Showing posts with label Doc Holliday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doc Holliday. Show all posts

Sunday, November 27, 2011

RON HOWARD TO DIRECT ‘DOC’ FOR HBO



According to Nellie Adreeva at Deadline TV, Ron Howard will direct the pilot for the proposed series about the Wild West’s favorite dentist, Doc Holliday, inspired by the book DOC by Mary Doria Russell. Howard’s credentials in Westerns are pretty-near unmatched these days: before the camera from GUNSMOKE to THE SHOOTIST, and behind it from FAR AND AWAY to THE MISSING. It’ll be produced by frequent Ron Howard and Imagine Film collaborator, producer Akiva Goldsman, and is the first project in a two-year exclusive deal between Goldsman and HBO.  In addition to being a very successful producer, Goldsman is a fine screenwriter, who scripted DAVINCI CODE, CINDERELLA MAN, and won his Oscar for writing A BEAUTIFUL MIND.

DOC will be scripted by Adam Cooper and Bill Collage, who co-wrote ACCEPTED and the story for TOWER HEIST.   Among co-producers will be Ron’s dad Rance Howard, along with Rance’s wife Judy Howard.

Reportedly the series will be soft-pedaling the ‘lunger’ aspect of Holliday’s life, although he’ll be presented as a well-educated professional from the South, moved to the West for his health, and there will be a romantic triangle involving himself, his 'wife', Big Nose Kate Elder, and his friend Wyatt Earp.


SONY TV TO REFIGHT CIVIL WAR IN ‘TO APPOMATTOX’ MINI

In 2013, Sony Television will be presenting an eight-hour miniseries about the Civil War, focusing on the generals on both sides.  And what a cast they have: Michael C. Hall (DEXTER) as U.S. Grant, William Petersen (CSI) as William Tecumseh Sherman, Will Patton as Robert E. Lee, Rob Lowe as James Pete Longstreet, Stephen Lang (Ike Clanton in TOMBSTONE and Pickett in GETTYSBURG) as Abraham Lincoln, Kim Delaney as Mary Todd Lincoln, Bill Paxton as Stonewall Jackson, D.B. Sweeny as George Mclellon, Noah Wylie as George Pickett, Trace Adkins as John Gregg, Dwight Yoakam as George Meade, Powers Boothe as Albert Sidney Johnson, Walton Goggins as Richard Ewell, Kix Brooks (of Brooks and Dunn) as Winfield Scott Hancock, and many more.

Not unusual for a Western-ish show, a number of country music stars will be playing roles.  In addition to Yoakam, Adkins and Brooks, the members of Rascal Flatts, who will be doing the score, will be acting as well.  Very unusual, in a bid to make the project more accessible to a general audience, several NASCAR stars will be playing parts. 

Produced by Thomas Augsburger, Mikael Salomen, and Michael Frost Beckner, Salomen will additionally be directing, and Beckner wrote the script; I’m told this project has been his primary focus for nine years.  I’ll have more details soon.


WEB SERIES ‘WESTERN X’ #1-6 ONLINE

By far one of the most ambitious webisode productions I’ve seen, WESTERN X, the creation of Michael Flores, is available online through Youtube and ITunes, and tells its story in six-minute ‘bites’.  Chapter #7 is coming soon, and I believe the whole will be fifteen chapters.  Shot in striking desert locations and Western towns, its hero is named X because he awakens after a beating, not knowing where he is or who he is. 

I’ve seen the first six chapters, and they are beautifully produced, with eerie music, striking editing and often beautiful photography.  But they’re heavy on atmosphere and light on plot – there’s a lot going on at times, but while I assume it will all become clear down the line, for the time being, much of it is incomprehensible.  But it’s certainly worth a peek.  Here’s the official website link:  http://www.westernxtheshow.com/index.html

And here’s chapter one:  http://youtu.be/6ucb7rX2DqA


TIME STRETCHES IN TOMBSTONE – THE BIRD CAGE THEATRE


In September my wife and I spent a week in and around Tucson, one of those days in the fabled Tombstone.  It’s an odd place, not a ghost town in the usual sense, but a far cry from the activity that once filled its streets and saloons and brothels. 
The people that live in Tombstone today are immersed with the brief but remarkable history of the town when it was at its most active, in the years between 1881 and 1889, the years the silver mines were producing, before uncontrollable water seepage flooded the mines, and all but drowned the town too tough to die.

