Showing posts with label Jane Withers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jane Withers. Show all posts

Sunday, August 17, 2014

CLAIM-JUMPERS BE DAMNED! ALMERIA INTERNATIONAL WEST FILM FEST RIDES AGAIN -- ‘6 BULLETS TO HELL’ TO PREMIERE AT FEST!



(Updated 8-18-2014 -- see KARL MAY story)

As you may have read in the June 15, 2014 Round-up (and if you missed it, HERE is the link ), the 4th Annual Almeria Western Film Festival was cancelled because Tabernas Mayor Mari Nieves Jaen stole it from its creators!  She registered the Festival name under her own name, and proceeded to plan her own event, one which would presumably be politician-friendly, and more dedicated to photo ops than film history.   

I don’t know if her festival is going to proceed, and could not care less!  But I was delighted to hear from Original fest co-creator Danny Garcia.  “We've decided to carry on and we'll celebrate this year’s Almeria Western Film Festival next September 11-13.  We'll have a new website and a new name as we'll add 'International' to the name to make it different from the fake one.”



The very next day I heard from the star/writer/director of the excellent LEGEND OF HELL’S GATE (click HERE for my review), Tanner Beard, with news about his next Western film.  “6 BULLETS TO HELL will have a European Premier in Almeria, Spain on September 12th.  We are finding out about our US premier, which should be happening sometime in October, and there is another European screening at the Aberdeen Film Festival in early October.” 


Crispian Belfrage


There can be no more fitting place for the film to premiere, since its conception is tied to the Fest, when Tanner attended in 2012.  As Danny Garcia, both the Fest’s co-creator and the film’s exec producer, explained to me in 2013, “The first contact between us and Tanner happened at the… Festival, where Tanner won the audience prize with THE LEGEND OF HELL’S GATE.”  They started talking story, and before you knew it, they had a movie in the works.  “We used Mini Hollywood (the set built by Leone for the film FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE) and Fort Bravo (used in hundreds of Spaghetti Westerns as well: DEATH RIDES A HORSE, BLINDMAN, CHATO’S LAND, etc.) and we shot in the desert of Tabernas and the mountains of Abla for the epic final duel.” (You can read more details about the production HERE )


Tanner Beard


6 BULLETS TO HELL is a revenge tale, about a peaceful man who must put on a badge and track down the men who destroyed his world.  It’s made very much in the spaghetti western manner and style.  It was shot in Spain and edited in the U.S.  It has five credited writers: Chip Baker, Jose L. Villanueva, Tanner Beard, Danny Garcia, Russell Quinn Cummings, and it’s co-directed by Tanner Beard and Russell Quinn Cummings. 


Don't let them in!


The stars are Crispian Belfrage as the lawman, Tanner Beard as an outlaw with no conscience, and Magda Rodriguez, Aaron Stielstra, Russell Quinn Cummings, and long-time Euro-western regular Antonio Mayans.  I had the pleasure of watching the first half hour of the film (note: they didn’t hold back on the rest of the film; I just couldn’t get the rest to play.  I HATE watching movies on-line!), and enjoyed it a helluvah lot!  Spaghetti Western fans will be ‘all in’ as soon as they see the titles roll, and hear the first dubbed line of dialogue!  It manages the very dicey balancing act of being enough of an homage to bring the knowing smiles, while still maintaining its own integrity as a dramatic story.  I’ll have more information on the Festival in the coming weeks.  

WEDNESDAY COWBOY LUNCH @ THE AUTRY CELEBRATES ‘MELODY RANCH’!



On Wednesday, August 20th, at high noon, Rob Word will present, as he does on the third Wednesday of every month, the Cowboy Lunch @ The Autry, which this time out will celebrate that legendary location for Western films for 99 years, Melody Ranch!  A working ranch from the 19th century, and a movie ranch since 1915, it was the stomping ground of silent stars like William S. Hart and Tom Mix, and with the coming of sound, it became Monogram Ranch.  Incalculable sagebrush sagas were shot there, and it gained its greatest fame when Gene Autry bought the property in 1952, and rechristened it Melody Ranch after his long-running radio show. 



In addition to Gene’s own movies, just about every western TV series shot episodes there, and among the many series that called the lot home were GUNSMOKE, BRET MAVERICK, and DEADWOOD.  Hundreds of features have been shot there, including the recent DJANGO UNCHAINED, and currently the miniseries WESTWORLD is lensing there. 



