Showing posts with label Harrison Ford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harrison Ford. Show all posts

Monday, February 24, 2020

‘CALL OF THE WILD’, ‘BEN HALL’ KICKSTARTER, ‘TCM FEST’, ‘WESTERN PORTRAITS’ SIGNING & INTERVIEW – AND IT’S THE ROUND-UP’S 10TH ANNI!




UPDATED TCM FEST INFO! 
‘CALL OF THE WILD’ Reviewed



Over the years, Jack London’s brilliant, ground-breaking novel about a dog kidnapped and forced to pull sleds during the Yukon Gold Rush has been filmed many times. The chief human role of John Thornton has been portrayed by a remarkably fine collection of actors, starting in 1923 with silent star Jack Mulhall, followed by Rutger Hauer, Charlton Heston, Nick Mancuso, and my personal favorite, Clark Gable, in William Wellman’s 1935 version, co-starring Buck, the St. Bernard offspring of Buster Keaton’s remarkable pooch. 

The problem has always been that while the book is about the dog, the films have always been about the humans, the filmmakers never figuring out how to direct a dog through a performance that would carry the story.  Ironically, director Chris Sanders has scaled that mountain in the same way Willis O’Brien humanized an ape in 1933’s King Kong: with animation. The difference here, of course, is that instead of stop-motion, the magic is done through CGI.


Harrison Ford meets Buck


Sanders has succeeded remarkably. While a first-time director of live action, as a writer he scripted Mulan, and created Lilo & Stitch, How to Train Your Dragon, and The Croods. He directed the last three, and was thrice Oscar-nominated for Best Animated Feature.  Screenwriter Michael Green (Murder on the Orient Express, Blade Runner 2049) has preserved and polished the most important elements of the story, made a few PC changes, and softened elements for a younger audience, but maintained the integrity and purpose of the tale. There are few if any deaths of me or dogs onscreen, but you’ll notice who doesn’t return. And they’ve preserved included Buck’s gradual drawing away from humans and their civilization.


Buck -- not bad for a CGI pooch!


Harrison Ford has the confidence and presence to play John Thornton without the human interaction his predecessors in the role had, perfectly involving when alone, or with the dog as his only companion.  Of special note is Terry Notary, who played the role of Buck, although his image is, of course, entirely removed, and the glorious cinematography by two-time Oscar winner for Schindler’s List and Saving Private Ryan, Janusz Kaminski. There are literally so many hundreds of people involved in animating Buck that I don’t know where to start giving credit. Call of the Wild is that rarity, a fine family film, with nothing patronizing meant by that label.

COMING ATTRACTIONS -- EVENTS THIS WEEK OR SOON AFTER!

‘THE HISTORY OF PARAMOUNT RANCH’ THIS THURSDAY!


Paramount Ranch in Wyatt Earp's Revenge


On Thursday, February 27th, 7 p.m. at the New Life Church, 10650 Reseda Boulevard, Porter Ranch 91326, The San Fernando Valley Historical Society presents Mike Malone. Mike spent the last 16 years of his Park Ranger career at the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Center, home of the Paramount Ranch. He’s spent years researching the extensive film history of the area, and will give a PowerPoint presentation incorporating his extensive photo collection. 
The event is free, but contributions are welcome.

The ranch, once one of the busiest filming locales in California, celebrated it’s 90th anniversary in 2017, and tragically burned to the ground in 2018, a victim of the Woolsey Fire. It is set to begin rebuilding this year. The Ranch’s history is as convoluted as it is long, and should make a fascinating presentation. Just to give you a teaser, after the original Paramount Ranch fell into ill repair and disuse, the Hertz family from back east bought a large section of RKO’s Western Town in the San Fernando Valley and hauled it to the Paramount Ranch location. And when that one wore out, it was rebuilt by the producers of DR. QUINN, MEDICINE WOMAN. 


‘TRAFFIC IN SOULS’ FRIDAY AT THE EGYPTIAN!



On Friday, February 28th, at 7:30 pm, Retroformat presents the biggest hit of 1913, the first feature released by Universal Pictures, TRAFFIC IN SOULS – OR WHILE NEW YORK SLEEPS, a dramatic exposé of the white slave trade, presented with a live accompaniment by Retroformat Musical Director Cliff Retallick. Also on the two hour program, two Mack Swain comedies, Ambrose’s First Falsehood (1914) and Willful Ambrose (1915). Ticketshttps://fandan.co/2um98Iu


ARCHAEOLOGY WEEKEND FEB. 29 – MAR. 1 AT BORREGO SPRINGS

Colorado Desert Archaeology Society and Anza-Borrego Desert State Park present pottery-making demonstrations, Native American crafts displays, tours of the Archaeology Lab, and field trips. Learn more at www.anzaborregoarcheao.org

‘WESTERN PORTRAITS’ SIGNING MARCH 6 AT BOOK SOUP



On Friday, March 6th, at 7 p.m., at Book Soup in West Hollywood, Steve Carver and C. Courtney Joyner will be joined by several of their book’s subjects, including Bo Svenson (“Kill Bill”), Jeff Kober (“The Walking Dead”) and L. Q. Jones (“The Wild Bunch”), for a panel discussion, moderated by Film historian Stephen B. Armstrong.  Copies of “Western Portraits: The Unsung Heroes & Villains of the Silver Screen” will be available for purchase and signing.  Book Soup is located at 8818 Sunset Boulevard in West Hollywood, 90069.  My interview with Courtney is later in this column.

KICKSTARTER CAMPAIGN FOR ‘LEGEND OF BEN HALL’ DIRECTOR’S CUT



If you’ve been reading The Round-up, or my articles in True West, for a while, you’re probably familiar with Australian filmmaker Matthew Holmes, and his film The Legend of Ben Hall, the true story of the legendary bushranger – highwayman to us Yanks -- which True West named Best Foreign Western Movie for 2016.  (If you’d like to refresh your memory, you can read my first Round-up piece HERE, and my True West article HERE.)

Last week I spoke to Matthew about his new Kickstarter campaign to produce a Director’s Cut of Ben Hall, which would add more than an hour of scenes that he was required to cut for the theatrical release. As of this writing, 132 backers have contributed over $26,000 Australian of the $90,000 Australian (about $59,482 U.S.) goal. You can check on their progress – or better still, become a backer – by clicking this LINK.

Q: The released version of Legend of Ben Hall runs a little over two hours. How much longer will it be with the added material?

