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Initial Impressions: The Last Picture Show - August 2017
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Tom, "Big Daddy"
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Jul 27, 2017 12:04PM

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I'm just getting started, having read one chapter. I saw the movie when it was released, but I remember almost nothing about it. If my library has it, I will watch it again when I finish the book. My copy has 220 pages, so should be a quick read.



I have watched the movie several times, once just recently. And I agree with B.R. that it is excellent. The screenplay by McMurty and Bogdanovich was on the mark and the film features a great ensemble cast of young and veteran performers.
And thank goodness it wasn't filmed in color.
It has been much longer since I read the book, but I think it is excellent, too. So, I guess I need to read it again if I am going to rate one over the other. Reading it again won't be hard since I own two copies (I don't know how that happened.).

So, when I decided to reread the book I decided to read the hardback copy because the print is larger. On the first page of Ch. III, I read this:
"He drove to the all-night cafe and started in, but when he looked through the window he saw that his father, Frank Crawford, was sitting at the counter, sipping Morgan, the night waitress."
WTH? "Sipping Morgan, the night waitress!!" How do you do that? The hour was late and I kept rereading that passage trying to make sense of it. But I couldn't. But then I remembered, I've got another copy of the book.
So I fetch the paperback copy and I read this:
"He drove to the all-night cafe and started in, but when he looked through the window he saw that his father, Frank Crawford, was sitting at the counter, sipping defensively at a cup of coffee and talking to Genevieve Morgan, the night waitress."
I was genuinely relieved to discover that it was a misprint and that Frank wasn't sipping Morgan, the night waitress, especially since his son was looking in the window.
So I pick up the hardback copy and read on until the next page:
"Money arguments often upset them for hours. Frank couldn't help offering it and Sonny couldn't help refusing to take it. Sonny did not want it, nor could he see how his father defensively at a cup of coffee and talking to Genevieve could possibly do without it, as high as his prescriptions were."
WTH! I located the missing phrase! As I say, the hour was late and I closed the book and went to bed. I plan on tackling the book again this evening -- the hardback copy, that is. It is much more interesting and thought-provoking than the paperback.

Wow, hilarious - I hope the hard copy was one sale...


Though a bit tattered, the book still has its dust jacket and there is a picture of a very young Larry McMurtry on the back. The book was originally published in 1966 when he was only 30 years old. It was his third novel. It was filmed in 1971.
His first novel was "Horseman, Pass By," which was filmed under the title "Hud" in 1963, giving Paul Newman one of his best screen roles. The second was "Leaving Cheyenne," which was filmed under the title "Lovin' Molly" in 1974, starring Blythe Danner, Anthony Perkins, and Beau Bridges.
As I said, I may have bought it at a library book sale -- or maybe it was at a used bookstore that I frequent. But I know I didn't give much for it.
My paperback copy is not that entertaining, but being inside the mind of high schoolers, male and female, certainly is. McMurtry may have been 30 when he wrote this book, but he had a great memory for thoughts and feelings of adolescents. The coach is pretty funny too, and a real stereotype. Howard, any feel for the year in which this book is set? It was published in 1966, but I can't figure out if this is 40's or 50's.

It has to be early to mid-'50's, Diane. The film "Storm Warning" was released in 1951; "Francis Goes to the Army, also 1951; Debbie Reynolds became a star in 1952 in "Singing in the Rain;" Groucho Marx's quiz show was on TV from 1950-61.
It could be a little later than the above dates for the movies indicate since it is doubtful that first-run movies made it to Thalia. They certainly didn't in the small-town theaters where I lived. We only saw re-releases and sometimes they were films that had been released a decade or more earlier.

P.S. ~ I just ran across another clue. The Coach's car is a '53 Chevy. He's a teacher in a small town in Texas. I doubt that it is a new car. Must be mid-'50's.

Thalia = Archer City and the town is located in north TX. If you like the story of Sonny, Duane, Jacy, Ruth and the others there are three or four more McMurtry books with the same setting and cast of characters. The books progress in time like Updike's "Rabbit" books. I've read them all and I personally thought Duane's Depressed was the best with this #2. Sam the Lion is one of my all-time favorite characters from this book. We could use more people like him.
Thanks guys, that helps. I am more than halfway, and am finding it extremely funny, extremely sad, by turns depressing and hopeful. The juxtaposition of adults dealing with the real world versus kids with expectations is very poignant.


Thanks Sara. I am about half-way through the book and there have been no more slip-ups to this point. But I'm hoping .....

When I first read your comment, B.R., I was sure that I would disagree with you. My memory was that I liked the book better than the movie, although I always considered the movie to be one of my favorites.
However, after rereading the first half of the book I find myself in total agreement with you. It is a good novel, but the movie is a classic.

I should keep my comments focused on the book but I do have one more comment about Larry McMurtry. He has written some excellent books, Lonesome Dove would be one of my top 10 or 20 all-time favorites, however, he has also written some very marginal stuff and I think he would admit it. This book starts out pretty dismal, poor football team and all. Not much to get the reader nostalgic or enthused about Thalia, TX.

I agree about the marginal books. That is my impression, too. I get the feeling that he has only been going through the motions in recent years.
The only other movie that I can think of that I liked better than the book is M*A*S*H.
I intend to watch the movie. I did see it when it was released in 1971, that was the year I graduated from high school. I remember the swimming pool scene, but that's about all. I think it was Cybil Shepherd's first movie, and she got the part of Jacy because she was Peter Bogdonovitch's girlfriend at the time. I'm sure I was impressed that Jacy was so wild and daring.

The movie is very atmospheric -- and depressing. But it is worth watching to see, if for no other reason, the Best Supporting Oscar winning performances of two veteran performers: Cloris Leachman and Ben Johnson. Ellen Burstyn and Jeff Bridges were also nominated in the same categories.
The film was nominated in a number of other categories, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Screenplay, and Best Cinematography.
In some cases, Oscar winners and nominations don't mean all that much, but in this case I think they do.

I agree that McMurtry is a mixed bag...he can write something amazing (Lonesome Dove one of the BEST books ever) and then something so horrible I cannot push through it (Duane's Depressed and what for others is favorite but for me not--Terms of Endearment).

I didn't much like "Duane's Depressed" either and I couldn't make it through "Terms of Endearment," though I did enjoy the movie.


I saw the movie last night and posted my comments in the final impressions thread. A great movie, and Hollywood stayed true to the book in every instance. That is unusual, to say the least.


Yes, I had forgotten about that practice. I too remember a family watering the dusty gravel road in front of their house on a road that my family lived on. Since we had no outside running water we ate the dust. It would have taken a lot of trips with buckets to accomplish the task.
Come to think of it, we didn't have running water inside the house either.



Hopefully someone can tell me that it is worth finishing and I am being to conservative in my thinking. Not sure I can relate to some of this. I was a teen. I remember the angst. But wow.
I only gave this book a 3, so not a favorite, but I am glad I read it. It helps that it's only a little over 200 pages. I remember my teen days much differently, I would never have had the freedom Jacy had, and would have avoided boys like Duane and Sonny. What does amaze me is that this book actually got published in 1966. I think it's worth finishing, Guy.

I never knew a Jacy, because I was never acquainted with any family that had the kind of wealth that her family had, nor, as Diane says, with any girl who had the freedom that she had. On the other hand, I grew up with Duane and Sonny. They were even friends.

If you really want to "push through" and learn how all the folks in Thalia, TX end up then four sequels await: Texasville ('87), Duane's Depressed ('99), When the Light Goes ('08) and Rhino Ranch ('10). Would you believe Duane reading Proust?
