Editor’s note: Underplayed in the media intrigue over the prospect of Warner Bros swallowing Shari Redstone’s empire that includes Paramount and CBS is the gloomy reality that another storied Hollywood studio could go the way of Fox. That went from a vibrant, multi-faceted creative content-generating enterprise to a headstone when Rupert Murdoch decided to cash out for Disney stock. David Zaslav spent 2023 kicking employees and finished films to the curb to pay down debt just to get this far; chances are more blood will spill down Melrose if Redstone sells some or all the pieces of Paramount to be mashed into an existing studio. When Bill Mechanic was perched atop Paramount, Disney and Fox, he built Disney’s home video from a $30 million to $3 billion business and found ways to take risks and squeeze max returns from blockbusters from Braveheart to Titanic, Independence Day and many others. Who...
- 1/4/2024
- by Bill Mechanic
- Deadline Film + TV
UK correspondent Lee Broughton returns with coverage of a well-realised Spaghetti Western, Michele Lupo’s irony-laden semi-comedy Ben & Charlie. The film’s eponymous anti-heroes are played by fan favourites Giuliano Gemma and George Eastman and the duo receive great support from a number of familiar faces including Marisa Mell, Aldo Sambrell and Giacomo Rossi Stuart.
Ben & Charlie
Region-Free Blu-ray
Explosive Media GmbH
1972 / Color / 2:35 widescreen / 113 min. / Amigo, Stay Away; Amico, stammi lontano almeno un palmo / Street Date, 28 October 2021 / Available from Explosive Media / £22.99
Starring: Giuliano Gemma, George Eastman, Vittorio Congia, Luciano Lorcas, Giacomo Rossi Stuart, Remo Capitani, Nello Pazzafini, Marisa Mell, Aldo Sambrell, Roberto Camardiel.
Cinematography: Aristide Massaccesi
Production Designer: Dario Micheli
Film Editor: Antonietta Zita
Original Music: Gianni Ferrio
Written by Luigi Montefiori and Sergio Donati
Produced by Lucio Bompani
Directed by Michele Lupo
Charlie (George Eastman) patiently waits outside of a Mexican prison so that he can give his...
Ben & Charlie
Region-Free Blu-ray
Explosive Media GmbH
1972 / Color / 2:35 widescreen / 113 min. / Amigo, Stay Away; Amico, stammi lontano almeno un palmo / Street Date, 28 October 2021 / Available from Explosive Media / £22.99
Starring: Giuliano Gemma, George Eastman, Vittorio Congia, Luciano Lorcas, Giacomo Rossi Stuart, Remo Capitani, Nello Pazzafini, Marisa Mell, Aldo Sambrell, Roberto Camardiel.
Cinematography: Aristide Massaccesi
Production Designer: Dario Micheli
Film Editor: Antonietta Zita
Original Music: Gianni Ferrio
Written by Luigi Montefiori and Sergio Donati
Produced by Lucio Bompani
Directed by Michele Lupo
Charlie (George Eastman) patiently waits outside of a Mexican prison so that he can give his...
- 5/21/2022
- by Lee Broughton
- Trailers from Hell
There is a distinct flavor of the brawnily austere Westerns that comprise Budd Boetticher’s cult-favorite Ranown Cycle — and more than a hint of another showcase for the great Randolph Scott, Sam Peckinpah’s “Ride the High Country” — in director Michael Feifer’s “Last Shoot Out,” a small-budget indie that aims to please the currently underserved niche audience for oaters.
To be sure, no one will ever confuse this slow-paced concoction with one of the classics that so obviously influence it. But it’s definitely a cut above some of the recent streaming-ready attempts to sustain the genre — indeed, it’s a marked improvement over Feifer’s own “Catch the Bullet,” released just last September — and it features a ferociously nasty turn by Bruce Dern in a role that recalls a character from yet another golden oldie, Walter Brennan’s vicious Old Man Clanton in “My Darling Clementine.”
Dern doesn...
To be sure, no one will ever confuse this slow-paced concoction with one of the classics that so obviously influence it. But it’s definitely a cut above some of the recent streaming-ready attempts to sustain the genre — indeed, it’s a marked improvement over Feifer’s own “Catch the Bullet,” released just last September — and it features a ferociously nasty turn by Bruce Dern in a role that recalls a character from yet another golden oldie, Walter Brennan’s vicious Old Man Clanton in “My Darling Clementine.”