(Bird Cage Theatre 1932, by Frederic Nichols)
Among the many fascinating places to visit is one that is unique: The Bird Cage Saloon.  While most other attractions – The Crystal Palace, O.K. Coral, Tombstone Epitaph – have been lovingly restored to how they once were, or should have been, the Bird Cage has been the beneficiary of benign neglect: when it closed its doors in 1889, those doors literally remained closed for nearly half a century.  It was declared a landmark in 1934, and opened to the public, as is.  Some historical displays have been added, but no interior decorator has come after-the-fact to fix it.  Ancient posters for vaudeville acts that once played the theatre adorn the lobby.  A favorite is for the woman who, with magnets on her shoes, danced on the theatre’s ceiling.

(Note the boxes along the balcony)

From the day it opened, The Bird Cage Theatre never closed until it closed for good nine years later.  It took $1000 to buy into its poker game, and that game ran continuously for eight years, five months and three days.  The movie TOMBSTONE did a marvelous job of reproducing both the exterior and interior of the Bird Cage for the memorable scenes where Wyatt and Doc and their wives (we’re giving Big Nose Kate the benefit of the doubt) watch a theatrical performance from one of the boxes on the balcony.  But the filmmakers took one liberty here, because those boxes in fact contained not chairs but a bed: they were cribs, so prostitutes and johns could do their business and still enjoy the show onstage!


(The stage, small open doorway on left)

The small door below and to the left of the stage leads to the wine cellar, and the high-stakes poker game, and a little farther and to the left, more cribs, including the one where Wyatt Earp would visit Sadie Marcus, who became his third wife. 

(Sadie Marcus' crib)

On the stage, behind the curtain, are stored all manner of knick-knacks, among them a beautiful and much-used hearse, and to its right, one of those elegant caskets with the glass window of the sort that Billy Clanton and Tom and Frank McClaury were famously pictured in.  There is disagreement as to how many people died in the Bird Cage.  It’s been claimed that it was the site of sixteen gunfights, that twenty-six people were killed there, and there is no argument that 140 bullet holes pepper the walls and ceilings.  One of the documented murders took place when a girl whose hair-color had given her the nickname Gold Dollar, saw a Mexican girl known only as Margarita, sitting on the lap of one Billy Milgreen, one of Gold Dollar’s regulars: Gold Dollar stabbed Margarita to death. 

As is common in places where death is so common, the Bird Cage Theatre is said to be haunted.  The young woman who was running the gift shop by the exit told us that the first day she worked there, someone grabbed her arm, but when she turned, there was no one there.  She ran home, and didn’t come back for several days, then decided to give it another chance.  Since then, she’s frequently felt a presence, but nothing has touched her.

(Tombstone prostitute's license -- $7.50 for one year)

Described by the New York Times in 1882 as, "...the roughest, bawdiest and most wicked night spot between Basin Street and the Barbary Coast," it also attracted some of the top talent of its day.  Eddie Foy, Ethel Barrymore, Lotta Crabtree, Lily Langtry and Lola Montez are among the many performers reported to have trod the boards there.  It’s also said that it was the inspiration for the hugely popular song, ‘She Was Only A Bird In a Gilded Cage,’ by Arthur Lamb and Harry Von Tilzer, who cleaned up the lyrics to make it about a woman who married for money, not love, instead of the soiled dove it originally extolled. 

(View of the theatre from backstage)

I’ll be writing more about the town of Tombstone, and Tucson, soon. 

TV WESTERNS ALL OVER THE DIAL!

More and more, classic TV Westerns are available all over the TV universe, but they tend to be on small networks that are easy to miss. Of course, ENCORE WESTERNS is the best continuous source of such programming, and has been for years. It’s not in my current satellite package, which is why I often forget to mention it, but currently they run CHEYENNE, MAVERICK, LAWMAN, THE VIRGINIAN, WAGON TRAIN, HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL, GUNSMOKE, BRET MAVERICK, CIMMARON STRIP, and HOW THE WEST WAS WON. (I’d get it in a minute, if I didn’t have to buy a huge package of STARZ and ENCORE channels just to get the one!)


But there are several new, or at least new-to-me, channels showing sagebrush fare. GEB, which stands for Golden Eagle Broadcasting, is largely a religious-programming cable outlet that runs at least one Western on Saturdays – the ones I’ve caught have been public domain Roy Rogers and John Wayne pictures – and sometimes have weekday afternoon movies as well.