A: The Director’s Cut will boast an additional 60 minutes at least. We anticipate the running time will fall between 180 – 200 minutes. It’s going to be quite a different experience for the audience compared to the Theatrical Cut, not just in length, but in tone as well. It’s a darker version of the story. I’m planning the Director’s Cut to be a more sensory film experience.

Q: Will the added footage be additional scenes, or will it be making the existing scenes longer?

A: Both. For the Theatrical Cut we had to reduce scenes down substantially or remove them entirely to bring the running time down. It was a painful process for me because there were so many wonderful moments and important scenes that had to be sacrificed for that reason. We have 30 new scenes to be added and at least 45 scenes that will be expanded upon.



Q: We’ve all heard stories about movies being taken away from their creators and being badly chopped. Is that the case here?

A: Not really. At no point was the film taken away from me, but there was a lot of debate between me and my editor and producers as to what should stay and what should go. But I was told I had to bring the film closer to two hours and ultimately, I had to be the one to make the hard choices. We delivered a version that was closer to 2 hours, but after watching it I truly felt we had broken the movie by removing too much. Fortunately, my producer Russell Cunningham allowed to me reinstate about 15 minutes, which was great. But even at 139 minutes, the Theatrical Cut feels rushed and limited to me. That’s because I know there’s just so many more layers to the story and characters.

Q: Which will you be adding more of, acting, or action?

A: It’s probably about 20% more action and 80% more drama. There’s a whole action sequence that had to be lifted entirely, and most of the existing action scenes will be expanded upon.  The majority of the deleted material is character-based drama, and expands the world they live in and the emotional journeys they are on. The new additions will also include a lot more historical references and nuances.

Q: Any new characters?

A: Yes. There are at least four new characters and several of the minor characters will be given more to do. It was heart-breaking to have to tell those actors that their scenes had to be dropped. One of those actors was my brother Darren who played a policeman that gets taken captive by the gang. Darren took the bad news well, knowing that’s how these things go sometimes. But we’ll both be so thrilled to have it reinstated. He did a marvelous job.

Q: As I recall, Ben Hall began with a Kickstarter campaign. Was that how you financed the original movie?

A: In 2014 I launched a Kickstarter campaign to fund an ambitious short film about Ben Hall, which was essentially the last reel of the feature. We managed to raise $40,000 above our target goal, which allowed us to get even more ambitious. The footage we created enabled us to raise some private investment to expand it into a full-length feature. ‘The Legend of Ben Hall’ would not exist if it weren’t for our generous Kickstarter pledgers back in 2014. Now 6 years later, I just hope they are willing to go on one last ride with me.


Jack Martin as Ben Hall, left. Director Holmes with backwards cap.



Q: There are a lot of choices of benefits to claim, depending on the level of pledge. If you were contributing, which option would you select?

A: I always try to make Kickstarter rewards as generous as possible because ultimately, I’m not asking for charity. Pledgers are essentially pre-buying this Director’s Cut, which in turn allows me to go make it for them. So it’s an absolute win-win for everyone and we all get want we want. That’s the beauty of crowd-funding, when it’s done correctly. I would probably pick the $250 pledge for the Blu-Ray and Book - because I’m a struggling filmmaker I couldn’t afford a higher pledge than that!

Q: I notice one of the options is to be a featured extra. Does that mean that you’re going back to camera? What did you miss the first time?

A: Yes, we are absolutely doing some more filming. For the Theatrical Cut, we used some deleted scenes footage to create a montage because we ran out of time and money to film the dedicated shots we planned for that montage. So when we restore those deleted scenes back into the movie, that will create some gaps that need filling. So it means we can offer people the experience of being on a film set, meeting the actors and they get to feature within this Director’s Cut.
What’s even more exciting: if we over-finance the Kickstarter by $10,000 or more – that will afford us the chance to shoot some bonus scenes that were in the original screenplay but were removed before filming began. In short, we can make this Director’s Cut even better if we get enough people pledging toward it. It really is up to the fans as to how epic this Director’s Cut will be.

Q: If you don’t reach your goal of $90,000 Australian, what happens to the money?

A: When someone makes a pledge on Kickstarter, no money is removed from their account unless we reach the target amount. It’s all or nothing. So people can safely make a pledge at anytime knowing that their money is not withdrawn until the end of the campaign - and only withdrawn if the campaign is successful.  If we don’t reach our minimum target by March 29th, then no money ever comes out… but the Director’s Cut will never happen. That would be such a tragedy because all this amazing footage is sitting on my hard drives waiting to see the light of day.
Cinematic glimpses into Australia’s Wild West are so rare, so for audiences to miss out on the wealth of material we shot would be very unfortunate. We really want to make this extended edition not only for the fans, but the rest of the world, because it’s going to be a much richer movie experience.
‘The Legend of Ben Hall’ has been a big seller in the home entertainment market the United States, even more-so than in Australia. So I would urge our American fans to make a pledge toward this Director’s Cut so they can discover the story the way we originally set out to tell it.
Personally, I won’t ever at feel at rest until this version of the film is completed. The Ben Hall story has been burning in me since 2007, and that passion for this story is not easily extinguished.  So I live in hope that the fans will support me in completing this journey I started 13 years ago. In return, I promise to deliver the most epic Ben Hall movie I can manage!


Jamie Coffa takes aim.


Q: What about your next project. Do you have anything going?

A: Aside from this Ben Hall Director’s Cut campaign, I have a low budget horror film called ‘BlackJack’ that I’m chasing finance for. Horror is a new genre for me, but its one I’m looking forward to working in.
I also have a script entitled ‘The Legend of Frank Gardiner’ that is a prequel to ‘The Legend of Ben Hall’. It’s slowly gathering some interest in the USA. The film chronicles the rise and fall of Ben Hall’s friend and criminal mentor Frank Gardiner and will feature the true account of largest gold robbery in the British Empire at that time. Many actors from the first film will be reprising their roles such as Jack Martin (Ben Hall) and Jamie Coffa (John Gilbert). It will be very exciting if that happens, because the US will finally discover just how wild Australia’s ‘wild west’ period really was!

TCM CLASSIC FILM FESTIVAL – APRIL 16-19!


The Hollywood American Legion Post
is TCM's newest venue

For the eleventh year in a row, for four days in April, Turner Classic Movies will once again take over Hollywood!  This is my one can’t-miss film festival, an unbelievable embarrassment of cinema riches, with so many wonderful films shown on big screens in wonderful venues. The films are always introduced by someone knowledgeable, often by someone involved in its making – stars, directors, writers, special effects people. 

