So, some of you may know I recently changed locations of residency. I now live with my sister in Pottsboro, just south of the Oklahoma border. The move has been a bit stressful, in terms of library access. Pottsboro, a town of only about 2000, has a small library (in what used to be the post office when I was growing up, although the town got big enough it built a bigger post office.) The two nearest towns, Denison (pop. 25,000) and Sherman (pop. 44,000) each have their own libraries, although the combined 3 libraries only have maybe 1/4 of what was available in the library of my last residence in south Texas.
As such, my resources are limited. But as I was looking through the available DVDs at the Sherman library I came across this gem. I had never even heard of it, although it has won a few awards in the film community albeit mostly local... For instance one of the awards for it was Best Local Feature at the Philadelphia Film Festival (fitting since the subject drive-in is a Philly drive-in).
The dedication of the people involved and their love of the drive-in experience really shines through here. And, at least currently, it is still going strong. Their Facebook page has updates often (I just found it). Unfortunately, from my perspective, they don't dwell too much with the 50's and 60's themes. Much of what I saw in the film, as well as what I saw in my brief scan of the FB page, the movies tend to be 70's, 80's and some 90's stuff. But that's a far cry from some of the more recent "new wave" drive-in theaters which are showing current run movies. The Stars and Stripes Theater which opened down the road from my old stomping grounds in New Braunfels fits that category.
(Note: I realize that in it's heyday drive-ins ran first run films. I just wish there was a retro drive-in that ran that same stuff now.)
Of course, if you know this blog from it's beginnings, I grew up here in north Texas, where I now reside, and the Sherman and Denison area had two twin theaters (Coincidentally located directly across the highway from each other; The She-Den Twin and The Twin Cities Twin). I spent quite a bit of my early teens and twenties going to just such theaters.
The first few weeks they were sometimes showing these old movies to only 4 or 5 cars. And they ran in the red for a while. The film points out that their first double feature was The Wizard of Oz and Willy Wonka (the Gene Wilder version). That apparently is now a tradition that they run those first two films on opening night.
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