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====The New York Times==== | ====The New York Times==== | ||
The ] criticized the pacing of the series saying "a story that seems as if it should be characterized by adventure and daring-do instead is often as flat and drab as a Western plain." They expressed surprise that director Roland Joffé was only able to create "a disjointed collection of clichés, often staged with the clumsiness of bad community theater." The Times held that the writing reduced Houston to a character which "has no magnetism" and made Santa Anna into "something of a repellent caricature". The Times held that by having no depth in the opposition that the Texan heroes were facing, the series seemed trite "The good guys — the Texans — are good, and the bad guys are reductive figures who exist to be hated. ... Native American warriors gallop and whoop; Mexican soldiers and generals enjoy cockfights, executions and all things vile." They also complained that the dialogue was "truly awful" with characters speaking "in sound bites rather than convincing conversation". The Times held that some good performances could be found if one overlooks the drawbacks, singling out Liotta, Fraser, and Jeremy Davies' work in the series. The Times also praised the music video done for the series by Kris Kristofferson, (who appears as Andrew Jackson in the series), doing a cover of ]'s "]."<ref>{{cite news|title=Review: ‘Texas Rising,’ a Mini-Series on Alamo Aftermath With Dialogue to Forget|publisher=New York Times|date=May 22, 2015|author=Neil Genzlingermay|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/23/arts/television/review-texas-rising-a-mini-series-on-alamo-aftermath-with-dialogue-to-forget.html?_r=0}}</ref> | The ] criticized the pacing of the series saying "a story that seems as if it should be characterized by adventure and daring-do instead is often as flat and drab as a Western plain." They expressed surprise that director Roland Joffé was only able to create "a disjointed collection of clichés, often staged with the clumsiness of bad community theater." The Times held that the writing reduced Houston to a character which "has no magnetism" and made Santa Anna into "something of a repellent caricature". The Times held that by having no depth in the opposition that the Texan heroes were facing, the series seemed trite "The good guys — the Texans — are good, and the bad guys are reductive figures who exist to be hated. ... Native American warriors gallop and whoop; Mexican soldiers and generals enjoy cockfights, executions and all things vile." They also complained that the dialogue was "truly awful" with characters speaking "in sound bites rather than convincing conversation". The Times held that some good performances could be found if one overlooks the drawbacks, singling out Liotta, Fraser, and Jeremy Davies' work in the series. The Times also praised the music video done for the series by Kris Kristofferson, (who appears as Andrew Jackson in the series), doing a cover of ]'s "]."<ref>{{cite news|title=Review: ‘Texas Rising,’ a Mini-Series on Alamo Aftermath With Dialogue to Forget|publisher=New York Times|date=May 22, 2015|author=Neil Genzlingermay|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/23/arts/television/review-texas-rising-a-mini-series-on-alamo-aftermath-with-dialogue-to-forget.html?_r=0}}</ref> | ||
==Historical inaccuracies== | |||
*] was the filming location. Unlike Durango, the southeast part of Texas has no mountains, no cliffs. | |||
*Mexican soldiers driving ] and her daughter, and Emily D. West, in a wagon and are attacked by ] Indians. | |||
:*The Alamo survivors walked to Gonzales, no Mexican soldiers were with them. It took them 7 days to walk the 80 miles. | |||
:*Susanna and her daughter were actually accompanied by Travis' slave Joe and Almonte's black cook.<ref>*{{cite book|last=Moore|first=Stephen L.|title=Eighteen Minutes: The Battle of San Jacinto and the Texas Independence Campaign|publisher=Republic of Texas Press|location=|year=2004|isbn=1589070097}}</ref> | |||
:*They were not attacked by Indians, and the Karankawa were a coastal band and not lurking around Gonzales. | |||