This year’s theme is Grand Illusions: Fantastic Worlds On Film.   Among the venues you’ll be dashing between are two of Sid Grauman’s classic palaces, The Chinese Theatre – now an IMAX – and The Egyptian Theatre, as well as The Chinese 6 Multiplex, poolside at The Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, and the newest addition, the beautifully restored Legion Theatre at Post 43, in Hollywood’s American Legion Post.

The list of films to be featured is still growing, and at the moment there are no Westerns on it, but they have never ignored our genre before, and I’d be shocked if they did so now. The festival will open at The Chinese with a 35th anniversary screening of Back To The Future, to be attended by stars Michael J. Fox. Other events include presenting the 3rd Annual Robert Osborne Award to film critic and historian Leonard Maltin. And the delightful Lilly Tomlin will be immortalizing her hand- and foot-prints in cement at the Chinese Theatre.  Among the guests attending the festival – with more to be added – are Bruce Dern, Piper Laurie, and animator Floyd Norman.

Last year’s Festival featured a varied line-up, the high points including a double-feature of rarely seen Tom Mix Westerns, THE GREAT K&A TRAIN ROBBERY, and OUTLAWS OF RED RIVER. As New York Museum of Modern Art Film Curator Anne Morra explained, these films were ‘lost’ in the United States, until copies were given to MoMA in the 1970s from the Czech Film Archive in Prague. They were presented with a live musical score by famed Silent Film Organist Ben Model.  At the premiere of the restoration of WINCHESTER 73, author Jeremy Arnold revealed that director Anthony Mann, who would go on to his greatest fame in collaboration with James Stewart, was a last-minute replacement for Fritz Lang, and that Stewart only agreed to do the film so that the studio would also make HARVEY. Paramount now owns the Republic library, and Paramount Pictures Archivist Andrea Kalas presented a very entertaining programs of cliffhanger chapters called WHAT’S NOT TO LOVE ABOUT REPUBLIC SERIALS? Other screenings included BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID introduced by its Oscar-winning composer Burt Bacharach, Shirley Temple in THE LITTLE COLONEL, SERGEANT YORK introduced two of the real Sgt. York’s sons, and GONE WITH THE WIND on closing night. I particularly enjoyed seeing CITY SLICKERS star Billy Crystal get his prints in cement in the Chinese Theatre ceremony.


Billy Crystal at his footprint ceremony

While this years’ Festival doesn’t list any Westerns yet, only 28 films have been announced thus far, and I’ll be checking daily, and updating the information in The Round-up. Among the non-Westerns of note on the list are COMING HOME, with star Bruce Dern; DINNER AT EIGHT; HARVEY; THE HUSTLER, with star Piper Laurie; JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS; LOST HORIZON; SOMEWHERE IN TIME; and THE TIME MACHINE.
UPDATED 3-5-2020 


The first Western has been added to the schedule, the 1954 Musical Western '7 BRIDES FOR 7 BROTHERS', directed by Stanley Donen. Stars Russ Tamblyn and Ruta Lee will attend!

Festival passes run the gamut from $349 to $2449, but happily there are individual movie tickets available for $20 apiece for remaining seats, although the most popular movies do fill up. Make sure you arrive at least a half-hour early.  You can learn more at the official TCM Festival website HERE.


‘WESTERN PORTRAITS’ – A TALK WITH ESSAYIST C. COURTNEY JOYNER


C. Courtney Joyner, photographed by Steve Carver


When novelist, screenwriter and film director C. Courtney Joyner agreed to write an essay for each portrait in Steve Carver’s Western Portraits – The Unsung Heroes & Villains of the Silver Screen, it’s safe to say he didn’t know what he was getting into: there would be more than eighty articles.  But the author of Nemo Rising and the Shotgun Western series was more than up to the task.  And the book, a big Christmas-time seller, quickly sold out its 1st printing. (You can read my interview with Steve Carver HERE)  

I spoke with Courtney about Unsung Heroes a few months ago, so some of the future events he mentions towards the end have already come to pass.

HENRY: How did you first get involved with Western Portraits: The Unsung Heroes and Villains of the Silver Screen?

COURTNEY:  Well, I've known Steve Carver since the 80s, and L.Q. Jones is the one that introduced us. I wrote a screenplay Steve was going to direct, Cynthia Rothrock was going to star in it with David Carradine, Christopher Lee was going to be in it, and then the financing didn't come through. Later I was asked to come in on a picture Steve was doing at Cannon, to do some revisions on things. So, we’d had a long-standing relationship.  And years ago when Steve had a studio in Venice, he showed me portraits he'd taken of Brian Keith and a few others, and they were wonderful. But the project really didn't have any form yet.  And then a couple of years ago, out of the blue, he called me because he'd been talking to (director) Mark L. Lester (Commando, Class of 1999). Mark sends me a little note that Steve Carver is going to call you about this book about Westerns that he wants to do. We got together, we went over to House of Pies, and Steve was there with Indiana, his beautiful Australian Shepherd. And he told me and how many people he'd photographed, and that he really wanted to turn this into a book, but with accompanying essays. So that was really the start of it. But he was pretty far along with the photography and honestly Henry, I think one of the reasons that he wanted to push forward on the book project was that a number of the people he photographed had died, and these would be their last images. And they were beautiful. He showed me that portrait of Denver Pyle and, you know, it still haunts me. I mean, it's absolutely incredible. I think it was taken 10 days before he died.

HENRY : How long have you been involved with Steve on this project ?

COURTNEY:  Three and a half years.

HENRY: What appeals to you about the project? What's special about the photography?

COURTNEY:  Well, he got very interested in photography from the Old West, particularly Edward Curtis, who used to do the portraits of all the tribal chiefs.  Steve decided to approach this the way those photographers approached their work, with the same technical limitations. That was what was so interesting about this. Even when it was digital photography, it was going to be printed in the old way. And the exposure was going to be, you know, between 15 and 18 seconds; all these things that were the truth in 1885. Obviously, technology and photography is much different now. But that was his approach and it comes through, because here you have people in period costume, and the process of taking the photograph itself was also appropriate for the time period, as if your portrait of Bo Hopkins was literally taken on the trail in the 1880s.

HENRY: And because the exposures were so long you've just got a tremendous amount of detail that you don't get now.