Among the guests attending will be one of the great child stars of Hollywood’s Golden Age, Jane Withers, who starred with Gene Autry in SHOOTING HIGH!  The event is free, but you have to buy your own lunch, and I’d advise you to get there early, as the tables do fill up.  The good news is, if you end up at one of the outdoor tables, there will be a live video feed.  See you there!


Gene and Jane in SHOOTING HIGH!


WIN TICKETS TO SEE JOHN BERGSTROM LIVE ON THURSDAY AUG. 21ST!


Thursday night at 8 (tho’ the doors open at 7), Cowboy balladeer John Bergstrom will be celebrating the release of his fourth CD, BUTTERFIELD STAGE, with a concert at The Rep, a.k.a. The Repertory East Playhouse, 24266 Main St., Newhall, CA 91321.  Tickets are just $20, and you can buy them by calling 877-340-9378. This concert is being presented by the excellent folks at OutWest Western Boutique and Cultural Center, our sponsor with the logo at the top left of the page – and you can buy all of John Bergstrom’s CDs at that site. 

But wait – there’s more!   I caught OutWest honcho Bobbi Jean Bell in such a good mood that she told me she’ll give away two free pairs of tickets to the first two folks who email me and ask for them!  Just send me a note at swansongmail@sbcglobal.net, and be sure to put ‘John Bergstrom’ in the subject line, so I don’t think you’re one of those Nigerian Princes who keeps contacting me!


FREE GENE AUTRY DOUBLE-FEATURE SAT. AT THE AUTRY



At noon on Saturday, August 23rd, The Autry will screen a pair of Gene’s movies in the Imagination Gallery, BOOTS AND SADDLES (Rep. 1937) and GOLD MINE IN THE SKY (Rep.1938).  In BOOTS, an English kid inherits a ranch, and wants to sell it, but Gene wants the boy to become a westerner, and help him raise horses for the Army.  Another man wants to buy the ranch, and when his and Gene’s bids are the same, they decide to settle it with a race.  The best part is, the kid actor, New Zealander Ronald Sinclair, would in fact give up his acting career to join the U.S. Army when war broke out, and would return to be a very successful movie editor.  And the other bidder is played by Gordon Elliot, who would become a big star a year later, when Republic changed his name to Wild Bill Elliot.   In GOLD MINE troubles ensues when Gene is made the executor of a will, and has to decide who a high-spirited heiress may and may not marry!  Both co-star Smiley Burnette, and are directed by Republic action-ace Joe Kane.  


GENE AUTRY COLLECTION #5 REVIEWED




GENE AUTRY ENTERTAINMENT continues to release four-packs of Gene’s films, and I’ve just received volume 5 (I’ve also received 6&7, which I’ll be reviewing in the near future).  Made from 1949 to 1953, they’re all Gene Autry‘Productions released by Columbia Pictures.  As always, each features a beautiful female lead – Barbara Britton, Elena Verdugo, Virginia Huston, and Gail Davis.  And they all feature Champion, the World’s Wonder Horse.  Two star Pat Buttram, one stars Smiley Burnette, but in the first, Gene rides sidekickless!

LOADED PISTOLS (Col 1949) is an unusual Gene Autry entry in a number of ways, most noticeably that it’s a legit murder mystery, opening with a shooting when the lights are switched off during a crap game.  There’s even one of those fun THIN MAN-styled, “You’re probably wondering why I brought you all here tonight,” scenes where the crime is reenacted!  The victim is a friend of Gene’s, and the suspect is such a jerk that you realize Gene is stepping in more to make sure the guilty party doesn’t get away, rather than to see the innocent jerk freed.  This is the first Autry I recall seeing without a sidekick, and much as I like Smiley and Pat, it’s an interesting change.  Barbara Britton, the beautiful female lead, had already made an impression opposite Joel McCrea in THE VIRGINIAN, and done a pair of films with Randolph Scott so, unlike his other ladies, she receives title-card billing with Gene.  She’s probably best remembered for costarring with Richard Denning in the MR. AND MRS. SMITH series.