*] was never at the Alamo, was from Connecticut/New York and had no southern accent, and never accompanied Susanna Dickinson. She was kidnapped by Santa Anna's troops on April 16 at ].<ref>{{cite web|title=Emily D. West|url=https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fwe41|website=Handbook of Texas Online|publisher=Texas State Historical Association|accessdate=June 7, 2015}}</ref> | |||
*Empresario Buckley is depicted as the empresario of ] whose loyalties are with Santa Anna. Victoria was actually the capital of ]. Real-life empresario ] died in 1833.<ref>{{cite book|last=Poyo|first=Gerald Eugene|title=Tejano Journey, 1770–1850|year=1996|publisher=University of Texas Press|isbn=978-0-292-76570-2|page=117}}</ref> His family fought on the side of the Texians when war broke out. | |||
*In Episode 3, Blood for Blood, the Victoria ] is clearly behind Buckley. That bandstand was not built until after 1839.<ref>{{cite web|title=De Leon Plaza and Bandstand - Victoria|url=http://atlas.thc.state.tx.us/view_narrative.aspx?narrative=victoria.htm&title=HISTORIC%20AND%20ARCHITECTURAL%20RESOURCES%20OF%20VICTORIA&filepath=E:\atlas_text\nr_listed\html|publisher=Texas Historical Commission|accessdate=May 6, 2015}}</ref> | |||
==What they got correct== | |||
*Houston did order Bowie to the Alamo to blow it up. | |||
*Houston did order Fannin to destroy the presidio at Goliad. | |||
*The story Santa Anna tells about learning psychological warfare from ], is more or less how historians also tell it. | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 00:02, 8 June 2015
2015 American TV series or programTexas Rising | |
---|---|
Written by | Leslie Greif Darrell Fetty George Nihil |
Directed by | Roland Joffé |
Starring | Bill Paxton Brendan Fraser Ray Liotta Jeffrey Dean Morgan Olivier Martinez Cynthia Addai-Robinson Thomas Jane Crispin Glover Rhys Coiro Jeremy Davies Christopher McDonald Max Thieriot Chad Michael Murray Trevor Donovan Robert Knepper Jeff Fahey Rob Morrow Kris Kristofferson |
Theme music composer | Bruce Broughton John Debney José Feliciano (featured guitar soloist) |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 3 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer | Leslie Greif |
Producers | Roland Joffé Batán Silva Joanne Rubino Herb Nanas Darrell Fetty |
Cinematography | Arthur Reinhart |
Editor | Don Cassidy |
Running time | 600 minutes |
Production companies | A+E Studios ITV Studios America ThinkFactory Media |
Original release | |
Network | History |
Release | May 25, 2015 (2015-05-25) – present |
Texas Rising is a 2015 History Channel 10-hour television miniseries based on the Texas Revolution against Mexico and how the Texas Rangers were created. It is directed by Roland Joffé and premiered on May 25, 2015. The series stars Bill Paxton, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Ray Liotta, Brendan Fraser, Olivier Martinez and Cynthia Addai-Robinson.
Premise
Opening Introduction: (narrator):
1836—Republic of Texas. The Mexican territory is home to thousands of U.S. settlers. Tensions rise as Comanche and Karankawa fight to keep their lands. Outlaws roam free, and slaves are caught in the crossfire. Mexican General Santa Anna battles to reclaim the land. U.S. President Andrew Jackson is hesitant to intervene and Texas has no choice but to declare itself an independent nation. Outnumbered, General Sam Houston's Texas Republic Army and Stephen Austin's Ranging Company are all that stand between Santa Anna's tyranny and independence. Texas in flames; the Alamo in ashes. Pioneers, Mexicans, Tejanos, Indians, Soldiers, have no choice ... fight or die!
Production
Filming began around June 2014 in Durango, Mexico. The series is from A+E Studios and ITV Studios America, produced by Thinkfactory Media with Leslie Greif as executive producer. Actor Jeffrey Dean Morgan ate a can of tuna a day to lose 40 pounds for his role as Deaf Smith.
Release
The first teaser trailer was released on January 25, 2015, during Sons of Liberty, which revealed a "Memorial Day" release date and featured the tagline, "The Alamo wasn't the end. It was the beginning."