COURTNEY: Yes. But it also was a strain, because in older photographs you'll notice if it's not like a candid, and sometimes there's blurring. That's because the person's moving while the shutter is still open. Especially some of our older people, like (87 year old) Edward Faulkner, staying in those lights, keeping your eyes open for that length of time, wow, that was difficult.


Edward Faulkner


HENRY: You can't smile.

COURTNEY: There are absolutely no smiles.

HENRY: What were your duties on this project besides the writing?

COURTNEY:  Steve asked me who among the actors I knew might be interested in participating. We wanted people who had some sort of a pedigree with westerns obviously. So I called Clu Gulager, I called Tim Thomerson, folks that we knew and were friends with, and they came on board and they're all represented very well in the book. And when people were enthusiastic and wanted to do it, like Robert Forster for example was an old friend of Steve's.  Rob Word brought in some folks like Bruce Boxleitner, and that was so great. I was not there for every photography session; I was there probably for 10 or 15 of them. But there are 85 subjects in the book.  Steve wanted more women represented, and we got some terrific ones: Jacqueline Scott, Rosemary Forsyth, Stephanie Powers. That was really cool. Jackie Scott, she's just a pistol. When I did my sit-down with her, she was so funny.  She started talking about the fact that she did all these westerns, and she cannot ride a horse. Every time they put her in a Western, she said for God's sake don't put me on a horse!


Jacqueline Scott


HENRY: In your essays you talked to many of your subjects about favorite directors.

COURTNEY: We have actors who are associated with one particular director, like Bruce Davison talks all about his experience with Robert Aldrich. Bo Hopkins, L.Q. (Jones) of course they talk about Sam Peckinpah. L.Q. also talks about Raul Walsh. Jackie Scott talks about Don Siegel, and Johnny Crawford talks about Howard Hawks. So, all these iconic filmmakers are in there, and there are a couple of really big behind-the-scene boys are included too, including Robert Evans.


Johnny Crawford


HENRY:  Ah, The Fiend Who Walked the West.

COURTNEY: (Producer) Gray Frederickson is an old friend of Steve Carver's. I was not there when they did his session, but I had to do the interview with him. And I told him, look, I am going to burst into tears in the middle of this interview. And he's like, why? I said, because you are responsible for three of the greatest films in the history of American cinema: The Godfather, The Godfather 2, and Apocalypse Now. Of course, he was the original producer of Unforgiven (1992) and he was the unit manager on The Good, The Bad, The Ugly. He talked all about that. Mark Richmond was discovered by William Wyler, so he talks about that.

HENRY: How many interviews did you conduct?

COURTNEY:  Eighty, eighty-three. When I started, a lot of the subjects were some were already deceased, but many people have unfortunately passed away since we did the sessions. Like Dick Miller, for example; Bob Forster. But I had already sat down with them, and I knew Bob, and Dick. That was great. We got Dick really towards the end, and he had had the autobiography come out the movie, and a very nice book about him, but he was terrific. No one had talked to him about doing Gunsmoke and all that stuff in probably 50 years because they all want to talk about Little Shop of Horrors. All the Roger Corman films.  And that was really great because he goes, “God, I’ve got to think; wait a minute.” And then he just would reel off these terrific anecdotes and these stories. And it was like finding this vein of gold when you were talking to him, because again, this had been shuttled away in memory and nobody had touched it for so long.
HENRY: It was not a rehearsed story.

COURTNEY: Exactly. And that was also something that was consistent, even with folks who weren't necessarily associated with Westerns. Like Fred Dryer for example doesn't really have an association with Western movies, because he hadn't done anything along those lines. But we got one of the best essays about Fred, because what he wanted to talk about, and it was wonderful, was growing up in the era of Hopalong Cassidy and Roy Rogers and Gene Autry. Growing up in California, having access to horses. And it was the impact of these Western heroes/Cowboys on his growing up. He attributes his wanting to excel in athletics because of his interest in Jay Silverheels, and things like that. So that was where our conversation took us. It was a different slant.


Fred Dryer


HENRY: It's a link that you would never have guessed was there.
COURTNEY: Exactly.

HENRY: Which were your favorite interviews?

COURTNEY: George Hamilton was probably my favorite interview. He was great, and just so interesting. He loved doing westerns, and he was so entranced with the equestrian lifestyle and being out on location. But he talked very frankly about why he is not in How the West Was Won when he was under contract MGM, when that movie was being made. So you'll have to buy the book to read that story. But, but he also talked about being a young contract player at MGM, who at the time was engaged to the daughter of the President of the United States (he was engaged to LBJ’s daughter, Lynda Bird Johnson).

HENRY: Pretty cool.

COURTNEY:  And he was considered just this fan magazine boy by a lot of these old veterans. So guys like Richard Boone gave him a hard time and he always felt like he had to prove themselves over and over again, and it bugged him. But George said when he was just starting out, he was so glad he did one of his very first movies with Robert Mitchum. Who was fantastic, and said, “Kid, look, let me tell you how to handle this.”

HENRY: If I remember right, you really enjoyed interviewing Monte Markham.


Monte Markham

COURTNEY: Oh, Monte Markham is just the greatest guy. He was terrific. First of all, his memory is clear as a bell. There was no prompting. And because he went from being an actor to being a very successful documentary producer, and branched out into all of these other areas, he’s just a fascinating guy and also a very, very nice man, too. And Ed Faulkner; who's nicer than Ed Faulkner? (Note: Ed Faulkner has been in six movies with John Wayne) He's an old friend, so I was so glad to have him involved. Oh my God, the portrait of R.G. Armstrong is just, just incredible. And of course we did Morgan Woodward before Morgan passed. (Note: Morgan Woodward was Gunsmoke’s most frequent guest star, almost always as a villain).  And he loved that picture. Fortunately he got to see it and he just thought it was sensational.

HENRY: How do you write 83 articles about older character-actors and not have them seem too similar?

COURTNEY: By taking a different tack; like with Bill Smith (Laredo), and I’ve known Bill and Joanne for years. But what I wanted to do was to build the essay around Bill's poetry. So I did that, because I wanted just for my own creative mojo, to be breaking patterns. I didn't want every single essay to read like the ones immediately before. And fortunately, everybody's story is really different. We have people who are strictly character actors. Some who were movie stars. And a movie star perspective is going to be completely different than the perspective of the producer. 

HENRY:  What was your interview with Clu Gulager?


