Synopsis
A Completely Cool, Multi-Purpose Movie.
A small but growing Texas town, filled with strange and musical characters, celebrates its sesquicentennial and converge on a local parade and talent show.
A small but growing Texas town, filled with strange and musical characters, celebrates its sesquicentennial and converge on a local parade and talent show.
David Byrne John Goodman Annie McEnroe Jo Harvey Allen Spalding Gray Alix Elias Roebuck 'Pops' Staples Tito Larriva John Ingle Matthew Posey Swoosie Kurtz Amy Buffington Richard Dowlearn Capucine De Wulf Cynthia Gould Kelly Wright Hinpheth Siharath Phyllis Wallace Linda McCauley Marian Henley Huey P. Meaux Connie Deaton Jerry Harrison Meredith Zednick Alonzo Richard Chrissy Miller Tony Reynolds Eric "E.T." Thorngren Stephen Seybold Show All…
トゥルー・ストーリー, デイヴィッド・バーンのトゥルー・ストーリー, Historias verdaderas, True Stories: A Film About a Bunch of People in Virgil Texas, Истински истории, 真事信不信, Histórias Reais, 트루 스토리스, Prawdziwe historie
honestly the exact kind of beautiful, weird, specific, small town working class wonder-piece i needed time watch tonight. it’s a shame byrne didn’t direct anything else because he’s got such a specific style that feels like it could’ve been applied to an entire generation of eccentric comedies to great effect! i love you david!
dale cooper would have a field day with this town. i’m getting too predictable but this was a home run, so delightful and hilarious and life-affirming. nashville but weirder and happier, even some stuff (parade scene) that reminded me of tati. thank you to the one person in my twitch chat who would tell me to watch this every stream
"I really enjoy forgetting. When I first come to a place, I notice all the little details. I notice the way the sky looks. The color of white paper. The way people walk. Doorknobs. Everything. Then I get used to the place and I don't notice those things anymore. So only by forgetting can I see the place again as it really is."
On Brett Goldstein's podcast "Films To Be Buried With," he always asks his guests "Which film do you most relate to?" and for a while I have thought my answer to that question would be Brigsby Bear. Now I think it's this.
I'm so impressed by what David Byrne did here. Such a rare and difficult thing to…
sir that's my emotional support surrealist talking heads western musical
a fucking masterpiece. the more i watch byrne do his thing, the funnier it is that i used to confuse him and david lynch without any real knowledge of each other, because i do think they do a lot of similar things– just with polar opposite auras about their work. could've switched names with american utopia and worked just as well, but that's more a credit to byrne's consistency in his work/message. i could write 1,000 words on how loving and celebratory and quietly funny and sarcastic this movie is, and one day on a subsequent viewing i probably will.
i'd like to believe david byrne has seen Joe Pera Talks With You and he loves it. :)
At one point during this film, the camera follows a lone sheet of newspaper floating across the lawns of some bland suburban houses. David Byrne narrates: "Look at that - who can say it isn't beautiful?", and through the eyes of TRUE STORIES, it is. It's a sort of meditation on progress, told with one of the most natural and unforced displays of strangeness I've ever seen. Gone is the underlying fear and cynicism of a lot of Talking Heads' music, replaced by an almost childlike sense of wonder and excitement for the future - the future of technology, the future of love, the way our lives might change for the better.
Watching TRUE STORIES as a kid might be…
i'm 6'3" and maintain a very consistent panda bear shape
David Byrne makes a great thesis statement for his whole deal
i love that david byrne is talking to me
i wish i could jump inside this film and live there
this is my neurodivergent communist manifesto i will never be the same
john goodman is truly one of the most charming screen presences of all time