depth.At the center of the tale is the aimless local boy Sonny Crawford (Timothy Bottoms). When he meets a depressed woman 20 years his senior (Cloris Leachman) who is just as starved for affection, they have intercourse. For a while they find distraction from their despair.The performances in this film are uniformly strong, however, I think too much time is given to the comings and goings of vapid teenagers in heat. I'd have liked to see and learn a little more about the intriguing father figure Joe the Lion (the craggily handsome Ben Johnson). But then again, one of the lessons here is that the good things in life are fleeting. Enjoy -- and more, appreciate -- while you can!I also think there's a take-home message in Sonny. In the course of the film he does manage to grow. Starting out as fickle and unreflective, he evolves into someone who can tolerate the emotional pain of another -- Joe the Lion, and later Mrs. Popper -- without taking the easier route of running away. Definitely a role model for us all!