Tex

    Tex
    1982

    Synopsis

    After their mother dies and their father leaves them, teenage brothers Tex and Mason McCormick struggle to make it on their own.

    Votre Filmothèque

    Cast

    • Matt DillonTex McCormick
    • Jim MetzlerMason McCormick
    • Meg TillyJamie Collins
    • Bill McKinneyPop McCormick
    • Frances Lee McCainMrs. Johnson
    • Ben JohnsonCole Collins
    • Emilio EstevezJohnny Collins
    • Jack ThibeauCoach Jackson
    • Zeljko IvanekHitchhiker
    • Tom VirtueBob Collins

    Recommandations

    • 100

      Chicago Sun-Times

      The movie is so accurately acted, especially by Jim Metzler as Mason and Matt Dillon as Tex, that we care more about the characters than about the plot. We can see them learning and growing, and when they have a heart-to-heart talk about going all the way, we hear authentic teenagers speaking, not kids who seem to have been raised at Beverly Hills cocktail parties.
    • 90

      Newsweek

      Tex, a Walt Disney production, makes good on that studio's promise to return to quality family filmmaking. You don't have be 16 to be moved by it -- having been 16 will do. [02 Aug 1982]
    • 80

      The New York Times

      An unexpected but certainly major force in movies at the moment, S.E. Hinton (with four of her novels being adapted for the screen), created in Tex an utterly disarming, believable portrait of a small-town adolescent. Tim Hunter's film version captures Miss Hinton's novel perfectly.
    • 70

      The New Yorker

      This adaptation of one of the S.E. Hinton novels that became favorites of high-school kids in the 70s has an amiable, unforced good humor that takes the curse off the film's look and even off its everything-but-the-bloodhounds plot. The earnest naivete of this movie has its own kind of emotional fairy-tale magic.
    • 60

      TV Guide Magazine

      The film probes the pitfalls of growing up, tackling such subjects as sex, boozing, and fighting--three areas the Disney folks have stayed clear of in the past. Dillon, though occasionally annoying, turns in a decent performance, as do Jim Metzler as his brother and Meg Tilly as his girlfriend.
    • 50

      Variety

      What Tex will probably best be remembered for is breaking new ground at Disney Studios in representing some of the real problems confronting today’s young people. The teenagers are put in the milieu of drugs, alcohol, sex and violence. Family life is not necessarily rosy and well-scrubbed. Where the picture ironically goes awry is in trying to tackle all of these problems in the space of 103 minutes.
    • 50

      Miami Herald

      Tex is well-meaning, all right, but a little inept. [04 Aug 1982, p.B4]