[go: up one dir, main page]

Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Budd Boetticher’ Category

The Time Machine Film Festival over at The Hannibal 8 gathers up newspaper ads for interesting double-features (or more). It’s led to some great back-and-forth stuff as folks share what was playing in their neck of the woods.

Over at The Hannibal 8, we have what was playing at the just-opened Center Drive-In on May 18, 1955. Here, we see what was playing north of town that same night — the Forest Drive-In offered up a “grand night of family entertainment.”

Seven Men From Now (1956)
Directed by Budd Boetticher
Starring Randolph Scott, Gail Russell, Lee Marvin

Girls In Prison (1956)
Directed by Edward L. Cahn
Starring Richard Denning, Joan Taylor, Adele Jergens, Phyllis Coates

Return To Treasure Island (1954)
Directed by E.A. Dupont
Starring Tab Hunter, Dawn Addams, Harry Lauter

There were several drive-ins around Raleigh in the 50s. Some hung around into the 80s (saw The Road Warrior at the Forest in 1982).

No offense, but I would’ve headed home after Girls In Prison.

Read Full Post »

Kino Lorber has announced their fourth Audie Murphy Blu-Ray set, and it’s something to be really stoked about — gathering three more of Murphy’s 50s Westerns for Universal International. Coming this summer, they say.

The Kid From Texas (1950)
Directed by Kurt Neumann
Starring Audie Murphy, Gale Storm, Albert Dekker, Shepperd Strudwick, Will Geer, William Talman, Frank Wilcox, Ray Teal

Audie Murphy plays Billy The Kid in his first Western for Universal International. Universal always surrounded Murphy with a top cast. Frank Wilcox is an interesting Pat Garrett — and Gal Storm in a Western is always worth a look.

The Cimarron Kid (1952)
Directed by Budd Boetticher
Starring Audie Murphy, Yvette Dugay, Beverly Tyler, John Hudson, James Best, Leif Erickson, Noah Beery, Hugh O’Brian

This was Budd Boetticher’s first Western and first film in color. He already knew Audie Murphy from Terry Hunt’s Athletic Club. Audie plays Bill Doolen, who gets out of jail and almost immediately gets wrapped up with the Dalton gang. He was supposed to die at the end, but the studio changed their mind.

Drums Across The River (1954)
Directed by Nathan Juran
Starring Audie Murphy, Walter Brennan, Lyle Bettger, Lisa Gaye, Hugh O’Brian, Mara Corday, Jay Silverheels, Regis Toomey, Morris Ankrum, Bob Steele

Nathan Juran was a good director for Audie Murphy. Some of the best of his earlier pictures were done by Juran — Tumbleweed (1953) is a real good one.  Here, Audie is a homesteader who gets all wrapped up in a squabble between Lyle Bettger and the Ute Indians.

The first three Murphy sets have been terrific and this one should be, too. Highly recommended — and looking forward to Number 5!

WordPress has kinda retired their “Classic Editor” that I’ve used since the very beginning of this blog. Please excuse any lumps and bumps as I wrestle with what they’ve left me with.

Read Full Post »

Directed by Budd Boetticher
Starring Randolph Scott, Gail Russell, Lee Marvin

If this rumor proves to be a fact, this will be a dream come true for a lot of the folks who look at this blog (including me). There’s word going around, and it’s looking pretty solid, that Sidonis of out France is preparing a Blu-Ray release for Budd Boetticher’s Seven Men From Now (1956).

Of course, this is the first of the Westerns made by the team of Burt Kennedy, Budd Boetticher and Randolph Scott — a run of terrific pictures that have become known as the “Ranown Cycle.” It was out of circulation for a number of years, one of the Batjac films held in John Wayne’s estate. (Thanks to Blake Lucas for helping nudge it loose!)

While the DVD is the prize of many of our collections, it’s certainly deserving of a Blu-Ray upgrade. What’s a little concerning is the tendency for French releases to have “forced” French subtitles. They say this is a requirement from the studios, not Sidonis’ decision. Keep your fingers cross, folks!

Thanks to John Knight for the tip!