Dern doesn...
- 12/3/2021
- by Joe Leydon
- Variety Film + TV
Disney’s Marvel Studios released a batch of moody character portraits today as well as an interesting new featurette with a subtle message for any despairing Avengers fans out there: Don’t worry, life goes on after the dust settles.
Click on the photo above to launch a gallery of the posters, and watch the video below.
After months of a grim drumbeat, Marvel’s message was likely aimed at parents of younger fans who might have fretted about the dour outcome of a superhero movie that, in preview clips, has the emotional tones of a funeral in an ash-covered field on an overcast day. These are already grim days in the real world and the featurette seems to acknowledge that, at some point, true hero movies need moments of heroic uplift.
The message comes across in the promotional video from interviews with cast members and Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige. The pep talk was led by Chris Evans, who portrays the never-give-up hero Captain America: “They’ve truly leveled us, not just literally but morally and emotionally…the good thing is that it’s always easier to build people back up after they’ve been broken down. That’s what Marvel’s great at doing. It’s that shred of hope that everyone is looking for.”
The featurette also has footage from the upcoming Avengers: Endgame (April 26) as well as scenes from Avengers: Infinity War, the grim, beat-down epic that hit theaters last April and finished as 2018’s top-grossing global release ($2.05 billion worldwide). The movie ended, now infamously, with the tyrannical alien Thanos (Josh Brolin) snapping his fingers and erasing half of the universe’s living organisms, among them Spider-Man (Tom Holland) and Black Panther (Chadwick Boseman).
In the months since the existential dust-up, Marvel fans have reacted with many emotions to the devastating sequence of events. Some, for instance, chided Chris Pratt via social media, others complained that Feige and the Russo Brothers directing tandem had gone too far by wantonly killing off such beloved heroes. Feige addressed that in the new promotional video: “The fans’ reaction to the end of Infinity War, when half their favorite characters turned to dust, really was indicative of how emotionally connected the world has gotten to these characters.”
In actuality, of course, the characters are alive on every toy aisle in America and will remain that way. The film was simply following in the grand tradition of the American comic book industry, which has “killed” every one of its major characters at least once and, in some unlucky cases, three or more times. The notion that Spider-Man might not return from the dead doesn’t hold up too well when you consider a trailer has already been released for his next solo-adventure film, Spider-Man: Far From Home, and the footage contains neither zombies nor angels. It’s also worth noting that Peter Parker was back in action already in Sony’s Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse (or at least he was in the first half of the film…).
The featurette starts to wind down with the space-marooned Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.) and a line that surely foreshadows a big bounce-back moment in the new film (“I know I said no more surprises but I was really hoping to pull off one last one…”) and it ends with a wink and a smile (via the first meeting of Chris Hemsworth’s mighty Thor and Brie Larson’s even mightier Captain Marvel). It’s a moment that fans are loving. There will be life after Endgame, the exchange reminds us. Will every hero survive the film, which is billed as the climatic chapter for the Marvel Studios saga to date? No, probably not. There’s a good chance, for instance, that Taps might be playing for Captain America) but an on-screen funeral is just career downtime for a hero. n the other side of Boot Hill, after all, is Reboot Pasture.
Here is the new featurette:
Launch Gallery: 'Avengers: Endgame' Full Cast Posters - Photo Gallery...
Click on the photo above to launch a gallery of the posters, and watch the video below.
After months of a grim drumbeat, Marvel’s message was likely aimed at parents of younger fans who might have fretted about the dour outcome of a superhero movie that, in preview clips, has the emotional tones of a funeral in an ash-covered field on an overcast day. These are already grim days in the real world and the featurette seems to acknowledge that, at some point, true hero movies need moments of heroic uplift.
The message comes across in the promotional video from interviews with cast members and Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige. The pep talk was led by Chris Evans, who portrays the never-give-up hero Captain America: “They’ve truly leveled us, not just literally but morally and emotionally…the good thing is that it’s always easier to build people back up after they’ve been broken down. That’s what Marvel’s great at doing. It’s that shred of hope that everyone is looking for.”
The featurette also has footage from the upcoming Avengers: Endgame (April 26) as well as scenes from Avengers: Infinity War, the grim, beat-down epic that hit theaters last April and finished as 2018’s top-grossing global release ($2.05 billion worldwide). The movie ended, now infamously, with the tyrannical alien Thanos (Josh Brolin) snapping his fingers and erasing half of the universe’s living organisms, among them Spider-Man (Tom Holland) and Black Panther (Chadwick Boseman).
