Racing up I-35, we're at our exit in about 20 minutes. Right near the exit, we
pull off the access road and onto a large field filled with cars, where we park.
Soon we're picked up by vans and taken down and around the field to a staging area.
Here there are trucks, cars, vans, tents, and crew. We grab a ride in yet another
van and soon we're walking down a field to a 1920s Western/Midwestern town, with
a few storefronts, a stable, and a few townspeople scattered about. Within an hour,
we'll watch three men ride out the only road through town, having just finished robbing
the bank. One of them turns around, curses, the rest turn around and curse, a car
has come up behind them, an old Model-T type manned by a sheriff and a deputy. They
begin to chase the riders and the riders take off. In the middle of this afternoon
shot for The Newton Boys, a $27 million Twentieth Century Fox production,
wanders Richard Linklater. The film was not only shot entirely in the Austin area,
it was conceived, and the pre-production and post-production were all done, locally.
Linklater is wearing the same uniform, T-shirt and pants, that he's always worn;
he seemed relaxed and confident. He is making a movie that he has dreamed about making
for two years and it is going well.
The first time I visited a Linklater set was back in the late Eighties when the
Austin Film Society crew (as I thought of them then) were filming Slacker.
The day I was there, they were shooting out of a lone van. Lee Daniel was on camera,
d. Montgomery working sound, with a crew of maybe three. They were having a hell
of a lot of fun and working surprisingly smoothly and swiftly. The scene was carefully
worked out, rehearsed, and shot. Still, I thought this was another local student
production and no one was more surprised than I when Slacker proved to be
such an influential and important movie. It was not only a critical hit but a seminal
event in independent filmmaking. Linklater's effort, appearing far more casual than
it really was, inspired a generation of filmgoers to become filmmakers. After this
success, Linklater and company (including producer Ann Walker-McBay and screenwriter/all-round
team player Clark Walker) decided to stay in Austin. Eventually, Linklater's production
company Detour secured an office building and moved the operation there. At this
same time Linklater continued to actively serve as the artistic director of the Austin
Film Society. Although he was now talking and dealing with Hollywood, Linklater was
still living deep in the heart of Texas.

Richard Linklater on the set of The Newton Boys
photograph by Clark Walker
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Driving up to his next set made me nervous. Dazed and Confused was Linklater's
first studio production with a budget of around $5 million. Driving there through
the night, first there was just the dark. Then we came on a very long stretch of
road with cars parked on both sides. After the cars came the trucks, equipment trucks,
dressing-room trucks, catering trucks. Then we hit the people, crew members, and
extras wandering everywhere. The last time I had seen Linklater and Daniel making
a movie they were using one van.
In the middle among extras and crew, cast and hangers-on, Linklater and Daniel
were working on making their own movie. I was worried that they would lose this movie
among all the moviemaking apparatus grown up about them. Working off the back of
the truck, Rick and Lee conferred, heads together, talking, looking exactly the same
as they had when four or five people waited on them at the G-M Steakhouse on Lamar.
Word on the film from the set and some Film Society/Detour loyalists was mixed.
They were nervous about the movie; was it working? The size of the budget, compared
with the previous effort, added to the worry.
Dazed and Confused blew me away and remains one of my favorite all-time
films. Linklater and crew's sophistication on this effort was a real surprise. I
realized that a lot of what I thought of as innocent and naïve in Slacker's
film-storytelling structure was actually conscious and deliberate style. There was
a real sense here of this production having been guided not only by a mature cinematic
hand but a generational philosopher. Linklater's films are an attempt to understand
the growing-up process. Not simply in terms of adolescent angst, but more as to how,
in a world full of choices, we decide who we are going to be (or don't decide). What
are the choices and the influences that lead us to be who we are and who we are going
to become? This is the central theme in all of Linklater's work.

The Newton Boys
photograph by Clark Walker
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The next two films, Before Sunrise, shot in Vienna, and subUrbia,
shot in Austin, showed Linklater's growing skills as a stylist and established his
mastery at working with actors. Both films were loosely formed and occurred in a
contiguous time period, consistent with his two earlier films. Plans for The Newton
Boys actually began before subUrbia, but when the start date had to be
pushed back, Team Linklater worked up a relatively quick production schedule for
subUrbia. Based on Eric Bogosian's stage play, it's the only time Linklater
has shot without really participating in writing the script.
Walking around the set of The Newton Boys that day was an experience. Here
was a big sprawling set, a small army working on the picture, and Linklater as causal
as he could be, was still clearly in control. Anne Walker-McBay was producing, Clark
Walker had co-written the script, but for the first time Rick was working with cinematographer
Peter James, rather than Lee Daniel - it marked Linklater's first film without Daniel.
No worries this time; beyond the van and despite the trucks, this was about vision,
not commerce; experience, not just ambition. What was most obvious was that Linklater
had grown up - he was no longer a maturing artist but had become an important American
filmmaker at the peak of his powers. The Newton Boys continues to explore
the themes central to his work, it's beautifully acted and nuanced, and is a full-
blown Texas story. No review here, though you should go see it, but for all of us,
where Linklater pitches his next set is always of interest. The changeover from a
van to a fleet of trucks is not a switch from low-budget to big-budget; the transition
is the evolution of skill and imagination. The Newton Boys is a story of decisions
and how they do and don't get made, but it is also a Texas-sized movie about Texas,
a work Linklater was born to make.
--Louis Black
Full Length Reviews
The Newton Boys 
The Newton Boys 
The Newton Boys 
Capsule Reviews
The Newton Boys 
The Newton Boys 
The Newton Boys 
Other Films by Richard Linklater
Before Sunrise 
SubUrbia 
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