What Are Your Favorite Movies Set In Texas?

Texas has wide open spaces, a laid back attitude. and a unique culture. It has always drawn storytellers in all mediums to the state. Here are just a few of the films that have been set and filmed in the Lone Star State:

Rio Bravo
As gimmicky as the starring lineup of John Wayne, Dean Martin, and Ricky Nelson might seem, Rio Bravo is a classic Western with heart, humor and, of course, some killer musical interludes.

The Last Picture Show
This stark and beautiful film is based on the semi-autobiographical novel of the same name by Larry McMurtry. The film follows the coming of age of a young ensemble cast in a 1950s Texas town.

Blood Simple
The Coen brothers’ neo-noir about a Texas bartender sending a PI after his wife has so many twists and turns you won’t be sure what the truth is by the end. The Coens always seem to return to this genre, and their stellar first outing may explain why.

Smokey and the Bandit
Nothing personifies the Texas spirit like the lure of the open road. In Smokey and the Bandit, Jackie Gleason is in hot pursuit! This romp is a heck of a lot of fun as Burt Reynolds leads Smokey through what seems like most of the state.

Paris, Texas
Considered one of Wim Wenders’s masterpieces, this slow and meditative film captures the state of mind of a man who wanders out of the Texas desert not sure where or how he has spent the last 5 years. It's a film that rewards patient viewing.

Threadgill’s: Delicious Meals Set to Music

If you want to experience Austin new and old, head over to Threadgill’s at one of its two locations. Open 365 days a year at both locations, the legendary restaurant offers a Southern comfort, home cooked meals, and live music. Famous for being the place where Janis Joplin developed her sound, Threadgill’s has been home to many musicians on the road throughout the years. Check out one of many live shows and you may be witnessing music history in the making. The North Austin location, the original Threadgill’s, has bragging rights as owning the first beer license in the county.

The South Austin location, “Threadgill’s World Headquarters,” hosts a family friendly beer garden and a Sunday Gospel Brunch. Both locations have brunch on Sundays from 10 am – 1 pm and a “Howdy Hour,” Monday through Friday, from 3 p.m. – 6 p.m. The North location also offers an additional happy hour Monday through Friday from 9 – 11 p.m. Can’t get enough of Threadgill’s? The restaurant has an online store for all different kinds of restaurant merchandise including t-shirts and a cookbook.

Threadgill’s

North Austin:
6416 North Lamar
Austin, TX 78752
(512) 451-5440

South Austin:
301 West Riverside Drive
Austin, TX 78704
(512) 472-9304

Mulberry: Outstanding Wines and Delicious Eats, Any Time of Day

Just because you are in Texas, doesn’t mean you always have a Texas-sized appetite. For days like that, visit Mulberry, a downtown wine bar and restaurant that is cozy yet hip, with influences from both Austin and New York. Many of the menu items are snack-sized, including a variety of cheeses and meats, pressed sandwiches, and salads. Placed beautifully on each plate, the dishes are artful and packed with taste. For noshers with a larger appetite, there are also full plates like Truffle Porcini and Cremini Risotto, Meatballs, and a Salmon Filet served with Orange Pecan Couscous. A wine bar indeed, Mulberry is stocked with over 150 wines from the top producing wine regions around the world and a wide selection of draught beers, including seasonal favorites. Dinner is served daily from 5 – 11 p.m.; however, the bar is open until 1 a.m. Sunday – Wednesday, and 2 a.m. Thursday – Saturday. Mulberry also serves a filling brunch on weekends and a happy hour with special snacks and drinks from 5 – 7 p.m. on weekdays.

Mulberry
360 Nueces Street
Austin, TX 78701
(512) 320-0297

Museum of Natural and Artificial Ephemerata: Helping Keep Austin Weird

Austinians fighting to “Keep Austin Weird” have legions of outposts throughout the city. The Museum of Natural and Artificial Ephemerata is one of the quirkiest! Located in the house occupied by a husband-wife team, the Museum of Ephemerata is dedicated to the oddness of the human desire to collect things, as demonstrated in their “impermanent collection.” The collection has five categories: urban phantasmagoria, the celebrity collection, the snowglobe collection, and what the owners have dubbed “an entire wig collection dedicated to sleep.” The museum also hosts events. But in the spirit of the venue, they’re quite atypical: less along the lines of barbecues and blues bands than of seances, komboucha workshops, and special exhibits of narwhal teeth. All planned events are posted onto the museum’s website, so check there to see what's happening.