In the months since the existential dust-up, Marvel fans have reacted with many emotions to the devastating sequence of events. Some, for instance, chided Chris Pratt via social media, others complained that Feige and the Russo Brothers directing tandem had gone too far by wantonly killing off such beloved heroes. Feige addressed that in the new promotional video: “The fans’ reaction to the end of Infinity War, when half their favorite characters turned to dust, really was indicative of how emotionally connected the world has gotten to these characters.”
In actuality, of course, the characters are alive on every toy aisle in America and will remain that way. The film was simply following in the grand tradition of the American comic book industry, which has “killed” every one of its major characters at least once and, in some unlucky cases, three or more times. The notion that Spider-Man might not return from the dead doesn’t hold up too well when you consider a trailer has already been released for his next solo-adventure film, Spider-Man: Far From Home, and the footage contains neither zombies nor angels. It’s also worth noting that Peter Parker was back in action already in Sony’s Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse (or at least he was in the first half of the film…).
The featurette starts to wind down with the space-marooned Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.) and a line that surely foreshadows a big bounce-back moment in the new film (“I know I said no more surprises but I was really hoping to pull off one last one…”) and it ends with a wink and a smile (via the first meeting of Chris Hemsworth’s mighty Thor and Brie Larson’s even mightier Captain Marvel). It’s a moment that fans are loving. There will be life after Endgame, the exchange reminds us. Will every hero survive the film, which is billed as the climatic chapter for the Marvel Studios saga to date? No, probably not. There’s a good chance, for instance, that Taps might be playing for Captain America) but an on-screen funeral is just career downtime for a hero. n the other side of Boot Hill, after all, is Reboot Pasture.
Here is the new featurette:
Launch Gallery: 'Avengers: Endgame' Full Cast Posters - Photo Gallery...
- 3/26/2019
- by Geoff Boucher
- Deadline Film + TV
One of the strangest mummy tales ever told comes not from the tombs of ancient Egypt or the famous Aztec mummies of Mexico, but from the lawless days of America's Wild West. It all began with an epic gun battle in Oklahoma in October of 1911, between a posse assembled by Sheriff Harve Freas and the fugitive Elmer McCurdy, who was wanted for bank and train robberies and had a $2000 bounty on his head. McCurdy was killed in the shootout, and his body was embalmed in Pawhuska, Ok where it was put on display for the paying public; people would pay the viewing fee by placing a penny in the corpse's mouth. Five years later, McCurdy's mummified remains were taken from Pawhuska by the owner of a traveling carnival, then changed owners repeatedly over the next sixty years (including wax museums, carnival sideshows, amusement parks, even movie sets) before disappearing... or so people thought.
- 2/28/2014
- by Gregory Burkart
- FEARnet
It's not like anyone had especially high expectations for "The Lone Ranger." Given the movie's poor pre-release buzz and its positioning opposite the sequel to a wildly popular animated family film, pundits expected "Ranger" to do just modest business; only the might of Johnny Depp's name and the Disney marketing machine were expected to carry it to a domestic gross of about $40 million from Friday to Sunday and maybe $60 million over the whole July 4th five-day weekend.
But the movie didn't even do that well. According to estimates, it earned just $29.4 million over the three weekend days and just $48.9 million over the five days since it opened on Wednesday, July 3. Given the film's production cost, reportedly between $225 and $250 million, that weak opening makes "Lone Ranger" a flop the size Disney hasn't seen since last year's "John Carter."
Why was this Western so slow on the draw? After all, despite...
But the movie didn't even do that well. According to estimates, it earned just $29.4 million over the three weekend days and just $48.9 million over the five days since it opened on Wednesday, July 3. Given the film's production cost, reportedly between $225 and $250 million, that weak opening makes "Lone Ranger" a flop the size Disney hasn't seen since last year's "John Carter."
Why was this Western so slow on the draw? After all, despite...
- 7/8/2013
- by Gary Susman
- Moviefone
Tom Wilkinson grew up in England but, of course, like any child of the 1950s, he could see the Old West just fine thanks to the powerful and focused lens of Hollywood. The two-time Oscar nominee plays a rapacious railroad baron named Latham Cole (that’s him in the new poster above) in Disney’s The Lone Ranger, the most expensive western in history and a bold bid to revive that once-dominant screen genre.
