2 BIG WESTERNS – THE REVENANT & HATEFUL 8 – TO
OPEN CHRISTMAS DAY!
We’re getting a wonderful pair of gifts in our
stocking this December 25th: two big Westerns opening on Christmas Day! The last time this happened, Tom Mix was
going up against William S. Hart (don’t do research – I’m making it up!)! THE REVENANT, starring Leo DiCaprio and
Thomas Hardy, is the true story of Hugh Glass, a mountain man who was mauled by
a bear and left for dead. It’s written
and helmed by Mexican-born Alejandro Gonzalez Inarruti, who swept the Oscars
this year, winning Best Picture, Director and Original Screenplay for
BIRDMAN. A previous version of the Hugh
Glass story, MAN IN THE WILDERNESS (1971), starred Richard Harris and John
Huston, directed by Richard Sarafian from Jack DeWitt’s script.
While REVENANT had long been heralded as a Yuletide
release, just this Friday the Weinstein Company
announced that Quentin Tarantino’s THE HATEFUL 8, will also open on December 25th. Featuring a huge cast of Tarantino favorites
– Kurt Russell, Samuel L. Jackson, Walter Goggins, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Bruce
Dern, Tim Roth, Michael Madsen, et al
– it’s an all-star ‘bunch-of-people-caught-in-a-snowstorm’ Western. The writer/director cheerfully revealed that
his inspiration was the sort of BONANZA/BIG VALLEY/HIGH CHAPARRAL episodes that
would happen mid-season when budgets were tight, and plots would be crafted
around a bunch of people caught in a small place. In spite of those close quarters, the
Christmas premiere will be exclusively in 70 mm – the largest 70 mm opening in
at least two decades! It’s been said
that Tarantino’s determination to release the movie on actual film, in 70 mm,
is what lead Kodak to reverse their decision to shut down their film-stock
production entirely. HATEFUL 8 will
broaden its release to crummy new digital theatres on January 8th.
I’m very proud that my first article as TRUE WEST
MAGAZINE’s new Film Editor is in the July ‘All Pancho Villa Issue’, which has
just come out. No surprise, my piece is
about the best and worst of the movies about Villa. Buy several copies today!
GENE AUTRY FANS!
ENTER THIS GREAT FREE GIVEAWAY!
Gene Autry Entertainment wants to get a verification
check-mark on its Youtube channel, and increase their Google + numbers, and
they’re giving away THREE great collections of Gene Autry merchandise and
collectibles to do it! Each collection
contains DVDs, CDs, books, scarves – each is worth well over a C-note – and to
enter to win one, all you have to do is click HERE to subscribe to the Official
Gene Autry Youtube Channel, then come back and click HERE to be a Google +
follower! Everyone who does so will be
automatically entered to win ! Do it
soon – the giveaway ends on June 19th!
June is a great month for Westerns at Quentin Tarantino’s
New Beverly Cinema! Sunday and Monday, June 14th &
15th , a rarely seen pair of Westerns about Custer will screen, THEY
DIED WITH THEIR BOOTS ON (1941), starring Errol Flynn as Custer, with Olivia
DeHavilland, directed by Raoul Walsh; and CUSTER OF THE WEST (1967), starring
Robert Shaw as Custer, with Mary Ure and Ty Hardin, and directed by Robert
Siodmak. (That latter film was shot in Spain at the height of the spaghetti
western Renaissance, and Ty Hardin told me some very interesting stuff about the
making of the film – including what director was fired the first day. Read that interview HERE )
On Wednesday and Thursday, June 17th & 18th see Glenn Ford in Edna Ferber’s CIMARRON (1960), starring Glenn Ford, directed by Anthony Mann. Then on Wednesday and Thursday, Jne 24th & 25th, catch the Glenn Ford double bill THE FASTEST GUN ALIVE (1956), and the original Elmore Leonard’s 3:10 TO YUMA (1957), directed by Delmer Daves, and co-starring Van Heflin. Then Sunday, June 28th through Saturday, July 4th, you have a full week to catch Sergio Leone’s masterpiece ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST. Get all the details HERE.
On Wednesday and Thursday, June 17th & 18th see Glenn Ford in Edna Ferber’s CIMARRON (1960), starring Glenn Ford, directed by Anthony Mann. Then on Wednesday and Thursday, Jne 24th & 25th, catch the Glenn Ford double bill THE FASTEST GUN ALIVE (1956), and the original Elmore Leonard’s 3:10 TO YUMA (1957), directed by Delmer Daves, and co-starring Van Heflin. Then Sunday, June 28th through Saturday, July 4th, you have a full week to catch Sergio Leone’s masterpiece ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST. Get all the details HERE.
After the tremendous success of last year’s event,
the annual ‘Cops & Cowboys’
fundraiser for The Mid-Valley Community Police Council will again be held at
the historic Leonis Adobe Museum in
Calabasas, CA. Built in 1844 as the home
to a Basque farmer and his bride, daughter of a Chumash Chief, the Adobe is one
of the oldest existing buildings in Southern California, and the C&C is a wonderful time to visit it! You can learn about ranch life, bid at the
regular and silent auctions, play blackjack and poker, have a few drinks in the
saloon, enjoy barbecue, country music, line dancing, and more! Tickets are $150 each ($50 if you’re in the
LAPD), and there are opportunities for sponsorship, buying tables, and buying
space in the program. To learn more,
please call 818-994-4661, FAX 818-994-6181, email info@theproperimageevents.com
or visit http://www.midvalleypolicecouncil.org/event/cops-cowboys-july-18th-2015/
.