Clu Gulager


COURTNEY:  Oh, Clu was terrific, of course. And what he did, because he discussed the technique that Steve was going to use to take the photographs and the costuming, and really adopt a character. So Clu really went to the floor. He came in and John, his son, did this great makeup on Clu, and he became this mule skinner. I mean, he approached this like he would have a role in a movie. One thing too, one of the true unsung heroes of this thing is Rob Word. Rob stepped up so many times to help, getting folks involved with the book.  He was terrific, and his suggestions were always great. For example, Rosemary Forsyth was a one of his suggestions. She was wonderful.


Rosemary Forsyth


HENRY: Of the portraits, which are your favorites?

COURTNEY: Again, I think the Denver Pyle is just amazing. L. Q.’s is iconic. I love the R.G. Armstrong. I really liked what we did with Bruce Davison because it is his character from Ulzana's Raid brought forward to his current age. And that was just a neat visual. Stephanie Powers, she's very much a cowgirl, very equestrian. I think she looks just tremendous; she looks beautiful in her portrait. So there are a few.  You know, on Facebook a lot of the production shots had been posted a lot. Most of them, all of them. Steve's been posting have been in color.  And they're terrific, but they are nothing compared to the black and white and sepia ones. They just knock your socks off.

HENRY:  The cover with David Carradine is wonderful.

COURTNEY : And that's the thing, when you just see this stuff, and it's just like, my God, in some cases this image sums up that entire career, certainly an entire screen image, which is what Steve wanted to do. That was his intention and I think he sure achieved it.


Robert Carradine


HENRY:  What are your next projects?

COURTNEY: The next things that are coming out are more Blu-ray commentaries. The Far Country comes out in the middle of November from Arrow. And we did a really nice documentary about Anthony Mann's career at Universal. And we've got a lot of upcoming commentaries for Mill Creek, on the Lon Chaney Jr. Inner Sanctum series from Universal. And this is fun. Steve Carver, L.Q. Jones, Robert Beltran, Yoren Ben-Ami and I did a commentary on the Blu-ray release of Lone Wolf McQuade. And that should be out in December.

HENRY: Is there anything else I should have asked?

COURTNEY: I would say the one thing is that Steve built a great crew of people around him, and they did just such a terrific job. And everybody came in to help with costumes and makeup. As you said, it was really a labor of love. Everyone really wanted to turn this project into something, and at the end of the day, you have to say, well, they did.


JUST ONE MORE THING!

With today’s post, Henry’s Western Round-up begins its 11th year of publication! I know quite a few of you have been reading it since 2010, and I thank you, and all of my readers, for your continued interest and support. And please post comments – that’s how I know what’s working and what is not.

…AND THAT’S A WRAP!



In the next Round-up I’ll be reviewing INSP’s new Western, THE WARRANT, talking with TRAVELS WITH DARLEY host Darley Newman, and filling you in on what I know about Martin Scorcese’s new Western, KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON.  And by the way, did I mention that THE CW is planning a reboot of KUNG FU, but a female version?  And please check out the February/March True West, with my article, 33 American Indian Movies That Get History Right!
Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright February 2020 By Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved


Monday, August 15, 2011

DISNEY PULLS PLUG ON ‘LONE RANGER’





“What we do now, Kemosabe?”
“We wait, Tonto.”

Johnny Depp has been on board as Tonto for over two years, and Armie Hammer, late of THE SOCIAL NETWORK, was recently trumpeted as the Masked Man, but now Disney has pulled the plug on the Jerry Bruckheimer LONE RANGER project to be directed by Gore Verbinski. Verbinski’s previous collaborations with Depp and Bruckheimer include the PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN films, Disney’s most profitable franchise. The actor and directed also worked together on this year’s hugely successful ($243 million) western cartoon, RANGO.

The problem is the budget. Disney wants to spend $200 million, and while the budget had been brought down from a reported high of $275 million to $232 million, Disney says that isn’t close enough. And Disney’s concern is understandable. Currently the western of the summer, COWBOYS & ALIENS, while in the number three box office spot this weekend, behind PLANET OF THE APES and THE SMURFS, has grossed $81,476,000 domestically, with a budget of $163 million. The westerns that have done well in recent years have kept the budgets comparatively small: 3:10 TO YUMA cost $55 million, and grossed $70 million. TRUE GRIT cost $38 million and grossed $251 million.

No doubt Bruckheimer, Verbinski et al will not give up without a fight. We’ll see where it leads.

TY HARDIN INTERVIEW PART TWO:

In last week’s Round-up, Ty Hardin discussed his life, from his childhood, through his discovery by Paramount, his move to Warner Brothers, and his four years starring on BRONCO. (If you missed, go HERE) http://henryswesternroundup.blogspot.com/2011/08/bronco-layne-talks.html

Now we continue with the post-BRONCO years…

H: If you didn’t have any favorite BRONCO episodes, how about favorite movies of the period?

TY: I had a couple of pictures that I liked, PT 109, and I liked MERRIL’S MARAUDERS. I worked with Jeff Chandler. It was a good picture. It was authentic. We shot it over in Europe. We had a lot of good people in it. And we used all those tanks. We were shooting in Spain and we actually had the last Sherman Tanks in existence. And we tore up a couple of them.

H: While were doing BRONCO, you did THE CHAPMAN REPORT for George Cukor. Then after BRONCO you did P.T. 109, WALL OF NOISE, PALM SPRING WEEKEND, all in 1963. Then your next western was MAN OF THE CURSED VALLEY in 1964, which was shot in Spain.

TY: Well, what happened was Sergio Leone wanted me to do PER UN PUGNO DI DOLLARI (A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS). I could hardly understand the guy; he had hardly any English at all. And I was so busy working in Europe that I just said, “Sergio, I just don’t have time to do it.” You know, he flew me from Spain – I was working on BATTLE OF THE BULGE I think – over to Rome. We went to a theatre, sat down and watched a film that was in Japanese, with Italian subtitles, called SAMAURI. I remember a dog running down the street with a hand in his mouth: all the time I was sitting there, and that’s all that I remember. And he said, “Why don’t you do this film?” He really wanted me to do it. First of all he bypassed my agent, the top agent in Europe or anywhere, MCA. I told him, “Well, get in touch with me when you get a script.” I went back to Spain, back to work again on BATTLE OF THE BULGE. He kept persistently asking me, “When are you going to be free?” And I said, “I’ll tell you what I’ll do. I’ll give you the names of some actors that are going to be out of work.” So I gave him Clint Walker, Clint Eastwood; three or four actors that I had known. And I was sitting on the Via Veneto, kind of a hangout for the actors in Madrid, and I run into Clint Eastwood. And he says to me, “You S.O.B.! I’m down here working with Sergio Leone, nobody here speaks English, and it’s a pile of crap!” I said, “Don’t worry about it.” “Don’t worry about it? I ain’t been paid!” He was one upset character for doing it. And I could understand, because when I saw the film that Sergio wanted me to do, I couldn’t see any way in the world that it would be a western. How he could get it together. But he did. That film was released in Spain. They pulled it out, did some more shots, some re-doing on it. They kicked it into Italy, and a few other places in Europe, and suddenly it took off: it was amazing. The rest is history. And that’s how Mr. Eastwood got his game together. Looking back I’d have done the same thing over again. Plus I was working on too good films over there, all-American films; I wasn’t doing any local films. Even though I did do some after that. A couple of them. Terrible.

