IMDb RATING
5.6/10
510
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A crooked sheriff in a small Southern town frames an ex-convict in a drug bust and takes his girlfriend.A crooked sheriff in a small Southern town frames an ex-convict in a drug bust and takes his girlfriend.A crooked sheriff in a small Southern town frames an ex-convict in a drug bust and takes his girlfriend.
Jack Starrett
- Buford Tyler
- (as Claude Ennis Starrett Jr.)
John Starrett Berry
- Cooter
- (as Starrett Berry)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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I would be lying through my teeth if I said I knew anything about Director Jack Starret. Never heard of him, but must admit that he does not do a bad job of A SMALL TOWN IN TEXAS.
To that end he is helped by a strong cast including Timothy Bottoms - then riding the tail end of his six-year stardom flash beginning with LAST PICTURE SHOW and JOHNNY GOT HIS GUN in 1971, and continuing with THE PAPER CHASE in 1973 - the stunningly sexy British actress Susan George entering her own decline, and Bo Hopkins with yet another striking support part, after THE WILD BUNCH seven years earlier. This time he is not loud, he is just a quietly corrupt copper.
The script by William Norton is this film's weakness. The characters fall well shy of fleshed, dialogue is uneven.
Strong, competent cinematography and editing, by Jessup and Horger respectively.
To that end he is helped by a strong cast including Timothy Bottoms - then riding the tail end of his six-year stardom flash beginning with LAST PICTURE SHOW and JOHNNY GOT HIS GUN in 1971, and continuing with THE PAPER CHASE in 1973 - the stunningly sexy British actress Susan George entering her own decline, and Bo Hopkins with yet another striking support part, after THE WILD BUNCH seven years earlier. This time he is not loud, he is just a quietly corrupt copper.
The script by William Norton is this film's weakness. The characters fall well shy of fleshed, dialogue is uneven.
Strong, competent cinematography and editing, by Jessup and Horger respectively.
Haven't seen this movie for well over 20 years, when I was only about 12. Even at such a young age, I picked up on the fact that the realism of the town depicted is extremely far-fetched; the police department in a town of this size (remember, this is a "Small" Town in Texas) would have a fleet of 6 or 8 vehicles at the most, yet in the big chase scene there are local police cars by the score, probably a hundred plus. That is my #1 memory of the film. A much better flick is "The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia" with Dennis Quaid. Although the protagonist in "Georgia" is not a native of the town in which the story takes place, the basic plot of "bad-guy lawman tries to bully damsel away from our hero" is very similar to "Small Town in Texas." I recall the Dennis Quaid movie as the better of the two, and that doesn't say much!*!
Susan George gave an excellent performance in this film, over powering Timothy Bottoms, and Bo Hopkins. Susan George with her excellent British acting background gave class to this SMALL TOWN IN TEXAS. Lots of small town police corruption with daring bike and car racing and a close miss of a train. This film is going to be another classic film collection. It is worth viewing and the Texas locations and photography are fantastic.
This movie was a cross between BILLY JACK, DUKES OF HAZZARD and that's it. It was a fun movie. Tim Bottoms is always a good person to watch act. The ending was sudden and typical of that decade of movies.
If it's on, see it.
If it's on, see it.
This obscure (to me anyway) film has a lot of problems. All the characters are either one dimensional, annoying, or cliched. It's overlong, boring, and has a script that spends the first half meandering around endlessly, then gets hopelessly predictable.
In its defence I will say that it is less dated than many films from the 1970s, and is occasionally entertaining or amusing (mainly me laughing at the dolts who populate this film). And its handful of action scenes are decent...though I suspect they may seem better than they really are because even the most inept stunts would seem exciting compared to the generally mundane tone of the film.
You could do worse, but you could do much better too.
In its defence I will say that it is less dated than many films from the 1970s, and is occasionally entertaining or amusing (mainly me laughing at the dolts who populate this film). And its handful of action scenes are decent...though I suspect they may seem better than they really are because even the most inept stunts would seem exciting compared to the generally mundane tone of the film.
You could do worse, but you could do much better too.
Did you know
- TriviaCast members Susan George and Bo Hopkins replaced original cast members Susan Blakely and John Beck in the roles of Mary Lee Carter and Sheriff Duke respectively. The casting of the originals had been announced in the 8th December 1975 edition of show-business trade-paper 'The Hollywood Reporter'. Reportedly, they did not stay with the project and bowed out of the production for reasons which are publicly undetermined.
- GoofsDuring most of the chase scenes, the police cars change alternately from Plymouth Satellites to Plymouth Furys and one changes to an AMC Matador in the final chase scene.
- Quotes
Buford Tyler: [Buford looks at Poke] You just get outta the state pen?
Poke Jackson: How'd ya know that?
Buford Tyler: I recognize your tailor.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Trailer Trauma V: 70s Action Attack! (2020)
- How long is A Small Town in Texas?Powered by Alexa
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