SOLIMA’S ‘BIG GUNDOWN’ INTRO’D BY JOE DANTE JUNE 18
AT LINWOOD DUNN
As part of their THIS IS WIDESCREEN series, The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences will screen Sergio Solima’s THE BIG GUNDOWN, starring Lee Van Cleef, Thursday, June 18th, at the Linwood Dunn Theatre in the Mary Pickford Center, 1313 Vine Street, Hollywood, CA 90028. (Note, this is the Hollywood venue, not the Academy headquarters in Beverly Hills). It’s a very unusual, well-told story, with lawman-turned-politician Van Cleef on the hunt for a degenerate criminal (Tomas Milian) who may be not as bad as the men who want him dead. This is the new restoration from Grindhouse Releasing which Courtney Joyner and I got to see when we were doing audio commentary for their BluRay release, and it looks spectacular. The ticket price range is from $3 to $5, and you can learn more about the film, and order tickets HERE
If you’d
like to buy the fabulous 4-disc set from Grindhouse,
including a CD of the brilliant Ennio Morricone soundtrack, go HERE .
Also
featured with THE BIG GUNDOWN at the Linwood Dunn is the martial arts film DRAGON INN (1967), written
and directed by King Hu.
Based on history you may have missed, outlaw Jesse
James pins on a badge, working for a lawman who figures you need the help of a
bad man to catch a very bad man in
JESSE JAMES: LAWMAN, coming soon from Barnholtz
Entertainment (read my interview with producer Barry Barnholtz HERE ) . Starring Andrew Galligan as Jesse,
he’s joined by Peter Fonda as the mayor, and Kevin Sorbo as J. Frank Dalton. Director Bret Kelly and screenwriter Janet
Hetherington collaborated last year on another Western, THE LAST OUTLAW.
One day apart, we lost two of the true icons of International
film. On June 6th, Pierre Brice passed
away at age 86. Though French, he gained
undying fame in German cinema playing a fictional American, Winnetou, the
Apache Chief created by the father of the German Western, Karl May. Starting in 1962 with THE TREASURE OF SILVER
LAKE, Brice would play the role eleven times in the original series of films,
often opposite American and British stars like Lex Barker, Herbert Lom, Stewart
Granger, and Rod Cameron, and indelibly etched his persona as the heroic,
dignified and stunningly handsome chief upon the consciousness of
non-English-speaking cinema. He played
many other characters, including Zorro twice, but he will always be Winnetou to
his loyal fans.
On June 7th, Christopher Lee passed away
at the age of 93. To a younger audience
he was Count Dooku in the STAR WARS films, or Saruman in the LORD OF THE RINGS
movies, but to us grown-ups he will always be Dracula, a role he first played
in 1958’s HORROR OF DRACULA. For Hammer and other studios he would play
every conceivable horror-related character; Fu Manchu five times, and he had
the unique distinction of playing Sherlock Holmes twice, as well as his brother
Mycroft, and Henry Baskerville. His
imposing form, chiseled features, and deadly stare, combined with his inherent dignity
and sense of humor, made all of his screen work a delight, sometimes the only
thing worth watching in his films. For
those of you with an interest in astrology, someone on Facebook noted that he
and Vincent Price shared the same birthday, May 27th, and Peter
Cushing’s birthday was May 26th.
Not known for a lot of Western roles, he was very effective as the
gunsmith in HANNIE CAULDER (1971), and played a Grand Duke opposite James
Arness in the HOW THE WEST WAS WON TV series.
On Monday, June 22nd, TCM will air eight of Lee’s finest
films. Both men shall be sorely missed
around the world.
TEXAS RISING ends today (or next week if you, like
me, DVR almost everything you watch).
Let me know what you think of the conclusion (not that I’ll read it for
a week), and tell me if you’re enjoying STRANGE EMPIRE so far. And who’s been watching Hallmark’s WHEN CALLS THE HEART?
One of the downsides of having so many channels is that you lose track
of stuff on channels you don’t regularly watch.
How far are we into season two? Have
a great week!
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright June 2015 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved
Some Lee Van Cleef trivia. Lee trying to break away from his Hammer Films typecasting as a horror actor, auditioned for the role of Winnetou at the same time Pierre Brice did and actually took a screen-test with costumes and make-up. The producer Horst Wendlandt chose Brice over Lee so both actors, dying one day apart, are both linked to the Winnetou character.
ReplyDeleteThanks Tom! Fascinating coincidence. I'm pretty sure that there's a typo above, and you're talking about Christopher Lee, rather than Lee Van Cleef.
DeleteYes I meant Christopher Lee. That's what I get for reading your post at midnight. Lack of sleep. :)
ReplyDeleteGreat to see some more new westerns coming out. I am looking forward to the Hugh Glass movie, didn't think the old one did the story justice.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Neil. The Hugh Glass story is beyond belief and no additional padding is needed. An exceptional trapper, Mountain Man and human being.
ReplyDelete