There are so many captivating characters, so many funny moments, and so much sweet
affection in this movie, its ending comes as a sorrowful leave-taking. You're tempted
to wave goodbye to it (if you have a hankie to wave, so much the better) and linger
in your seat long after the lights have come up. John, Keller, Squirrel, and Terrell
Lee are four fast friends who are fixin' to graduate and make good on their childhood
pact to get the heck out of Dancer, Texas, thereby decreasing their hometown's population
by five percent. Their plans are to head out to L.A., believing that their small-town
woes will disappear once they're west of the Rockies. Most of the townspeople know
better, of course -- some hold their counsel, some relate long and (hilariously) tragic
tales about the fate of similar odysseys, and still others make book on how many,
if any, of the four will actually leave. And, indeed, as the film progresses, it
looks as if the skeptical bookie will prosper. Faced with imminent departure, each
boy struggles with the childhood vow, and just who will take that westbound bus is
uncertain. The hours that unfold between graduation and the estimated time of departure
tell a loving and funny tale of small-town life distilled into the creak of a porch
swing or the dust from a speeding car on a lonely highway, a tale of opportunities
that beckon and ties that bind. Writer/director Tim McCanlies proves that rural wit
is not an oxymoron. A wonderful script is matched by a terrific cast. Meyer (Keller)
and Mills (John) are particular standouts. Keller is eager to leave and angry at
his friends' defection, but he is Dancer's Everyman, a restless native son who is
(and makes us) acutely aware of why they would choose to stay. Mills is simply big,
big star material. Though John is the quietest of the four boys, Mills' slight frame
and scrubbed face emit something powerful and pure, with a connection to that vast
land that goes far beyond his years. His John is an anathema to L.A., a young man
you'd like to meet. Patricia Wettig (thirtysomething) has a scene-stealing turn as
Terrell Lee's mama. She captures a quality peculiar to rich Texas women: the ability
to be icily brittle and sashay down the street at the same time. The film is filled
with such performances -- fond and funny and never condescending. Shot entirely in
the Fort Davis area, Dancer, Texas is a gorgeous picture that makes wonderful use
of the West Texas landscape. We can breathe the air, squint at the sun, and feel
dwarfed by the towering buttes and endless sky. And, sitting in traffic on I-35,
I feel like getting the heck out of Austin and heading straight for Dancer, Texas,
where the deer and the antelope and a bunch of warm and witty characters roam.
--Hollis Chacona
Capsule Reviews
Dancer, Texas 
Dancer, Texas 
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