For those of you who watch TV with an antenna, there are at least a couple of channels that exist between the standard numbers – largely unavailable on cable or satellite systems – that provide Western fare. ANTENNA TV is currently running RIN TIN TIN, CIRCUS BOY, HERE COME THE BRIDES, and IRON HORSE.


Another ‘in between’ outfit, ME-TV, which stands for Memorable Entertainment TV, runs a wide collection: BIG VALLEY, BONANZA, BRANDED, DANIEL BOONE, GUNS OF WILL SONNETT, GUNSMOKE, MARSHALL DILLON (the renamed black and white GUNSMOKE), RAWHIDE, THE RIFLEMAN, and WILD WILD WEST. Some of these channels are hard to track down, but if they show what you’ve been missing, it’s worth the search. 


TCM FANATIC - WESTERN NOW ONLINE!



That's right, the segment I was interviewed for is now viewable here:









THE AUTRY NATIONAL CENTER

Built by cowboy actor, singer, baseball and TV entrepeneur Gene Autry, and designed by the Disney Imagineering team, the Autry is a world-class museum housing a fascinating collection of items related to the fact, fiction, film, history and art of the American West. In addition to their permenant galleries (to which new items are frequently added), they have temporary shows. The Autry has many special programs every week -- sometimes several in a day. To check their daily calendar, CLICK HERE. And they always have gold panning for kids every weekend. For directions, hours, admission prices, and all other information, CLICK HERE.

HOLLYWOOD HERITAGE MUSEUM

Across the street from the Hollywood Bowl, this building, once the headquarters of Lasky-Famous Players (later Paramount Pictures) was the original DeMille Barn, where Cecil B. DeMille made the first Hollywood western, The Squaw Man. They have a permanent display of movie props, documents and other items related to early, especially silent, film production. They also have occasional special programs. 2100 Highland Ave., L.A. CA 323-874-2276. Thursday – Sunday 12 p.m. to 4 p.m. $5 for adults, $3 for senior, $1 for children.

WELLS FARGO HISTORY MUSEUM

This small but entertaining museum gives a detailed history of Wells Fargo when the name suggested stage-coaches rather than ATMS. There’s a historically accurate reproduction of an agent’s office, an original Concord Coach, and other historical displays. Open Monday through Friday, from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 a.m. Admission is free. 213-253-7166. 333 S. Grand Street, L.A. CA.


FREE WESTERNS ON YOUR COMPUTER AT HULU


A staggering number of western TV episodes and movies are available, entirely free, for viewing on your computer at HULU. You do have to sit through the commercials, but that seems like a small price to pay. The series available -- often several entire seasons to choose from -- include THE RIFLEMAN, THE CISCO KID, THE LONE RANGER, BAT MASTERSON, THE BIG VALLEY, ALIAS SMITH AND JONES, and one I missed from 2003 called PEACEMAKERS starring Tom Berenger. Because they are linked up with the TV LAND website, you can also see BONANZA and GUNSMOKE episodes, but only the ones that are running on the network that week.

The features include a dozen Zane Grey adaptations, and many or most of the others are public domain features. To visit HULU on their western page, CLICK HERE.

BONANZA and BIG VALLEY

Every weekday, TV LAND airs a three-hour block of BONANZA episodes from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. They've stopped running GUNSMOKE.  INSP is showing THE BIG VALLEY every weekday at noon, one p.m. and nine p.m., and Saturdays at 6 p.m., and have just added DR. QUINN, MEDICINE WOMAN to their schedule.

NEED YOUR BLACK & WHITE TV FIX?

Check out your cable system for WHT, which stands for World Harvest Television. It's a religious network that runs a lot of good western programming. Your times may vary, depending on where you live, but weekdays in Los Angeles they run DANIEL BOONE at 1:00 p.m., and two episodes of THE RIFLEMAN from 2:00 to 3:00 p.m.. On Saturdays at 2:00 p.m. it's THE RIFLEMAN again, followed at 2:30 by BAT MASTERSON. And unlike many stations in the re-run business, they run the shows in the original airing order. There's an afternoon movie on weekdays at noon, often a western, and they show western films on the weekend, but the schedule is sporadic. 

AMC has been airing a block of THE RIFLEMAN episodes early Saturday mornings, usually followed by Western features.

