[On March 6th, 1836
the Alamo, a San Antonio fort and part of the newly independent Texan
Republic, fell to Mexican forces. That battle became a rallying cry for the
remainder of the war between Texas and Mexico, and so this week I’ll AmericanStudy
a handful of the ways the Alamo
has been remembered. Leading up to a special weekend post on Tejano culture
and legacies!]
[FYI: Spoilers for
Lone Star (1996) in what follows, especially
the last paragraph!]
On two exchanges
in my favorite film that capture the complexities of collective memory.
I believe I’ve written
more about my favorite
filmmaker, John Sayles, in this
space than any other single
artist, including an entire
October 2013 series AmericanStudying different Sayles films. Yet despite
that consistent presence on the blog, I believe I’ve only focused on my
favorite Sayles film, and favorite American film period, Lone Star (1996)
for about half of one
post (if one of my very first on this blog, natch). That’s pretty ironic,
as I could easily spend an entire week’s series (an entire month? All of
2019???) focusing on different individual moments from Lone Star and the many histories and themes to which they connect. I’ll
spare you all that for the moment, though, and focus instead on the film’s most
consistent theme: the fraught
and contested border between the U.S. and Mexico. Lone Star’s fictional South Texas town is named Frontera (a clear
nod to Gloria Anzaldúa), located directly on the border within fictional
Rio county; and as usual when Sayles journeys to a particular place to create a
story and film about that setting, he delves deeply and potently into the
histories and contexts that inform that world.
Two specific
dialogue exchanges/scenes focused on the Alamo illustrate a couple of the many
lenses that Sayles and his film provide on the particular theme of collective
memories of the battle and the border. Very early in the film we see one of the
film’s principal protagonists, high school history teacher Pilar Cruz (the
wonderful, tragically
lost Elizabeth Peña), debating her school’s new, multi-cultural
curriculum with a multi-ethnic, angry group of parents. Pilar is defending her
goal of presenting different perspectives on history, and an enraged Anglo father
responds, “I’m sure they’ve got their own version of the Alamo on the other
side, but we’re not on the other side!” But Pilar responds calmly that “there’s
no reason to get so upset,” noting that their ultimate goal has simply been to
highlight a key aspect of life for all those kids growing up in a town like
Frontera, past and present: “Cultures coming together, in positive and negative
ways.” For the Anglo father, Frontera and Texas are “American,” by which he
clearly means Anglo/English-speaking like himself; the Mexican perspective is “the
other side.” But what Pilar knows well, from personal experience as well as
historical knowledge, is that Frontera’s America (and, by extension, all of America)
is both Mexican and Anglo American, English- and Spanish-speaking, and thus
that multiple versions of the Alamo are part of this one place and its
heritage, legacy, and community.
In the film’s
final scene (again, SPOILERS in this paragraph, although I won’t spoil all the details
as the film is a mystery on multiple levels), Pilar communicates a different
perspective in conversation with one of the film’s other main protagonists, Chris Cooper’s Sheriff
Sam Deeds. Pilar and Sam are former high school sweethearts pulled apart by
complex family and cultural dynamics and now just beginning to reconnect, and
in this scene are debating whether and how they can truly start once more.
Pilar makes the case to a doubting Sam that they can indeed “start fresh,” and
in the film’s amazing final lines, argues, “All that other stuff? All that history?
To hell with it, right? Forget the Alamo.” That might seem like a striking
reversal from both her earlier perspective and her job as a history teacher,
and indeed from the film’s overall emphasis on the importance (if certainly
also the difficulty) of better
remembering histories both personal/familial and communal/cultural. But I
would argue—and I know Sayles would too, as I had the chance to talk about this
scene with him when I met him briefly in Philadelphia at an independent film
festival—that what Pilar wants to forget is not the actual past but the mythic
one constructed too often in collective memories and symbolized
so succinctly by the phrase “Remember the Alamo.” Forgetting the Alamo,
that is, might just help us remember better, a complex and crucial final message
fitting for this wonderful film.
Next Alamo
memory tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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