Cast
Texas Revolution
Actor | Character |
---|---|
Bill Paxton | Sam Houston |
Olivier Martinez | General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna |
Jeffrey Dean Morgan | Deaf Smith |
Cynthia Addai-Robinson | Emily D. West |
Crispin Glover | Moseley Baker |
Darby Hinton | President David G. Burnet |
Alixandra von Renner | Susanna Dickinson |
Rob Morrow | Colonel James Fannin |
Geoffrey Blake | Colonel George Hockley |
Kris Kristofferson | President Andrew Jackson |
Christopher McDonald | Henry Karnes |
Chad Michael Murray | President Mirabeau Lamar |
Jeff Fahey | Thomas Rusk |
Raúl Méndez | Juan Seguín |
Johnathon Schaech | Colonel Sidney Sherman |
Alejandro Bracho | General José Urrea |
Texas Rangers
Actor | Character |
---|---|
Max Thieriot | Jack Hays |
Robert Baker | Bigfoot Wallace |
Brendan Fraser | Billy Anderson |
Trevor Donovan | Kit Acklin |
Rhys Coiro | Vern Elwood |
Joe Egender | Beans Wilkins |
Stephen Taylor | Gator Davis |
Jeremy Davies | Private Ephraim Knowles |
Supporting characters
Actor | Character |
---|---|
Ray Liotta | Lorca |
Horacio Garcia Rojas | Buffalo Hump |
Adam Hicks | Truett Fincham |
Dillon Lane | Yancey Burns |
Harold Torres | Colonel Portilla |
Jake Busey | Samuel Wallace |
Thomas Jane | James Wykoff |
Sarah Jones | Pauline Wykoff |
Robert Knepper | Empresario Buckley |
Darrell Fetty | Doc Ewing |
Vico Escorcia | Sarah Ewing |
Courtney Gains | Cole Hornfischer |
Gerardo Taracena | Manuel N. Flores |
Molly McMichael | Rebecca Pitt |
Jacob Lofland | Colby Pitt |
Samuel French | Gavin McDonough |
John Elvis | Yellow Knife |
Marklen Kennedy | Zacharias |
Olga Segura | Concepcion |
James Paxton | Roy |
Amen Igbinosun | Nate |
Madelyn Deutch | Curls |
Amen Igbinosun | Nate |
Harding Junior | Jupiter |
Felipe de Lara | Francisco |
Daniel K. Walker | Fuzz |
Taylor Brock | Ruthie |
Bill Millsap | Raw-Boned Drunk |
Episodes
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | U.S. viewers (million) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "From the Ashes" | Roland Joffé | Leslie Greif, Darrell Fetty & George Nihil | May 25, 2015 (2015-05-25) | 4.08 | |
The day after the brutal defeat and executions at The Alamo on March 7, 1836, lone survivors, Emily D. West and Susana Dickenson journey to Texas Republic Army camp in Gonzalez with the help of the newly named Texas Rangers who battle Karankawa Indians along the way. Meanwhile, at the outpost, the Texas Revolution is in full swing under General Sam Houston's command. After hearing of the grave news, he and his Texian troops want revenge against General Santa Anna and his mighty Mexican army. But in order to fight another day, they must retreat and abandon their stronghold in Goliad and join forces in Victoria, much to the stubbornness of Colonel Fannin, who doesn't want to follow orders. Also, soon-to-be-famous rangers Jack Hays and Bigfoot Wallace meet for the first time in Nacogdoches and ride to Fort Defiance to fight. | ||||||
2 | "Fate and Fury" | Roland Joffé | Teleplay by Leslie Greif & Darrell Fetty Story by Leslie Greif & Darrell Fetty & George Nihil | May 26, 2015 (2015-05-26) | 3.39 | |
Colonel Fannin finally retreats from Fort Defiance, but faces overwhelming odds when he and his troops are ambushed by General Urrea, who assures him mercy for his men if they surrender. However, after the decision to become prisoners the Battle of Coleto Creek proves costly for the Texians when they are brought back to their fort and are all massacred on Colonel Portilla's command. Meanwhile, Emily plays spy and gets close to Santa Anna to learn his secrets. Also, Hays and Wallace are on the trail of robbers who stole their belongings, and wind up at Goliad where Bigfoot's brother Samuel died. Later, Houston teams up with the rangers and encounters Comanches and the lunatic Lorca, who after witnessing the aftermath, slays the remaining Mexicans. Back at camp, Officers Baker and Sherman rile up the soldiers against their general to "stand and fight", but Houston asks them to follow him east where victory awaits. | ||||||
3 | "Blood for Blood" | Roland Joffé | Teleplay by Leslie Greif & Darrell Fetty Story by Leslie Greif & Darrell Fetty & George Nihil | June 1, 2015 (2015-06-01) | TBD | |
Despite Houston's leadership still being under question by his officers, he marches his troops south outside Harrisburg to prepare for engagement with Santa Anna and his army in a final battle in San Jacinto. But Colonel Sherman defies orders and sends his cavalry in to fight, which almost costs them the war. Meanwhile, after purchasing farmland on the Mexican border, the Wycoff family are murdered by Comanches. However, while carrying the badly wounded lone survivor in his arms, their slave Nate warns of the attack to the empresario in Victoria. He then enlists Bigfoot and Hays, who are being held prisoner, to help defend the town. Also, Emily tries to get out of a sticky situation when Santa Anna finds her pistol in his bed, thinking she means to kill him. He then gives her an ultimatum: Him or Houston. | ||||||