And RFD-TV is currently showing THE ROY ROGERS SHOW at 9:30 Sunday morning, repeated several times a week, and a Roy feature as well -- check your local listings.

That's about all for now!

Hope you had a great Thanksgiving.

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright November 2011 by Henry C. Parke -- All Rights Reserved

Friday, February 19, 2010

ANOTHER COMIC-BOOK WESTERN




IN PRODUCTION:

JONAH HEX SET FOR JUNE 18, 2010 RELEASE


Nobody's seen a frame of film, but the action figures were already a hit at the Comic-Con. And speaking of action figures, Megan Fox, as Leila (seen below in what is being euphamistically called her saloon-girl outfit), is currently billed above Josh Brolin, who plays the title character, a face-scarred bounty hunter on the trail of a voodoo-er planning to liberate the South with an army of the undead. Based on the long-running comic book, the film also stars John Malkovich, Will Arnet, and Aidan Quinn as President McKinley.
The director is Jimmy Hayward, the writers are Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor.

TRUE GRIT - CAMERAS ROLL ON MARCH 8
No coincidence that it's the day after the Academy Awards. The Coen brothers are hopeful that Jeff Bridges will win an Oscar for Crazy Heart, which would put him in a good mood for playing Rooster Cogburn.

BIG VALLEY - SUSAN SARANDON IN TALKS
The Oscar-winning actress is interested in following in the boot-steps of Barbara Stanwyck, who played Victoria Barkley in series which ran on ABC from 1965 - 1969. The feature will be produced by Katy Edelman Johnson, whose father, Louis F. Edelman, co-created the series with A.I. Bezzerides. Daniel Adams, who penned the screenplay, and is Johnson's producing partner, will direct.

THE LONE RANGER - STILL JUST TONTO, BUT WITH NEW SCRIBE
The Jerry Bruckheimer project, with Johnny Depp on board as Tonto, still lacks a masked man, but it's got a new writer. Justin Haythe, who wrote The Clearing and Revolutionary Road, takes over the reins from Pirates of the Caribbean scripters Terry Rossio and Ted Elliot.

GUNSMOKE RE-LOAD IN THE WORKS
CBS Films, reportedly pleased with Gregory Poirer's draft of a Gunsmoke feature (he previously wrote National Treasure: Book of Secrets) is looking at Brad Pitt as a possible Marshall Matt Dillon, and Ryan Reynolds is also in the running. Pitt may have the edge, having starred in a western, The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.

PARAMOUNT SNAPS UP DOC HOLLIDAY SPEC
According to Variety, Chad St. John's script, The Further Adventures of Doc Holliday,will be produced by Transformers/G.I. Joe vet Lorenzo di Bonaventura. The aim is to make a history-based western tentpole.

TARANTINO WANTS TO MAKE A SOUTHERN WESTERN
It's well-known that the Inglourious Basterds director has been toying with doing a western for some time, but he recently got specific in a chat with the New York Daily News. "I'd like to do a western. But rather than set it in Texas, have it in slavery times. With that subject that everybody is afraid to deal with. Let's shine that light on ourselves. You could do a ponderous history lesson of slaves escaping on the Underground Railway. Or you could make a movie that would be exciting. Do it as an adventure. A spaghetti western that takes place at that time. And I would call it 'A Southern.'"

LIVE EVENTS:

THE VIRGINIAN REUNION IN TENNESSEE


Saturday Feb. 27th -- The 10th Annual Saddle Up festival in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee will feature a reunion of stars from the NBC series which ran from 1962 to 1970. James Drury, Gary Clarke, Roberta Shore and Randy Boone will meet up for a three hour event that will include clip screening, Q&As and autographs. Not coincidentally, the event coincides with the release of the first season of The Virginian on DVD, which will be available for sale at the event, but otherwise not until late May. At a time when most series were thirty or sixty minutes, The Virginian was unusual: it's 90 minute time slot gave a chance for greater depth of plot, making each episode a small movie. For further information, click here.

SPAGHETTI WESTERNS FREE ON-LINE
The next time you're working hard at the lap-top, and get a sudden urge to see some Italian cowboy action, click here, and you'll be brought to the AMC B-Movie Classics site, where, with a simple click of the mouse, you can see Dynamite Joe (1968) or The Ruthless Four (1968). I haven't seen either movie yet myself, but Ruthless Four, which claims to be "In The Tradition of Treasure of the Sierra Madre," stars Van Heflin, Gilbert Roland and German western star Klaus Kinski, so it's certainly worth a peek. Incidentally, there are a number of other movies in various genres at the site.