H: Were they recording sound live?

TY: They usually dubbed later. Because he’d be talking in Italian, and I’m talking in English. When he’d stop talking, I’d say my line. Soon as I’d finish my line, he’d talk. They were pretty good productions as a whole. But the Eastwood film was a fluke – it’s amazing how that took off. And the credit goes to Eastwood – he gave it the balls that it needed, you know? It needed that kind of strength , because the story line was nothing. You don’t remember anything – there wasn’t any love or loss or anything like that in it. It was just another beat-up Western. But Clint made the thing, himself, with his looks – and the music was dynamite. Genius. You’ve got to appreciate that; there is talent in Europe.

H: When you were doing these films where they were not recording sound, would you record your own dialog later?

TY: Oh yeah, that was in my contract. I didn’t want anyone else dubbing my voice. As far as dubbing it in Japanese and things, I didn’t have anything to do with that. But if they were going to sell in the international market, I wanted to be there to do it. You see, Americans coveted their own market, and it wasn’t easy for these films to get in. I knew they didn’t have a chance in the American market. I didn’t give a damn; I was just having a ball, running around the country and making forty or fifty thousands dollars I could just put in the bank, and it’s like having three hundred, three hundred fifty-thousand in the States.

H: So were you living in Europe at this point?

TY: Oh yuh, I was living mainly in Madrid. I like Madrid, and I had three bars on the coast of Spain – so I’d put in a big investment. I had one in Malaga, one in Touremolinos, and another one in between. So I ran my business down there at the same time. I had a pretty good life: I married Miss Universe!

H: How did you enjoy doing BATTLE OF THE BULGE?

TY: Any time American films came to Spain, any time ‘runaway’ films came, I was in it. And I enjoyed working with Robert Shaw. He was a good, solid actor, and BATTLE OF THE BULGE was a good show, a good picture.

H: You went to Argentina in 1966 to do SAVAGE PAMPAS with two of my favorite actors, Robert Taylor and Marc Lawrence. What was that like?

TY: (laughs) Don’t remember a lot about it, I really don’t. The problem in the industry is, you don’t need to be on the set until they need you. So I don’t know really what’s going on. I don’t think the film turned out really that good. But it was a very good experience for me. You work with these people, but you don’t get to know them. As soon as it’s ‘Cut!’ ‘Print!’, they’re off the set. And they don’t sit around and gab with pissant actors like me. (laughs)

H: Continuing with your globetrotting, you did DEATH ON THE RUN for Sergio Corbucci in Spain, then went to England for BERSERK. How’d you like Joan Crawford?

TY: She was a neat gal – a tough old broad and she’d been down the lane a couple of times. But this was her money, and she wanted it good. I think the problem was, there wasn’t that rapport between us that really makes it work. She was so busy working at being the director that I think her acting suffered from it. There wasn’t that sensitivity that her part (called for), for the problems that the circus was having – that’s just my personal opinion.

H: In 1967 you were in CUSTER OF THE WEST.

TY: Right, with Bob Shaw.

H: I was just watching that last night, and the logo is Cinerama. Was that shot in the Cinerama process, with the three cameras?

TY: Oh yuh. It was wonderful. We shot that in Spain. And all those Indians were Gypsies.

H: Really?

TY: (laughs) Yeah! We don’t have any Indians in Spain! They were all Gypsies, and they was fearless, man! They’d fall backwards off a horse, get run over and get right up! I was impressed, I really was. I couldn’t believe it, and they were so believable. Needless to say, I thought it was a pretty good film.

H: It’s a big movie. How long did it take to shoot?

TY: Took us about a month or so to shoot the thing.

H: Is that all?

TY: They’re pretty efficient. You don’t realize we’re getting seven or eight setups a day, and you have a second unit shooting your close-ups and everything. The industry has become very efficient to work with.

H: You had some excellent actors there, like Robert Shaw. What was he like?

TY: Robert’s a fun guy, I liked Robert. He was just a wonderful guy to work with .

H: How about Jeffrey Hunter, who played Benteen?


(Ty with Jeffrey Hunter in CUSTER OF THE WEST)

TY: Well Jeff and I got along real good. He’s more my type of man. Robert was just uptight all the time; he’s the same as he is in CUSTER. I was real fortunate to work with people like Lawrence Tierney. And Robert Ryan was wonderful, he really was. These are all committed actors. They’ve all been in the industry longer than I have. So I felt very humbled having them to work with.

H: Now Robert Siodmak, who directed, was born in Germany. He had a big career in the U.S., went back to Europe in the 1950s and was directing westerns in Germany before he did this one. What was he like?

TY: I felt he was a little loose. He’d sit there and…he could move the camera good, but I don’t think he knew how to deal with the people themselves. So he didn’t give you (direction). You like to get personal with your director, like to know that what you’re doing is what he’s looking for, and I didn’t get the feeling that he knew what he was doing. I don’t mean to be derogatory, but at the same time, it wasn’t like working with somebody that you had confidence in.

H: Well, what director did you work with that you had confidence in?

TY: Oh, there were a couple of directors that were really hot – they just did not like me at all, and they were my best directors; I worked with some really fine directors. You know, I’m intimidating in some respects, so a lot of lead actors did not want to work with me, so they minimized the work that I did with them. I didn’t realize that I intimidated a lot of people, not so much with my abilities, but that being an extraordinarily good-looking man, I would draw a lot of attention to myself. And I didn’t realize how involved the industry was with egomania. So some of the actors, like Robert Shaw, I had a hard time with him. Bobby was a good friend but, boy, he didn’t want to work with me. He made sure he got all his shots separate. And I didn’t realize this. I was so naïve about the industry, but when I look back I realize that there was a lot of that. And I wasn’t a part of it. I held my own, and did my own series. I did another series, RIPTIDE, right after that.

