In the Texas bayous, a local homicide detective teams up with a cop from New York City to investigate a series of unsolved murders.In the Texas bayous, a local homicide detective teams up with a cop from New York City to investigate a series of unsolved murders.In the Texas bayous, a local homicide detective teams up with a cop from New York City to investigate a series of unsolved murders.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 3 nominations total
Trenton Perez
- White Kid
- (as Trenton Ryan Perez)
Maureen Brennan
- Mrs. Kittredge
- (as Maureen A. Brennan)
James Landry Hébert
- Eugene
- (as James Hébert)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaInspired by a series of long-unsolved murders of young women occurring for decades along an interstate south of Houston, in a rural area that became known as the "killing fields." Since the release of this film, several of the murders have been solved, with four connected to William Lewis Reece.
- GoofsLiquor is shown for sale inside a convenience store. While this is legal in the filming location in Louisiana, it's not legal in the state of Texas.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Ebert Presents: At the Movies: Episode #2.14 (2011)
- SoundtracksLook on Down from the Bridge
Written by David Roback and Hope Sandoval
Performed by Mazzy Star
Courtesy of Capitol Records
Under license from EMI Film & Television Music
Featured review
In the Texas bayous, a local homicide detective teams up with a cop from New York City to investigate a series of unsolved murders.
The casting on this film is perfect -- Sam Worthington, Jeffrey Dean Morgan and the flawless Chloe Moretz. The directing and cinematography are great, with the dark, gritty feel that one would expect from your better serial killer films. And the story, despite being disjointed, is a pretty good one.
That being said, I have a major problem with this film -- it is fiction. My understanding is that the police involved with the real case were hoping this film would promote the true unsolved murders in the "Texas killing fields". Well, I am sure they must be disappointed. The story is fake, the solution is fake... they even changed the name of the city.
Now, here is the thing... if you are going to call this film "Texas Killing Fields" and then make it about nothing related to the case, the least you can do is put a featurette on the DVD. I know two former detectives who are willing to talk about the case. I know some family members of victims who have a story to tell. If one of the goals was to promote the real case (in order to get it solved), the people behind this movie did not do even the most basic of things to accomplish this goal.
If I pretend that this movie was not very loosely based on a true story, I can be more praising. Like I said, it looks great and the cast is phenomenal. Moretz never fails to impress, and I think Morgan should be an A-lister in the world of Hollywood. He impressed me in "The Resident" and again here.
While I have not read other reviews, I suspect there is a running theme to talk about the director's father, maybe saying things like "being in his shadow". I hope these sort of comments are few and far between. Ami Mann holds her own, and whether she was a famous director's daughter or not, she has the skills and is blazing her own trail.
The casting on this film is perfect -- Sam Worthington, Jeffrey Dean Morgan and the flawless Chloe Moretz. The directing and cinematography are great, with the dark, gritty feel that one would expect from your better serial killer films. And the story, despite being disjointed, is a pretty good one.
That being said, I have a major problem with this film -- it is fiction. My understanding is that the police involved with the real case were hoping this film would promote the true unsolved murders in the "Texas killing fields". Well, I am sure they must be disappointed. The story is fake, the solution is fake... they even changed the name of the city.
Now, here is the thing... if you are going to call this film "Texas Killing Fields" and then make it about nothing related to the case, the least you can do is put a featurette on the DVD. I know two former detectives who are willing to talk about the case. I know some family members of victims who have a story to tell. If one of the goals was to promote the real case (in order to get it solved), the people behind this movie did not do even the most basic of things to accomplish this goal.
If I pretend that this movie was not very loosely based on a true story, I can be more praising. Like I said, it looks great and the cast is phenomenal. Moretz never fails to impress, and I think Morgan should be an A-lister in the world of Hollywood. He impressed me in "The Resident" and again here.
While I have not read other reviews, I suspect there is a running theme to talk about the director's father, maybe saying things like "being in his shadow". I hope these sort of comments are few and far between. Ami Mann holds her own, and whether she was a famous director's daughter or not, she has the skills and is blazing her own trail.
- How long is Texas Killing Fields?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $45,469
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $8,772
- Oct 16, 2011
- Gross worldwide
- $1,271,319
- Runtime1 hour 45 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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