ON THE TUBE

WESTERN MOVIES ON TV
Note:AMC=American Movie Classics, EXT= Showtime Extreme, FMC=Fox Movie Channel, TCM=Turner Classic Movies. All times given are Pacific Standard Time.

Monday Feb. 22nd
AMC 2:00 a.m. Dances with Wolves (1990) Actor Kevin Costner's directorial debut won him an Oscar, and there were seven more: best picture; Dean Semler for cinematography; Neil Travis for editing; John Barry for his score; Michael Blake for his adapted screenplay; and Russell Williams III, Jeffrey Perkins, Bill W. Benton and Gregory H. Watkins for sound. Starring Costner as an army officer who befriends the Lakota Souix. With Mary McDonnel.
AMC 1:00 p.m. Dances With Wolves (1990) See above.

Tuesday Feb.23rd
TCM 5:00 p.m. Ruggles Of Red Gap (1935) Comedy pro Leo McCarey directed this 3rd version of Harry Leon Wilson's novel, with a script by Walter DeLeon and Harlan Thompson. Charles Laughton, in a delightful comic turn lays the gentleman's gentleman imported from England to give a western family some class. With Charley Ruggles, Mary Boland and Zasu Pitts.

Wednesday Feb. 24th
TCM 11:00 a.m. Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948) John Huston directed from his own screenplay, based on novel by the elusive B. Traven. Humphrey Bogart, Walter Huston (Academy Award perfoemance) and Tim Holt go gold prospecting in the Mexican Sierras. For my money, one of the best movies of any genre ever made. With Bruce Bennett, and with Barton MacLane in one of the most realistic bar-brawls ever filmed. Look for John Huston himself as the frequent victim of a panhandler, and little Robert Blake as the kid with the lottery tickets. "Badges?! I don't got to cho you no badges! We don't need no stinkin' badges!"
TCM 1:15 p.m. Duel In The Sun (1946) Directed by King Vidor, producer David O. Selznick wrote his own screenplay from the Niven Bush novel about a half-breed Jennifer Jones who comes between two brothers. With Gregory Peck and Joseph Cotten.

Thursday Feb.25th
FMC 8:00 a.m. Drums Along The Mowhawk (1939) John Ford directed with gusto from the Lamar Trotti, Sonya Levian script, based on the Walter D. Edmonds novel. Claudette Colbert and Henry Fonda star in one of the finest of 'eastern' westerns, a Revoltionary War story packed with Ford stock company greats like John Carradine, Arthur Shields and Ward Bond. In a more normal year, it might have been named Best Picture, but in 1939 it received only two Oscar nominations, for Edna Mae Oliver's comic turn as Best Supporting Actress, and for Ray Rennahan and Bert Glennon's glorious Technicolor photography -- and it won neither. Highly recommended.
TCM 9:45 a.m. General Spanky (1936) Though not the best of Our Gang's work, it ceratinly is a novelty, and the only Our Gang feature (I don't count the two from the 1940s, with replacement kids). Gordon Douglas and Fred C. Newmeyer direct from a script by Richard Flournoy, John Guedel, Carl Harbaugh and Hal Yates. Spanky MacFarland, along with Buckwheat Thomas and Alfalfa Switzer, fight the Civil War.
FMC 10:00 a.m. Flaming Star (1960) An early film from the soon-to-be-great Don Siegal, working from Nunnally Johnson's script of a Clair Huffaker novel. Elvis Presley, playing a role planned for Marlon Brando, is the half-breed son of white John McIntire and Kiowa Dolores Del Rio, forced to take sides in a local war between white and Indian. Surprisingly good, you realize how good an actor Elvis could have been if Col. Parker hadn't steered him into mostly inane crap. With Steve Forrest and Barbara Eden.
TCM 7:00 p.m. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962) The finest of John Ford's later films, and his last great film with John Wayne. James Warner Bellah and Willis Goldbeck adapted Dorothy M. Johnson's story, told in flasback, about a Senator (James Stewart) whose career turns on the fact that he shot outlaw Liberty Valance (Lee Marvin).