H: In Australia. How was that?

TY: It was fun. The sad part was that they couldn’t get a sale in the States. And that’s what they needed to continue on, because the budgets were pretty heavy, and we had to mail in a couple of actors from the American sector. It should have gone about four years. Because it was outdoors, it was fun, and with good writing it could have gone into other areas – drug-running and so forth.

H: Before we leave CUSTER, I read somewhere at Akira Kurasawa was supposed to direct that.

TY: That’s correct. He fouled out the first day. Something went wrong between him and…no one ever found out just what went wrong.

H: But he was actually there the first day?

TY: He was certainly hanging around. I wasn’t there, but that’s what I heard, so I’m not sure exactly what happened.

H: In 1968 you starred in KING OF AFRICA, which has been described as a South African western.

TY: That’s about right.

H: Your female lead was Pier Angeli.

TY: She was a doll. And KING was a good picture. You know what happened was, it didn’t get support. You need to have people get behind it and put money in it to make it happen. It’s not all about just shooting, it’s about what you put behind (a film) to get it exposed properly. It was quite an interesting concept, you know, and we actually shot it down among the Zulus. You should have seen those bastards pokin’ me with their swords! Those guys are tough, and they get carried away – I was scared shitless! But it was good and authentic, and the problem with a lot of that foreign stuff, again, was Americans wouldn’t let it in to the American market. Our pictures were made in Europe with European people, and the whole purpose of me being in it was the hope that we’d open the market for them. And it happened in a very special occasions, like P.T. 109, and there was a lot of American money in that too. But a lot of those films we’re talking about, there was no American money in it, and consequently there was no American distribution tied into it. So they had to go on their merits, and it wasn’t that the film wasn’t good; it was that the market wasn’t available. So needless to say, a lot of people have never seen three or four or five of my movies.

H: What about THE LAST REBEL, starring Joe Namath? That was also shot in Spain, and for a change you were playing a bad guy, a crooked sheriff.




TY: Oh, I enjoyed that; if I had my druthers I’d be doing bad guys all the time, but you can’t get away with it too often.

H: You’re just too likable.

TY: That’s it!

H: In that one you had a couple of great pros, Jack Elam and Woody Strode.

TY: Woody Strode, what a neat actor he is. He was just a good, genuine all-around man, just standing tall. I liked Woody; he was just a likable person, very perceptive, and a very good actor.

H: Joe Namath is such a likable guy, but not a great actor.

TY: Well, you said that, I didn’t. The thing is, you’ve got to have compassion. Joe’s working for himself, he visualized himself where nobody else does, so you play to that fantasy, you kind of support it, so you can embellish it a little. Joe doesn’t know he’s a bad actor, and I’m not going to tell him. So what you do, when you realize, and the director does, is you cut away as much as you can when he’s saying his lines, but you give him the reactions. So they’re able to protect him in some degree. We’ve got to protect his money. He had a big investment; otherwise you wouldn’t see Joe Namath in it.

H: After that you did a couple of spaghetti westerns I haven’t been able to find. ACQUASANTA JOE and YOU’RE JINXED, FRIEND. YOU’VE MET SACRAMENTO.

TY: I couldn’t tell you anything about them, because I was the only one talkin’ English.

H: Then in the late 1970s you were back in Hollywood doing an episode of THE QUEST, which was a western series a lot like THE SEARCHERS, with Kurt Russell and Tim Matheson. After being in Europe so long, how did it feel being back doing American TV?

TY: Well, things had changed a lot. My agent, William Morris, wanted me to do another series, but I didn’t want to. I got disenchanted with the film industry as a whole. And I just kind of walked away from it soon afterwards.

H: In 1977 you did a picture called FIRE! for an old pal of mine, Earl Bellamy. You had a great cast in that: Ernest Borgnine, Patty Duke, Vera Miles, Lloyd Nolan, Neville Brand, Gene Evans.

TY: Some real icons in the business. I’ve always enjoyed working with people of that caliber. They’re very interesting people; they’ve had a wonderful life. But they’re surprisingly introverted, you know? You have to kind of flavor up to them to get them to talk. It was almost like do your lines and walk off the set. It never got as personal as I kind of like the film industry to be. That’s one of the disenchanting things about the film industry, why I kind of walked away, said this is no fun anymore. It’s too serious. It’s all about money. Nobody’s interested in having a good time: it really did get boring.

H: You did TV episodes in the 1980s, FLYING HIGH, DAVID CASSIDY – MAN UNDERCOVER, THE LOVE BOAT. In 1988 you were back in the saddle in a remake of RED RIVER, with a lot of good people: Jim Arness, Bruce Boxleitner, Gregory Harrison. Then great pros like Guy Madison, Robert Horton, L.Q. Jones. What’s L.Q. Jones like?

TY: He’s a character, he really is. He’s got diarrhea of the mouth. Everybody likes him. He plays great character parts – he’s just a very fine actor. I think a lot of it is his personality is so good. You’re gonna like him on film, you’re gonna like him in person.

H: How’d you like Jim Arness?

TY: I like Jim. Jim has been in the business a long time, he’s a real pro. He’s Jim Arness on the screen as he is off he screen. He has that appearance, that prestige, an aura about him.

H: You were Sheriff Stone in 1990 in BORN KILLER, an escaped maniac movie. Then you did a western, BAD JIM, which toplined James Brolin and Richard Roundtree. And you’re there with Harry Carey Jr. and Rory Calhoun and Clark Gable’s son.

TY: Big cast, wasn’t it? I didn’t see it, so if you get the chance, let me know.

H: How did you like Harry Carey and Rory Calhoun?

TY: Honestly, I didn’t work with them: I’m in scenes that they’re not in.

H: Now I understand we’re going to be seeing you soon in a romantic comedy called HEAD OVER SPURS IN LOVE, where you play Col. Sanders. Do you have other upcoming stuff we should be looking for?


(Ty speaking at Republic Pictures' 75th Anniversary last year)

TY: Not that I know of. I’ve been retired for quite a while in principle. I don’t even have an agent. But it’s funny you should mention that, because I was thinking the other day that at 80 years old I look good, I feel good, I’m in good shape. What I want to do is do parts to my age; I want to do good supporting roles.

H: What are your favorite westerns, TV or movie, that you’ve been in? What was your best work?