4 | "Vengeance is Mine" | Roland Joffé | Unknown | June 8, 2015 (2015-06-08) | TBD | |
5 | "Rise of the Republic" | Roland Joffé | Unknown | June 15, 2015 (2015-06-15) | TBD |
Reception
Ratings
No. | Title | Air date | Rating (18–49) |
Viewers (millions) |
DVR (18–49) |
DVR viewers (millions) |
Total (18–49) |
Total viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "From the Ashes" | May 25, 2015 (2015-05-25) | 0.6 | 4.08 | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA |
2 | "Fate and Fury" | May 26, 2015 (2015-05-26) | 0.5 | 3.39 | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA |
3 | "Blood for Blood" | June 1, 2015 (2015-06-01) | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA |
4 | "Vengeance is Mine" | June 8, 2015 (2015-06-08) | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA |
5 | "Rise of the Republic" | June 15, 2015 (2015-06-15) | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA | TBA |
Reviews
The media coverage about the series was somewhat negative, with some debate over if the right blend between historical accuracy and poetic license had been reached - with some sources saying that a channel calling itself "History" invited greater scrutiny on the question:
Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic
Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gives the miniseries a rating of 13% based on 15 reviews, with an average rating of 5.1/10. The site's consensus states, "Tedious and forgettable, Texas Rising is full of offensive stereotypes and a messy multitude of unfocused characters and narratives." Metacritic gives the miniseries a score of 52 out of 100, based on 12 reviews, indicating "mixed reviews".
Associated Press
Days before the show aired the Associated Press' Lynn Elber wrote that inspired by the success of the series "Hatfields & McCoys" and "The Bible", History channel lined up several impressive elements for the Texas Rising series. Including shooting it in wide-screen CinemaScope and hiring Oscar-nominated Roland Jofee, "armies of extras in sprawling battle scenes, and getting Kris Kristofferson, George Strait and Jose Feliciano to add their own music along with the full symphonic score.
Elber reported that executive producer Leslie Greif stated that "We wanted to try to tell the story from a lot of perspectives, so there are really no villains in our piece. There are villainous deeds. ... but we didn't want to have a paintbrush and say this side is right and this side is wrong." Greif also said that "The film was vetted by experts but does take liberties for dramatic purposes". He explained "Historically, the battles that occurred were true. We didn't kill anyone who didn't die and didn't keep anyone alive who died (among the real-life figures). The rest we used as a jumping-off spot to tell a great story." With this approach to the historical material Greif's concern was that too many people would miss all the work "spent perfecting each visual and sound element" because they would watch it on a laptop or smartphone, and he felt it best viewed in a darkened room on as big a screen as possible.
Variety
In a review Variety columnist Brian Lowry held that the show was "wonderfully cast and otherwise completely wooden". He maintained that it "juggles too many indifferently written, tough-talkin' characters, as if "Lonesome Dove" had experienced a sharp blow to the head." Lowry held that the series did not live up to the level of History channel's previous series "Hatfields & McCoys". Lowry did hold that the concept of trying to fill in the gap for audiences of what happened after the Alamo was a good one, but that the series was unable to do so effectively. He held a major flaw was "the wholly one-dimensional way the Mexican are depicted and that the portrayal of Santa Anna invoked memories of the cartoon Snidely Whiplash and the character The Most Interesting Man in the World from the Dos Equis advertising campaign. Lowry held that the show "pays more attention to the marketing campaign than the script".
Washington Post
The Washington Post reported that the series seemed more concerned with portraying those fighting for Texas's independence as if they were in John Wayne's 1960 film "The Alamo" rather than addressing the complexity of the actual historical events. An approach one might not suspect from a channel that is named "History". The Post held that it was "a love letter to the Lone Star State that some critics say broadcasts conservative politics and punctures History’s educational veneer." The Post noted that "History" channel did offer other perspectives "including those of Mexicans, Native Americans and slaves" on the website created for the show but "some of these views didn’t seem to make it into 'Texas Rising.'" The Post pointed out that Houston had been a former spokesman for Cherokee Indians and was the only Southern governor to resist secession and felt the series not exploring this aspect of his story was "a missed opportunity".