Friday Feb. 26
EXT 2:30 a.m. Sukiyaki Western Django (2007) Directed by Takashi Miike, co-written with Masa Nakamura, the filmmakers try to transplant every spaghetti western cliche' into one pseudo Samurai epic. Strikingly shot and edited, but after an hour of identifying the homages, I did a lot of fast-forwarding. Starring Hideaki Ito and Masanobu Ando, with Quentin Tarantino popping up at the start and finish to tell you the story.

Saturday Feb. 27
TCM 2:00 a.m. The Reivers (1969) Charming, easy-going turn-of-the-century tale of Steve McQueen, Rupert Cross, and Mitch Vogel's adventures in a stolen car. Sharon Farrell is at her most radiant, and B-western fans will appreciate the cameo by Roy Barcroft as the judge. Written by the Oscar-winning wife and husband team of Harriet Frank Jr, and Irving Ravetch, from William Faulkner's novel. Directed by Mark Rydell.
TCM 4:00 a.m. Tom Sawyer (1973) Disney tunesmiths Robert and Richard Sherman wrote the screenplay as well as the songs for this musical adaptation of Mark Twain's novel. With Johnny Whitaker as Tom and Jodie Foster as Becky Thatcher. Directed by Don Taylor.
AMC 6:30 a.m. Stagecoach (1966) No, not that one, it's the pointless remake. Gordon Douglas directs with flair as always, and Joseph Landon's adaptation of Dudley Nichols 1939 screenplay, from the Ernest Haycox story is fine. But even with good actors like Alex Cord, Ann-Margaret, Bing Crosby and Red Buttons, could they possibly think they were improving on the John Ford version? Yes, because this one would be in color, and in tghe 1960s, that meant everything.
AMC 9:00 a.m. The War Wagon (1967) You've got John Wayne, Kirk Douglas, and an armored coach packed and gold and protected by a Gatling gun. What more do you need to know? Great fun, directed by Burt Kennedy, written by Clair Huffaker, featuring Bruce Dern and Bruce Cabot.
AMC 11:30 a.m. Silverado (1985) Larry Kasdan directs from a script he wrote with his brother Mark. Lots of good stuff in it, but at 133 minutes, it's at least a half hour too long. Starring Kevin Kline, Scott Glenn and Kevin Costner.
AMC 11:00 p.m. Silverado (1985) See above.

Sunday Feb.28
AMC 2:00 a.m. Backlash (1956) Director John Sturges is at the top of his powers in this western mystery scripted by Borden Chase from the Frank Gruber novel, starring Richard Widmark and Donna Reed.
AMC 4:00 a.m. The War Wagon (1967) You've got John Wayne, Kirk Douglas, and an armored coach packed and gold and protected by a Gatling gun. What more do you need to know? Great fun, directed by Burt Kennedy, written by Clair Huffaker, featuring Bruce Dern and Bruce Cabot.
AMC 6:30 a.m. Silverado (1985) Larry Kasdan directs from a script he wrote with his brother Mark. Lots of good stuff in it, but at 133 minutes, it's at least a half hour too long. Starring Kevin Kline, Scott Glenn and Kevin Costner.
EXT. 9:45 a.m. Barbarosa (1982) Fred Schepisi directs from western specialist William D. Wittliff's script, about a young man falling into company with an outlaw. Stars Willie Nelson, Gary Busey, Isela Vega and the great Gilbert Roland.
FMC 11:15 a.m. Rio Conchos (1964) D: Gordon Douglas, W:Joseph Landon and Clair Huffaker. Stars Richard Boone, Stuary Whitman, Anthony Franciosa.
FMC 3:30 p.m. - The Undefeated (1969) D:Andrew V. McLaglen, W:James Lee Barrett, from a story by Stanley Hough. At the close of the Civil War, Confederate officer Rock Hudson leads a group of southern loyalists to Mexico and Emperor Maximillian -- unless John Wayne can stop him. Rock Hudson later described the movies as "crap." Ironic, considering it's one of his more convincing performances. With Ben Johnson and Harry Carey Jr.

That's it for this week! Again, if you attend any events we discuss here, let's have some feedback -- click on the 'comments' thing below. Or e-mail me at swansongmail@sbcglobal.net. And I need your suggestions -- there's got to be a lot of western happenings around the globe that we don't know about, so fill us in. Next week we'll feature an interview with spaghetti western star Robert Woods!

Adios!
Henry