“In their heyday westerns provided a metaphorical universe in which moral fables of varying complexity could be acted out in an exciting way,” says Wilkinson, whose film credits include Michael Clayton,...
“In their heyday westerns provided a metaphorical universe in which moral fables of varying complexity could be acted out in an exciting way,” says Wilkinson, whose film credits include Michael Clayton,...
- 4/14/2013
- by Geoff Boucher
- EW - Inside Movies
The “adult” Western – as it would come to be called – was a long time coming. A Hollywood staple since the days of The Great Train Robbery (1903), the Western offered spectacle and action set against the uniquely American milieu of the Old West – a historical period which, at the dawn of the motion picture industry, was still fresh in the nation’s memory. What the genre rarely offered was dramatic substance.
Early Westerns often adopted the same traditions of the popular Wild West literature and dime novels of the 19th and early 20th centuries producing, as a consequence, highly romantic, almost purely mythic portraits the Old West. Through the early decades of the motion picture industry, the genre went through several creative cycles, alternately tilting from fanciful to realistic and back again. By the early sound era, and despite such serious efforts as The Big Trail (1930) and The Virginian (1929), Hollywood Westerns were,...
Early Westerns often adopted the same traditions of the popular Wild West literature and dime novels of the 19th and early 20th centuries producing, as a consequence, highly romantic, almost purely mythic portraits the Old West. Through the early decades of the motion picture industry, the genre went through several creative cycles, alternately tilting from fanciful to realistic and back again. By the early sound era, and despite such serious efforts as The Big Trail (1930) and The Virginian (1929), Hollywood Westerns were,...
- 1/4/2013
- by Bill Mesce
- SoundOnSight
Rob and Kristen are hands down the most fan-friendly actors in Hollywood — they always take time to greet his fans, even if they’re dead tired!
Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart are so gracious. Rob, 25, stopped by a sea of his adoring fans outside of his Cosmopolis set on June 21 in Toronto — and he made every Twi-hard’s day!
Rob was wearing his signature t-shirt and baseball cap — so down-to-earth! We told you the tee retails for $23 from the Boot Hill Saloon in Daytona Beach. We love how Rob immediately returns to himself after a long day of shooting.
But Rob’s girlfriend Kristen Stewart isn’t too far off from Rob’s humble ways. The 21-year-old actress took a pic with a fan on the same day but in La. She was at the premiere of New Moon director Chris Weitz‘s new flick A Better Life.
Rob and...
Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart are so gracious. Rob, 25, stopped by a sea of his adoring fans outside of his Cosmopolis set on June 21 in Toronto — and he made every Twi-hard’s day!
Rob was wearing his signature t-shirt and baseball cap — so down-to-earth! We told you the tee retails for $23 from the Boot Hill Saloon in Daytona Beach. We love how Rob immediately returns to himself after a long day of shooting.
But Rob’s girlfriend Kristen Stewart isn’t too far off from Rob’s humble ways. The 21-year-old actress took a pic with a fan on the same day but in La. She was at the premiere of New Moon director Chris Weitz‘s new flick A Better Life.
Rob and...
- 6/24/2011
- by Chloe Melas
- HollywoodLife
R-Patz stayed true to his laid-back, casual style in a tee — and we know where you can find the same exact one!
Guess it was t-shirt time for Robert Pattinson yesterday! The star took a break from filming Cosmopolis, where he was spotted leaving the set after a long day’s work, stepping out in a tee from the Boot Hill Saloon in Daytona Beach — but you don’t have to travel to Florida to get his look!
The tee retails at $23 and can be purchased on their website, where they also sell beanies, baseball caps, or bandanas.
Do you want your guy to dress like R-Patz? If so, here’s your chance to scoop up something that emulates his laid-back style.
–Amber Belus
Read More About Your Favorite Twilight Stars Here:
Kellan Lutz Reveals ‘Breaking Dawn’ Wedding Scene Was ‘Miserable’ For Kristen Stewart!
Kristen Stewart, Taylor Lautner & Garrett Hedlund...
Guess it was t-shirt time for Robert Pattinson yesterday! The star took a break from filming Cosmopolis, where he was spotted leaving the set after a long day’s work, stepping out in a tee from the Boot Hill Saloon in Daytona Beach — but you don’t have to travel to Florida to get his look!