WOAI radio
Others also criticized the series appearing on History for being "lousy history", including Alamo Historian at Texas State University Jesus de la Teja, who told reporters for WOAI news radio the series was "playing fast and loose with the facts" and that "It over simplifies and it misrepresents ... trivializing and commercializing history." De la Teja pointed out that it plays up sex and has explosions "which could not have possibly happened with the military technology that was in place in the 1830s." De la Teja pointed out that the series makes use of the semi-legendary character Emily D. West about which almost nothing is known. He regretted that because of the series on "History" people might confuse Hollywood for history.
New York Daily News
The New York Daily News held that the show rekindled the excitement of the "Hatfields and McCoys", once you can identify all the players in the drama. The held that Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Olivier Martinez, and Cynthia Addai-Robinson gave standout performances. They recognized that some inaccuracies were included but even though "There’s doubtless some dramatic license here. No matter. It’s a classic campfire story, from a land that truly was the Wild West."
The Guardian
The Guardian was very critical of the series complaining that the pacing was off with few battle scenes and too many shots of "dudes hanging around in grubby-looking clothing in front of tents talking about how awful Mexicans and Comanches are ... a lot of dithering and boring discussion of military tactics". Despite this they did hold that it would appeal to the fans of History channel's "Hatfields and McCoys and "The Bible" because it displayed "libertarian and conservative sensibilities". Even with this provisio it held that the other series were superior than "Texas Rising" - holding that this series has "atrocious dialogue, poor characterization and mechanical acting", that compares to "people clowning around on a campsite as if they’re in a salsa commercial". The Guardian held that the writing was bad as it failed to develop characters "none of the characters exude any sort of individuality at all. In fact, by the end of the first two hours, you will hardly know anyone’s name, their place in the hierarchy, or their contributions to the cause." And scenes attempting to establish character "are so heavy-handed that they will render more eye-rolls than engagement." The Guardian also felt that the series suffered from lacking any "post-colonial reflection ... in the great scope of history. The line between good guys and bad guys is drawn as simply and thoughtlessly as it is in a backyard game of Cowboys and Indians." They held that the final verdict of the show was that it was "just dreadfully boring. There is a whole lot of talking but next to no doing. A handful of conflicts are over too soon and too small in scope for an epic production such as this." Of all the performances the Guardian viewed Adam Hicks and Dillon Lane's performance as managing to rise above the others. They also had high praise for both the costumes and sets.
The Inquisitr
The Inquisitr praised the series holding that due to the many dramatic representations of the fight itself the "focus on the aftermath of the 'Battle of the Alamo' was a brave one, and probably the best decision. Persons who were important to the Texas Revolution outside of that event will get their chance to shine." They also held that "the historical inaccuracies" were "a problem that’s rather unavoidable". The Inquisitr held that complaints about the series' location backgrounds were unreasonalbe. Pointing out that Texas as a whole and San Antonio in particular does not look today like it did in the 1800s. The "landscape forever altered" - the city has "cars, paved roads ... a population of nearly 27 million people". The Inquisitr admitted that the series had inaccuracies "such as Texans believed about slavery prior to the Civil War and whether or not Sam Houston would have had a one night stand with the Yellow Rose of Texas." But held that the series should be viewed as within the genre of Historical fiction. They maintained that it was unlikely "made with the intent of being 100 percent true to the times or the characters". They concluded that "it would be impossible for a well-produced and entertaining series to leave a unique mark on viewers by interpreting events exactly as history experts would want. Sometimes you have to shut up and suspend disbelief to enjoy something. Texas Rising is meant to be entertaining and educational … but mostly entertaining."
The New York Times
The New York Times criticized the pacing of the series saying "a story that seems as if it should be characterized by adventure and daring-do instead is often as flat and drab as a Western plain." They expressed surprise that director Roland Joffé was only able to create "a disjointed collection of clichés, often staged with the clumsiness of bad community theater." The Times held that the writing reduced Houston to a character which "has no magnetism" and made Santa Anna into "something of a repellent caricature". The Times held that by having no depth in the opposition that the Texan heroes were facing, the series seemed trite "The good guys — the Texans — are good, and the bad guys are reductive figures who exist to be hated. ... Native American warriors gallop and whoop; Mexican soldiers and generals enjoy cockfights, executions and all things vile." They also complained that the dialogue was "truly awful" with characters speaking "in sound bites rather than convincing conversation". The Times held that some good performances could be found if one overlooks the drawbacks, singling out Liotta, Fraser, and Jeremy Davies' work in the series. The Times also praised the music video done for the series by Kris Kristofferson, (who appears as Andrew Jackson in the series), doing a cover of Tom Petty's "I Won't Back Down."