Read Full Post »

You may remember a recent post about Olive Films shutting down. They put out some great DVDs and Blu-Rays over the years, particularly things from Republic and Paramount. (In fact, I watched their The Night Riders this morning, one of my favorite B Westerns.)

Some of these titles have already been re-issued by others (or are on the way). But some may never see the light of day again, given the current state of physical media. From Republic’s Three Mesquiteers series with John Wayne to a handful of Regalscope pictures, there are some real jewels here.

For those trying to pick these things up before they’re either gone or getting crazy collectors’ prices, here’s a list of their Westerns, ranging from the Silents into the 60s. If I missed anything, please let me know.

Special thanks for Laura from Laura’s Miscellaneous Musings, who was a HUGE help with bringing this thing together. 

Wagon Tracks (1919)
Neath The Arizona Skies (1934)
The Lawless Nineties (1936)
The Lonely Trail (1936)
King Of The Pecos (1936)
Overland Stage Raiders (1938)
Red River Range (1938)
Santa Fe Stampede (1938)
Pals Of The Saddle (1938)
The Night Riders
(1939)
Three Texas Steers (1939)
Wyoming Outlaw (1939)
Westward Ho (1939)
Man Of Conquest (1939)
Frontier Horizon (AKA New Frontier) (1939)
Dark Command (1940)
In Old Oklahoma (AKA War Of The Wildcats) (1943)
Ramrod (1947)
Angel And The Badman (1947)
Pursued (1947)
The Fighting Kentuckian (1949)
South Of St. Louis (1949)
Rio Grande (1950)
Silver City (1951)
Bullfighter And The Lady (1951)
Only The Valiant (1951)
High Noon (1952)
Denver & Rio Grande (1952)
Pony Express (1953)

Woman They Almost Lynched (1953)
Johnny Guitar (1954)
Run For Cover (1955)
The Americano (1955)
King And Four Queens (1956)
Stranger At My Door (1956)
Gun The Man Down (1956)
The Quiet Gun (1957)
Showdown At Boot Hill (1958)
Ambush At Cimarron Pass (1958)
The Hangman (1959)
The Jayhawkers! (1959)
McLintock! (1963)
The Hallelujah Trail (1965)
The Night Of The Grizzly (1966)

I’ll forever appreciate the folks at Olive Films. Night Of The Grizzly was my first commentary track.

The non-Westerns list is now available over at The Hannibal 8.

Read Full Post »

Walter Hill directing The Long Riders (1980).

As my commentary notes for The Long Riders (1980) take shape (for Imprint’s upcoming Blu-Ray set), I keep bumping into all sorts of interesting things. The coolest was a chance to speak with James Keach for a bit, making sure I had the story of the film’s development correct. (He is justifiably proud and fond of the film.)

This BFI interview with Walter Hill was terrific, covering his relationship with Budd Boetticher, working with Sam Peckinpah and Steve McQueen and his feel for Westerns. Enjoy!

Read Full Post »

The Criterion Collection has announced an upcoming 4K set of Randolph Scott and Budd Boetticher’s Ranown Cycle: The Tall T (1957), Decision At Sundown (1957), Buchanan Rides Alone (1958), Ride Lonesome (1959) and Comanche Station (1960).

It’s coming in July, so get to shopping for 4K players and TVs!

Wish someone would convince the John Wayne estate to pave the way to get Seven Men From Now (1956), the film that launched the Scott-Boetticher collaboration, out on Blu-Ray.

Read Full Post »


George Randolph Scott

(January 23, 1898 – March 2, 1987)

Let’s raise a glass to Randolph Scott, born 125 years ago today. He’s seen here in Budd Boetticher’s Buchanan Rides Alone (1958).

Read Full Post »

Henry Silva
(September 23, 1926 – September 14, 2022)


The great character actor Henry Silva has passed away, a few days short of his 96th birthday.

From Westerns like The Tall T (1957, above) and The Bravados (1958) to gangster pictures like Johnny Cool (1964) to Rat Pack things like Oceans 11 (1960) to a slew of foreign action movies, it was always a good sign to see Silva’s name pop up in the credits. He rarely got a role that wasn’t a villain of some sort, but when he did, he was terrific.