The tee retails at $23 and can be purchased on their website, where they also sell beanies, baseball caps, or bandanas.
Do you want your guy to dress like R-Patz? If so, here’s your chance to scoop up something that emulates his laid-back style.
–Amber Belus
Read More About Your Favorite Twilight Stars Here:
Kellan Lutz Reveals ‘Breaking Dawn’ Wedding Scene Was ‘Miserable’ For Kristen Stewart!
Kristen Stewart, Taylor Lautner & Garrett Hedlund...
- 6/23/2011
- by HL
- HollywoodLife
With one cool shot, the Us president brought down both Osama bin Laden and Republican claims to the mantle of western hero
Westerns have never been seen as Democrat movies. But this is based on a misunderstanding. The western genre of American film is generally thought of as morally crude, politically reactionary and so on, but in reality it was always more complex. From Fort Apache with its depiction of military folly to The Searchers, a dark tale of racism and otherness, the master of the western film, John Ford, always explored ambiguous themes and invested his films with deep intelligence.
Many other classic westerns portray characters who abhor violence – although they always use it in the end: Destry Rides Again and Shane both have heroes who are reluctant to take up arms. In these and other westerns it is only the bad guys who shoot for the sake of...
Westerns have never been seen as Democrat movies. But this is based on a misunderstanding. The western genre of American film is generally thought of as morally crude, politically reactionary and so on, but in reality it was always more complex. From Fort Apache with its depiction of military folly to The Searchers, a dark tale of racism and otherness, the master of the western film, John Ford, always explored ambiguous themes and invested his films with deep intelligence.
Many other classic westerns portray characters who abhor violence – although they always use it in the end: Destry Rides Again and Shane both have heroes who are reluctant to take up arms. In these and other westerns it is only the bad guys who shoot for the sake of...
- 5/3/2011
- by Jonathan Jones
- The Guardian - Film News
Movies about snipers fascinates me, especially since I could never, ever in multiple lifetimes mold myself into one of them. Fact is, I’m just not that dedicated. They are the consummate professional — killer elites that pride themselves on patience, precision, and outerworldly skills. Plus, they’re the epitome of the lone wolf hero, that favorite of cinematic badasses — hiding out in the jungles by themselves (or with a spotter, if you really want to be accurate about it) for days, waiting for the perfect opportunity to take the shot and send the bad guy to Boot Hill. Yeah, they’re cool, and movies about them tend to be pretty cool, too, even if they’re complete rubbish like Mark Wahlberg’s “Shooter”. Cripes, that one was horrid. The best in the genre has to be the “Sniper” franchise, which started in 1993 with Tom Berenger and Billy Zane, with Berenger...
- 4/21/2011
- by Nix
- Beyond Hollywood
Blake Edwards was known for his crazy comedies with Peter Sellers, but he would take a trip back to the old west with William Holden and Ryan O.Neal. Ross Bodine (William Holden) and Frank Post (Ryan O.Neal) are cowhands at the R-Bar-r ranch owned by Walter Buckman (Karl Malden) and his sons John (Tom Skerritt) and Paul (Joe Don Baker). Ross is the older and more weathered of the hands and Frank a young buck. An accident on the ranch has one of the other hands headed for Boot Hill and Ross and Frank are tasked with transporting the body into town for his last rites. They have a conversation about what.s lacking in their lives, Ross not...
- 3/23/2011
- by Jeff Swindoll
- Monsters and Critics
Distant stars flicker briefly For the second installment of their Local Customs series spotlighting regional studios, Numero Group combed the archive at Mickey Rouse’s Lowland facility in Beaumont, Texas, the town where Johnny and Edgar Winter got their start. Spanning the late ‘60s to early ‘70s, Lone Star Lowlands is intriguing in theory, but is short on originality; most of these obscure artists sound like imitations of their more famous contemporaries. Among the more arresting moments are Linda Crowe’s piano cabaret ballad “I Still Remember”; Boot Hill’s “No Control,” combining the bluesy stomp of early Zeppelin with an extended Jethro...