TY: Well, I enjoyed BRONCO. Because it was all centered around being good, and revealing good over bad. I liked that, I liked the concept that we have values, and principles that we live up to. It never got romantically heavy; it avoided a great deal of that, which is often more of a distraction than an attraction. Stay away from that and direct yourself to the plot, and develop the plot. Because there’s a story to tell, and that’s what I’ve been more dedicated to than anything else.

H: What are your favorites of other people’s westerns?

TY: Well, I grew up as a kid with Bob Steele and Roy Rogers and all the others. And as a kid I loved them. And I grew up in Texas where westerns were the big thing. Johnny Mack Brown and all that. And of course going to Hollywood I never had any idea of getting in the film industry. My model was Gary Cooper. Him and John Wayne were my two people, and when I met John Wayne and he helped put me in the industry. I never met Cooper. Wait, I take that back. He was down on the set there at Warners one time. I don’t know what he was doing, but I went down to the set and watched him. And I went up to him, I said, ‘Hi Cooper,’ that kind of thing. He wasn’t very friendly to me. But those two people were I thought a great image for a kid growing up. I’ve always admired their work, and always wished I was as good as they were.

H: Aside from poker, how do you like to spend your time?

TY: Well, I’m in the process of finishing my second book. And I’ve enjoyed it, but I’m just not a good writer. I’ve been trying to find a ghost writer who would do kind of a look-over for the book, because my first one didn’t do good at all. (laughs) Mainly I think because it wasn’t legible, and the company didn’t put any money behind it. That was a big disappointment, and it took out a lot of my money, too.

H: Is there anything your fans don’t know about you that they should know?

TY: I think you should tell everyone that I am a Christian, and that I have tried to hold up those values, that I think are important to make a person feel like he is in essence a creature of God, that he is not just an animal living out of instinct. That he has a value and importance that is inherited in being a part of a belief system. We all know it’s just a belief system, but at the same time, what are we except what we believe ourselves to be? I believe there is purpose behind life, and meaning in life and I think that’s one of the great values that we are losing in our society.

HARRISON FORD SIGNS TO PLAY WYATT EARP!




The current COWBOYS & ALIENS star will portray Earp in BLACK HATS, based on the novel by Max Allan Collins. A blend of fact and fiction, in 1920s Los Angeles, 70ish Earp is working as a film technical advisor and p.i. when Doc Holliday’s widow, Big-nose Kate, approaches him for help. Seems the Doc had a son, who is now in trouble with Al Capone. Also in the mix is Bat Masterson, now sports-writing for the New York Telegraph.

The project is being produced by Thunder Road’s Basil Iwanyk and Kickstart Productions’ Jason Netter. Script is being penned by 300 co-writer Kurt Johnstad.

INSP-TV TO SHOW ‘THE BIG VALLEY’




If you’ve been missing the Barkleys, and getting impatient for the big-screen version of their stories, here’s great news -- The Inspiration Channel, found in many basic-cable plans, will begin airing the classic series THE BIG VALLEY on September 26th. Barbara Stanwyck, Linda Evans, Lee Majors, Peter Breck and Richard Long will soon be back on the air. A family-friendly outfit, INSP-TV currently shows THE WALTONS, and will soon be adding BONANZA and DR. QUINN, MEDICINE WOMAN.

SILENTS UNDER THE STARS FEATURES TOM MIX ON SUNDAY




On Sunday, August 21st, The Silent Society will present their 24th annual Silents Under The Stars program at historic Paramount Ranch in Agoura. THE GREAT K&A TRAIN ROBBERY (1926) stars Tom Mix, Dorothy Dwan and Tony the Wonder Horse, and is directed by Lewis Seiler. The talented Michael Mortilla will present a live musical accompaniment. Admission is $6 for adults, $3 for kids under 12, free for kids under three, and $5 for Hollywood Heritage members. The movie starts at 7:30 pm, and you’re encouraged to come early and bring a picnic dinner. As you’ll be in a National Park at night, a flashlight is a good idea as well. For details call (805) – 370-2301.

WILLIAM SMITH AT COMIC BOOK & SCI-FI CONVENTION SUNDAY




LAREDO fans can meet William Smith, who co-starred with Peter Brown and Neville Brand in all 65 episodes of the series at the convention, held at the Shrine Auditorium Expo Center, 700 West 32nd Street, Los Angeles, Ca. He’ll be signing autographs, and his new book of poetry, from noon ‘til two. Admission to the event is $8. To find out more, go HERE.

http://www.comicbookscifi.com/

TCM FANATIC - WESTERN NOW ONLINE!

And speaking of TCM, have I mentioned that 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.

TV LAND - BONANZA and GUNSMOKE

Every weekday, TV LAND airs a three-hour block of BONANZA episodes from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. They run a GUNSMOKE Monday through Thursday at 10:00 a.m., and on Friday they show two, from 6:00 to 8:00 a.m.. They're not currently running either series on weekends, but that could change at any time.

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.

RFD-TV has begun airing THE ROY ROGERS SHOW on Sundays at 9:00 a.m., with repeats the following Thursday and Saturday.

Also, AMC has started showing two episodes of THE RIFLEMAN on Saturday mornings.



EDITORIALIZING

More than once in the Round-up I’ve made comments to the effect that every western that does well helps the cause of all, and every western that does badly makes it more difficult to get another made. So while I’m sorry that THE LONE RANGER may not happen in the near future, I’d rather see it pulled than see it made for so high a price that it could never be profitable.

I think that there are two absolutely crucial elements for making a good, successful western, and the first is a strong plot and screenplay. It’s not by chance that both 3:10 TO YUMA and TRUE GRIT, the two most successful westerns of recent years, were based on an Elmore Leonard story and a Charles Portis novel. Conversely, the potentially upcoming LONE RANGER and the current COWBOYS & ALIENS and the recent JONAH HEX were all based on comic books or graphic novels (and no, this LONE RANGER is not based on the radio or TV series, but on a comic). COWBOYS has a strong screenplay considering the source material, and I found the movie very enjoyable, but it still is saddled with a comic-bookish premise.

The second crucial element to a western film is some humor. There’s humor throughout the films of Howard Hawks and John Ford, and those who imitate just the dark elements of Leone and Peckinpah need to watch the whole of the films: for all of the grimness, THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY and THE WILD BUNCH have hysterically funny moments. If the west was as relentlessly bleak as a lot of recent films show it, there’d be no need for shootouts: everyone would have shot themselves.

Happy Trails!

Henry

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