Also of note in the cast are Chill Wills as a lawman who keeps confiscating Gene’s guns; old western leading man Jack Holt; Robert Shayne before he’d become Inspector Henderson on SUPERMAN; ace geezer character actor Clem Bevans; and one of my favorites silent movie comedians, Snub Pollard, he of the handlebar mustache, and he even takes a pratfall – pretty impressive at sixty!  This is truly an outdoor picture, with little time wasted between walls.  Full advantage is taken of the beautiful Alabama Hills near Lone Pine, and the beautiful Champion.

As the title suggests, GENE AUTRY AND THE MOUNTIES (Col 1951) shifts the action north to Canada, or actually to heavily pine-forested Big Bear Lake.  In a story that today would be described as ‘suggested by actual events,’ Gene and Pat pursue into Canada a group of French Canadians who are heisting U.S. banks to fund a Canadian Revolution.  The boys encounter a startling world where Mounties are reviled and despised.  When their Mountie friend Terrie Dillon (Richard Emory) is nearly killed by the bandits, the nearest help is lovely Marie Duvol (long-time Universal starlet Elena Verdugo), whose juvie brother (Jim Frasher) and uncle (Trevor Bardette) are among the Mountie-haters.  And wouldn’t you know, their ring-leader Pierre LaBlond (Carleton Young) has plans for Marie that make her shudder.  

Unusual for the amount of seething hatred in the story, even easy-going Gene loses patience with the brother who is mean to his own dog.  When the kid asks if Gene plans to beat him up, he says it wouldn’t be fair for a grown man to beat a boy.  But he adds, never changing his smile, “If I were your size, I’d skin you alive.”  Directed by John English, as is LOADED PISTOLS, there’s a very dramatic out-of-control fire sequence towards the end. 

Again reflecting history, NIGHT STAGE TO GALVESTON (Col 1952) focuses on the days after the Civil War, when the Texas Rangers were disbanded, replaced by a corrupt State Police service, in the movie run by suave but villainous Robert Livingston.  With the support of newspaper publisher Porter Hall and his daughter Virginia Houston, Gene and Pat gather criminal evidence from ex-Rangers.  But Livingston won’t go down without a fight.  By turns effective and cloyingly adorable is twelve-year-old Judy Nugent as a child orphaned by the homicidal State Police.  Nugent would do two films for Douglas Sirk, MAGNIFICENT OBSESSION and THERE’S ALWAYS TOMORROW, at twenty be a continuing character on the Billy the Kid series THE TALL MAN, and later marry, and divorce, GUNSMOKE star Buck Taylor. 

Almost unrecognizable without his mask in a small, uncredited role, is Clayton Moore, THE LONE RANGER (Robert Livingston was also the Lone Ranger in a Republic serial).  Moore had been dropped from his series over a salary dispute in 1950, and while John Hart was wearing the mask for 54 episodes, generous men like Gene Autry gave Clayton small roles in movies and TV episodes, often unbilled or as ‘Clay Moore’, until the LONE RANGER producers came to their senses and brought him back. 

The final movie in the set is one from Gene’s last year of filmmaking, GOLDTOWN GHOST RIDERS (Col 1953).  The story of a gold-rush town built on a foundation of fraud, it’s an unusual entry for a number of reasons.  Gene plays not only a rancher, but a circuit judge.  Also, the story is told largely in flashback – the tale begins with a man looking for revenge after being imprisoned for a decade, and most of the story concerns the events that led to his imprisonment.   It also raises an interesting legal quandary that would be revisited in 1999’s DOUBLE JEOPARDY: if you’ve already served a term for the murder of someone who it turns out is alive, is it then legal for you to kill them?  There’s even a supernatural element; Smiley Burnette tells the story of an ethereal pack of ‘Ghost Riders’ who haunt the area and jealously guard their claims. 

The film features Gene’s nemesis from GENE AUTRY AND THE MOUNTIES, Carleton Young; a very young Denver Pyle; and as a young Mexican miner whose claim is jumped; Neyle Morrow.  A favorite of the great ‘guy story’ filmmaker Sam Fuller, Morrow would appear in fourteen of his crime thrillers, war movies and westerns.  The female lead is Gene’s lovely frequent co-star Gale Davis, who would soon shed her gingham in favor of fringed buckskin and star for Gene’s Flying A company as ANNIE OAKLEY.    