- 10/13/2010
- Pastemagazine.com
Johnny Winter "Live Through the '80s will be released in North America, August 24, from Mvd Visual . The new DVD includes a collection of official archival performance footage from around the world compiled from the original masters, featuring 18 performances from various locations includingas MTV Rock Influences '84 "Guitar Greats", Toronto's Massey Hall (Toronto '83), Roskilde Drtv (Roskilde, Denmark '84), New Hampshire ('84), Sonet Studio (Bromma, Sweden '87), Piazza Duomo (Pistoia, Italy '88), and a whole lot more. Intermixed with the live content is interview footage showcasing the 'definitive' document of Winter's career throughout the 1980's. "...The program kicks off in grand style with four performances culled from Johnny's long-sought-after 1983 appearance at Canada's Massey Hall. Leading his high-energy trio -- Jon Paris (bass, harmonica) and Bobby T. Torello (drums) -- with laser-like focus and fire-breathing intensity, the DVD opens with a blistering rendition of the Sonny Boy Williamson blues classic, "Unseen Eye.
- 7/1/2010
- HollywoodNorthReport.com
"Johnny Winter "Live Through the '80s" will be released in North America, August 24, from Mvd Visual.
The new DVD includes a collection of official archival performance footage from around the world compiled from the original masters, featuring 18 performances from various locations includingas MTV Rock Influences '84 "Guitar Greats", Toronto's Massey Hall (Toronto '83), Roskilde Drtv (Roskilde, Denmark '84), New Hampshire ('84), Sonet Studio (Bromma, Sweden '87), Piazza Duomo (Pistoia, Italy '88), and a whole lot more.
Intermixed with the live content is interview footage showcasing the 'definitive' document of Winter's career throughout the 1980's.
"...The program kicks off in grand style with four performances culled from Johnny's long-sought-after 1983 appearance at Canada's Massey Hall. Leading his high-energy trio -- Jon Paris (bass, harmonica) and Bobby T. Torello (drums) -- with laser-like focus and fire-breathing intensity, the DVD opens with a blistering rendition of the Sonny Boy Williamson blues classic, "Unseen Eye.
The new DVD includes a collection of official archival performance footage from around the world compiled from the original masters, featuring 18 performances from various locations includingas MTV Rock Influences '84 "Guitar Greats", Toronto's Massey Hall (Toronto '83), Roskilde Drtv (Roskilde, Denmark '84), New Hampshire ('84), Sonet Studio (Bromma, Sweden '87), Piazza Duomo (Pistoia, Italy '88), and a whole lot more.
Intermixed with the live content is interview footage showcasing the 'definitive' document of Winter's career throughout the 1980's.
"...The program kicks off in grand style with four performances culled from Johnny's long-sought-after 1983 appearance at Canada's Massey Hall. Leading his high-energy trio -- Jon Paris (bass, harmonica) and Bobby T. Torello (drums) -- with laser-like focus and fire-breathing intensity, the DVD opens with a blistering rendition of the Sonny Boy Williamson blues classic, "Unseen Eye.
- 7/1/2010
- by Michael Stevens
- SneakPeek
Val Avery, a popular character actor of stage and screen, has died at age 85. The New York City resident passed away in his Greenwich Village apartment. Avery was a familiar face to all movie goers in the 60s and 70s. Some of his roles were bit parts, but others were more prominent. He played the corset salesman whose determination to see an Indian get buried with dignity on Boot Hill sets up the first action confrontation in The Magnificent Seven. In the 1971 film The Anderson Tapes,Avery played the dumb but brutal racist thug 'Socks'. For more on his life and career click here...
- 12/15/2009
- by nospam@example.com (Cinema Retro)
- Cinemaretro.com
Browsing in bookstores, I’ve discovered the closing of the West. I’ve noticed over the years how the racks devoted to paperback Westerns (at least here in the East) have steadily shrunk. Now, in many stores here, there are only two or three shelves of Westerns (and mostly those are filled with multiple titles by Louis L’Amour). Equally, on DVD shelves, there’s usually only a single section of movie Westerns; in some stores, the Westerns are just mixed in amongst the action-adventure entries. And of course there are few new Western films in theaters and no current TV series. It’s sad evidence, I think, that we’re slowly Losing the Western.
As a Western fan, I’m concerned about its increasing rarity. Here’s where I come from on it: Although born in Pennsylvania, I lived in the West for a decade while growing up—New...
As a Western fan, I’m concerned about its increasing rarity. Here’s where I come from on it: Although born in Pennsylvania, I lived in the West for a decade while growing up—New...
- 11/6/2009
- by no-reply@starlog.com (David McDonnell)
- Starlog
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