Museum of Natural and Artificial Ephemerata
1808 Singleton Avenue
Austin, TX 78702
(512) 320-0566
 

Franklin Barbecue: Old School Barbecue

Franklin Barbecue isn’t your old Texas barbecue joint run by weathered Texans and frequented by tourists from North Carolina. Instead, its owner is the eminently hip Aaron Franklin, a horn rim-spectacled man with sideburns that give him the laid-back cool of Jermaine from Flight of the Conchords. As a reviewer for Austin360.com put it, Franklin Barbecue may be “the epicenter of the New Barbecue Nerd Movement.” That means taking the youthful vitality of the coffee-shop explosion, putting it in a food stand, and marinating it in Austin, Texas character. But don’t think that Franklin Barbecue has sacrificed flavor for cool. Its smoky, succulent brisket — and pork ribs that slide off the bone — have snagged more than a few regulars from other famed establishments.

Franklin Barbecue
900 E. 11th Street
Austin, TX 78702
(512) 603-1187

Fabi and Rosi: Explore Culinary Europe, Here in Austin

Modern European cuisine is the specialty of Fabi and Rosi, a wonderful restaurant that's been making waves since its opening in 2009. Inside a beautiful, crisp setting you'll find new takes on classic European fare. Dishes like braised lamb gnocchi and a golden beet risotto are just a taste of the tasty combinations that you can find here on any given day. Fabi and Rosi prides itself on sourcing its ingredients locally, and the dishes here are full of seasonal and natural items from the area. This includes a garden in the back, and restaurant-owned chickens that produce all of the kitchen's eggs! Stop by for dinner, or experiment with the nice happy hour offered here, but make sure to check it out. Fabi and Rosi has a unique menu of tasty European cuisine that will satisfy the senses.

Fabi and Rosi
509 Hearn Street
Austin, TX 78703
(512) 236-0642
http://www.yelp.com/biz/fabi-rosi-austin
 

Umlauf Sculpture Garden & Museum: Serene Space

There’s nothing exciting that goes on at Austin's Umlauf Sculpture Garden & Museum. But that’s precisely the point! Fifty sculptures created by 20th Century sculptor Charles Umlauf pepper the serene outdoor grove, giving visitors the opportunity to pause and appreciate them. Allow the sculptures to provide ambiance while you sit on a bench and read a book and let the kids roam around. Think of Umlauf as an artistically curated park, situated in the hustle of Austin but somehow shielded from it in a calm oasis. Umlauf offers summer camps for children and offers yoga sessions (the sessions are called “The Body as Sculpture”) throughout the season. And, okay, there’s one exciting happening: the yearly Garden Party, which was listed by the Austin Chronicle in its 2005 “Best of Austin” issue as, well, one of the best things to do in Austin.

Umlauf Sculpture Garden & Museum

605 Robert E. Lee Road
Austin, TX 78704
(512) 445-5582

Blue Starlite Mini Urban Drive-in: Cinema Time Machine

Drive-ins aren’t dead! It wasn’t more than a year ago that a guy named Josh saw an empty lot on Austin's Cesar Chaved Boulevard and thought the vacant space would be better utilized as a cinema time machine. Blue Starlite Mini Urban Drive-In has since taken on three additional employees, added capacity for 20 cars, and now sports a full 22’ x 10’ widescreen. Blue Starlite typically shows movies that are appropriate for a public throwback venue from another decade. For example, Star Wars, Back to the Future, and The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Pedestrians get in for $5, and cars are $25. Feel free to pile in as many people as you want to listen in to the FM radio speaker. Just know that the price does not include that drive-in friendly ‘61 Cadillac!

Blue Starlite Mini Urban Drive-in

2326 E. Cesar Chavez Boulevard
Austin, TX 78702
(512) 522-1278

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