Read Full Post »

Directed by William Castle
Produced by Sam Katzman
Associate Producer: Herbert Leonard
Screen Play by Arthur Lewis & DeVallon Scott
Story by DeVallon Scott
Director Of Photography: Henry Freulich, ASC
Film Editor: Al Clark, ACE
Art Director: Paul Palmentola
Musical Director: Mischa Bakaleinikoff

Cast: John Hodiak (Cochise), Robert Stack (Major Tom Burke), Joy Page (Consuelo de Cordova), Rico Alaniz (Felipe), Fortunio Bonanova (Mexican Minister), Edward Colmans (Don Francisco de Cordova), Alex Montoya (Jose Garcia), Steven Ritch (Tukiwah), Carol Thurston (Terua), Rodd Redwing (Red Knife) Robert E. Griffin (Sam Maddock), Poppy del Vando (Señora de Cordova)


Been on a big Sam Katzman kick of late, to the point I feel like a one-man Sam Katzman Blogathon — there are a number of Katzman posts in the works (here and on The Hannibal 8). This time around, it’s Conquest Of Cochise (1953), one of William Castle’s first films for Katzman’s unit at Columbia.

Coming a few years after Jeff Chandler played Cochise in Broken Arrow (1950), this time the Apache chief is played by John Hodiak. In Tucson, after the Gadsden Purchase, ranchers are being raided by the Apache and Comanche. Major Tom Burke (Robert Stack) is sent to stop the violence and establish peace with Cochise. While he’s there, Burke takes a shine to Consuelo de Cordova (Joy Page).

Cochise also wants peace, but the Comanche do not, which leads to trouble — and more trouble. Eventually, Page is captured by the Apache and held hostage, with Stack working to free her as she and Kodiak fall in love.

It’s a short picture, running just 70 minutes, with more talk than action — and Castle’s direction seems uncharacteristically stiff. The picture’s greatest asset is certainly its cast. John Hodiak is quite good as Cochise, making the usual stilted Indian-speaking-white-man’s-tongue dialogue work. It’s his movie. Robert Stack is a stoic hero here, a bit like his Elliott Ness on The Untouchables. Joy Page is lovely. She and Robert Stack had been paired in Budd Boetticher’s Bullfighter And The Lady (1951). 

The cast and crew spent a lot of time at Vasquez Rocks, about an hour from the Columbia lot — where a fairly crude painting of those same rocks awaited on a soundstage (see the above still). They also shot some stuff at Corriganville. Director Of Photography Henry Freulich captures it all in gorgeous Technicolor. As cheap as these Katzman pictures were, I’m surprised he sprung for Technicolor. The stuff wasn’t cheap.

Katzman’s cost-cutting is painfully obvious, the history is questionable, the ending is too abrupt and Castle doesn’t seem to have found much inspiration in the script he was handed. But I love it anyway.

Conquest Of Cochise was part of Sony’s MOD program, and the transfer was near-perfect. That’s what was used for Mill Creek’s terrific set The Fastest Guns Of The West: The William Castle Western Collection. It’s one of my favorite sets in my collection. Go get one!

Read Full Post »

L. Q. Jones (Justus Ellis McQueen, Jr.)
(August 19, 1927 – July 9, 2022)

The great Western character actor L.Q. Jones has passed away at 94.

His real name was Justus Ellis McQueen, Jr., but for the screen, he took his name from his first picture, Battle Cry (1955).

Jones worked with some of the greats of 50s Westerns: Randolph Scott (1958’s Buchanan Rides Alone, above), Joel McCrea and Audie Murphy. Sam Peckinpah made him a member of his stock company, casting Jones in five of his films. He stayed extremely busy on TV, often in Westerns, throughout the 60s and 70s. And he wrote, produced and directed the 1975 science fiction film A Boy And His Dog.

He was a great storyteller, as the many YouTube videos of him will prove.

L.Q. is T.C., the bad guy on the far right, in this promo still from Peckinpah’s The Wild Bunch (1969). He became close friends with Strother Martin (upper left). 

Read Full Post »

Older Posts »