Historical inaccuracies
- Durango, Mexico was the filming location. Unlike Durango, the southeast part of Texas has no mountains, no cliffs.
- Mexican soldiers driving Susanna Dickinson and her daughter, and Emily D. West, in a wagon and are attacked by Karankawa Indians.
- The Alamo survivors walked to Gonzales, no Mexican soldiers were with them. It took them 7 days to walk the 80 miles.
- Susanna and her daughter were actually accompanied by Travis' slave Joe and Almonte's black cook.
- They were not attacked by Indians, and the Karankawa were a coastal band and not lurking around Gonzales.
- Emily D. West was never at the Alamo, was from Connecticut/New York and had no southern accent, and never accompanied Susanna Dickinson. She was kidnapped by Santa Anna's troops on April 16 at Morgan's Point, Texas.
- Empresario Buckley is depicted as the empresario of Victoria, Texas whose loyalties are with Santa Anna. Victoria was actually the capital of De León's Colony. Real-life empresario Martín De León died in 1833. His family fought on the side of the Texians when war broke out.
- In Episode 3, Blood for Blood, the Victoria bandstand is clearly behind Buckley. That bandstand was not built until after 1839.
What they got correct
- Houston did order Bowie to the Alamo to blow it up.
- Houston did order Fannin to destroy the presidio at Goliad.
- The story Santa Anna tells about learning psychological warfare from José Joaquín de Arredondo, is more or less how historians also tell it.
References
- Noonan, Kevin. "History's 'Texas Rising' to Premiere Memorial Day 2015". Variety. Retrieved 14 August 2014.
- "History Announces Cast for 8-Hour Television Event Texas Rising". Coming Soon. Retrieved March 12, 2014.
- "Cynthia Addai-Robinson Lands Lead In History's Texas Rangers Miniseries". Deadline. Retrieved March 18, 2014.
- Goldberg, Lesley. "Bill Paxton, Brendan Fraser Among History's All-Star 'Texas Rising' Cast". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved March 12, 2014.
- "Backstage". Backstage.
- "History Announces Cast for 8-Hour Television Event Texas Rising". Coming Soon.
- White, Tyler (May 28, 2015). "'Texas Rising' star Jeffrey Dean Morgan ate one can of tuna a day to lose 40 pounds for role". mysanantonio.com. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
- ^ Bibel, Sara (May 27, 2015). "Monday Cable Ratings: NBA Playoffs Win Night, 'WWE Raw', 'Street Outlaws', 'Love & Hip Hop Live: The Wedding' & More". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (May 28, 2015). "Tuesday Cable Ratings: NBA Basketball Tops Night + 'Deadliest Catch', NHL Hockey & More". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
- "Texas Rising". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved May 30, 2015.
- "Texas Rising". Metacritic. Retrieved May 30, 2015.
- ^ Lynn Elber (May 22, 2015). "History channel miniseries 'Texas Rising' goes big with 19th-century Texas Revolution saga". Associate Press.
- Brian Lowry (May 21, 2015). "TV Review: 'Texas Rising'".
- ^ Justin Wm. Moyer (May 26, 2015). "'Texas Rising': Alamo aftermath as remembered by History channel". Washington Post.
- "Experts: 'Texas Rising' is Good TV, but Lousy History". WOAI News Radio. May 26, 2015.
- David Hinckley (May 25, 2015). "'Texas Rising' review: Miniseries with Bill Paxton, Jeffrey Dean Morgan doesn't mess with a great story". New York Daily News.
- Brian Moylan (May 25, 2015). "Texas Rising: American history as reimagined by the Tea Party". The Guardian.
- ^ "'Texas Rising' Skips Alamo And Is Historically Inaccurate — And That's Actually A Good Thing". Inquisitr. May 26, 2015.
- Neil Genzlingermay (May 22, 2015). "Review: 'Texas Rising,' a Mini-Series on Alamo Aftermath With Dialogue to Forget". New York Times.
- *Moore, Stephen L. (2004). Eighteen Minutes: The Battle of San Jacinto and the Texas Independence Campaign. Republic of Texas Press. ISBN 1589070097.
- "Emily D. West". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved June 7, 2015.
- Poyo, Gerald Eugene (1996). Tejano Journey, 1770–1850. University of Texas Press. p. 117. ISBN 978-0-292-76570-2.
- "De Leon Plaza and Bandstand - Victoria". Texas Historical Commission. Retrieved May 6, 2015.