Special features with each movie include a montage of stills and posters, inside info from producer and film historian Alex Gordon, an episode of the GENE AUTRY MELODY RANCH RADIO SHOW, and Gene and Pat doing on-camera introductions from MELODY RANCH THEATER, a TV series they hosted on The Nashville Network in 1987.  Personally, I like to listen to the radio shows on my computer, but you can also run them on your DVD player.  My favorite of this group is one where Jack Benny is guest, plugging his switch of radio networks.  The TV intros are fun and informative; the boys have a lot of amusing memories of performing in Canada.  Also there’s a surprisingly direct discussion of the importance of non-whites in the settling of the American West.  Released by Timeless Media Group, this and the other  Gene Autry Collections are available from OutWest HERE and other fine retailers.



A TERRIFIC N.Y. TIMES DOCUMENTARY ON KARL MAY
Lost in Translation: Germany’s Fascination With the American Old West
HERE is the link --  I’m sure you’ll find it fifteen minutes very well-spent!

THAT’S A WRAP!

That’s it until next week!

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright August 2014 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved


Monday, May 6, 2013

‘TCM CLASSIC FILM FEST’ RED CARPET, PLUS ‘GRAND DUEL’ REVIEW





 
My view from the red carpet
 
From Thursday, April 25th through Sunday, April 28th, I attended the 4TH ANNUAL TCM CLASSIC FILM FESTIVAL.  The events took place at and around Grauman’s Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, at several of the smaller Chinese Theatre multi-plex screens, with additional events at Grauman’s Egyptian and the Hollywood Arclight aka the Cinerama Dome.   It was my first time, and I was overwhelmed by all of the screenings, activities, and choices that had to be made. 


This is an event for people who are passionate about the movies, and eager to see them on a big screen, often in 35mm, always with someone of note giving an introduction.  But how do you choose when GIANT, ON GOLDEN POND, THE BIG PARADE, THE TRAIN, THEY LIVE BY NIGHT and GUYS AND DOLLS are all showing at once?!  It is truly an embarrassment of riches.
 
 

I caught as many movies as I could, but I only managed to catch four on one day, Saturday, which made me a piker by the standards of most attendees.  Chatting while standing on line, I met folks from Kansas City, Missouri; Illinois; Arlington, Virginia; Florida; and Cincinnati, Ohio.  A couple I met waiting to get in to see DELIVERANCE were from outside Raleigh, North Carolina, and confided, “We want to see it on a big screen, so we can recognize our relatives,” then quickly added, “only joking,” in case I was dense.  Interestingly, I didn’t meet a soul from L.A., and the one couple I met from San Diego turned out to be recent transplants from Kentucky.  And none of them were first-timers: on average they were back for their third year. 

It was delightful to be surrounded by so many people who were so enthusiastic, and knowledgeable, about classic film.  Waiting for BONNIE AND CLYDE to start, someone uttered the name Strother Martin, and a dozen voices piped in with their favorite Strother Martin performances.  The event is pricey.  The costliest package, featuring VIP entry to everything, meet-and- reets with stars and TCM hosts, and all manner of extras, costs $1599.  There are a lot of in-between packages, with the least expensive, at $249, getting you admission to only the big-screen venues, the Chinese and Egyptian.  You can also buy single event tickets for $20, but be aware that they are ‘stand-by’, and a lot of shows fill up, though most at the huge Chinese and the Egyptian do not.


I’d picked up my media credentials (when did they stop being ‘press credentials’?) the day before, and hadn’t read their many emails closely enough to realize that I had to apply separately for credentials to cover Thursday night’s gala, featuring the world premiere of the digital restoration of FUNNY GIRL at the Chinese.  I realized my stupidity late Wednesday night, and emailed, begging to be let on the red carpet.  Well, sometimes stupidity pays off: they not only gave me a spot on the red carpet (see the picture), since I was the very last dope to ask, I got the very last spot, which gave me a perfect view straight down the center of the famed ‘footprint’ courtyard.  The first star to come my way was Barbara Rush.  Best known for her role in TV’s PEYTON PLACE, she’s starred in many movies and guested in many series, her best western role being Audra in HOMBRE, opposite Paul Newman. 
 
Barbara Rush
 
Next was Coleen Gray.  She first made a splash as the good girl opposite carny grifter Tyrone Power in NIGHTMARE ALLEY (1947).  She got her feet wet in westerns the next year, co-starring with Victor Mature in FURY AT FURNACE CREEK, then entered the big-leagues playing John Wayne’s romantic interest in the Howard Hawks classic RED RIVER.  She’s appeared in numerous western and civilian films since then, guest-starring on nearly all of the major western series, and starred opposite Hugh Marlowe in a frequently overlooked top-of-the-line oater, Charles Marquis Warren’s THE BLACK WHIP.     

