It’s field trip time, movie buffs, and we’re headed down to the 505.

Our guide is New Mexico journalist Jason Strykowski, who just recently published his new book, “A Guide to New Mexico Film: From Billy the Kid to Breaking Bad and Beyond.”

The book, published by the University of New Mexico Press, breaks the state down into geographic regions and includes not only the history of a particular area where a movie was shot, but also gives easy-to-read directions and offers tips for where to stay and where to eat while you’re there.

Strykowski, who along with being a journalist has worked in the film industry on and off for about decade in support roles, has set the guide up as a sort of “call sheet” and map: A guide those working on a movie get every day that outlines the production’s plan for the day.

He said he chose the films included in the guide both for their worth as a movie and for the value of where they were filmed – the second seems to hold true because if you live near an area long enough, you tend to take it for granted.

“What I wanted to do was give people a sense of films that are worth seeing either because they’re quality films or because they’re locations worth going to,” he said. “A lot of it is I want to make sure that people have a chance, if they’re driving down from your area to get down here and check out some cool spots that maybe they hadn’t thought of, like the rail yards in Albuquerque – you might be coming down from Durango to catch a flight at the airport, and you can stop at the rail yards, they’ve got a winter festival, I think, and you can also kind of jump into ‘The Avengers,’ which is a great movie, that maybe you’ve seen, maybe you haven’t, but they shot some crucial segments over at this historic locomotive yard.”

Of all the films Strykowski covered in the book, he said his favorite is probably “Ace in the Hole,” the 1951 Billy Wilder drama starring Kirk Douglas as reporter Chuck Tatum. Tatum winds up working in at a local paper in New Mexico but quickly finds that there’s not much in the way of pressing news. However, when Tatum catches wind of a treasure hunter trapped in a mineshaft, he turns the story into a media sensation.

Some of my favorites from the book:

Strykowski said he hopes people will use “New Mexico Film Locations” as an excuse to get out into the state and take a new look at their everyday surroundings.

“My dream is that people buy it and that they can have someone in the back of the car reading sections of it while mom, dad, boyfriend, girlfriend or sibling drives. That’s my big hope for the book – something that will take familiar landscapes and then give it a whole new perspective for people,” he said.

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