 
Coleen Gray

She was followed by Jacqueline White, best known for noirs like CROSSFIRE and THE NARROW MARGIN, but who starred with Randolph Scott in RETURN OF THE BAD MEN, and with Tim Holt in RIDERS OF THE RANGE. 

 
Jacqueline White

Looking much as she did in MIDRED PIERCE was beautiful Ann Blyth, who would be attending screenings of both PIERCE and KISMET during the festival.  Her only feature western is Zane Grey’s RED CANYON, but she appeared on five episodes of WAGON TRAIN.  I asked her if she had a favorite western role among them.  “That’s always so hard to just pick one.  I’ll get back to you on that.”

 

 
Ann Blyth
 
 
Marvin Kaplan
 

Comedian Marvin Kaplan of IT’S A MAD MAD MAD MAD WORLD was next, and then I was talking to former child star Jane Withers, who would be the special guest at her film, GIANT, the next night.  Of all the stars entering the Chinese that night, she was probably the only one who would be walking by her own footprints in cement.  I asked her which was her favorite western, SHOOTING HIGH, with Gene Autry, or GIANT, with Rock Hudson and James Dean.  “Oh, bless your heart for knowing about both!  I did five westerns as a kid, and I loved them all, oh gosh, because cowboys are my favorite people in the world.   Monte Hale and Gene Autry and Roy and Dale were always very close friends.  Roy and Dale and I became neighbors years later; our kids all went to church and Sunday School together.  I’ve had the most unique and interesting life of anyone I know.  And I’m so grateful – I’ve just had my 87th birthday, and Fox Home Entertainment is rereleasing all my early Jane Withers films from the ‘30s and the ‘40s, and I’m just thrilled.”

 
Jane Withers
 
 
Jane's footprints
 

Next came the great Theodore Bikel, who appeared in episodes of HOTEL DE PAREE, WAGON TRAIN, RAWHIDE, GUNSMOKE, and LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE.  When I asked him what his favorite was, he said, “I can’t tell you.  Some of them I liked.” 

 
Theodore Bikel

When I asked Karen Sharpe Kramer about her favorite western, she might have said MAN WITH A GUN (1955), where she starred opposite Robert Mitchum, or JOHNNY RINGO (1959), her western series, but I wasn’t surprised at her answer.  “HIGH NOON, of course.”  She’s the widow of producer/director Stanley Kramer, who made HIGH NOON.  “I like THE SEARCHERS, I like TRUE GRIT as well.  But HIGH NOON has something to say, which I think is important.  So I would always search out a movie that would leave you with something, instead of just being entertaining.” 

 
Karen Sharpe Kramer


I next saw Wink Martindale, DJ and game show host who, a few decades ago, had the number one record in the country, not a song, but a spoken recording.  I asked him, “When are you going to do another recording like A Deck of Cards?” 
 
 
Wink Martindale
 
“Oh, I don’t know!  That was one of those rare ones – you don’t find those very often.  Would you believe that was recorded in 1959?  Or was it 1859?”

“Off-subject, let me ask you, what’s your favorite western?”

“I think it would be HIGH NOON, without any question at all, because I loved Gary Cooper’s performance in that; great story.” 

Next came beautiful Anne Jeffreys, Marion Kerby to those of us who grew up watching TOPPER, still lovely at ninety.  “Which is your favorite of all your westerns?”

 
Anne Jeffreys

“Ahh…NEVADA (1944), with Robert Mitchum.”

“Terrific.  Any favorites among you Wild Bill Elliot films?” 

“No, except with Gabby Hayes.”  There are eight of those to choose from. 
 
Mitzi Gaynor
 

By then the staffers were trying to hurry the guests into the theatre – we glimpsed Mitzi Gaynor, Marge Champion, France Nuyen, Tippi Hedron , Robert Hays, Eva Marie Saint and film historian Kevin Brownlow zipping by.  Although Barbra Streisand lives in town, she didn’t attend the screening.  She was in New York, at another event, presenting an award.  Cher filled in for her, doing the introduction to FUNNY GIRL.    
 
 
Marge Champion
 

I rushed off to see a movie, chose ROAD TO UTOPIA, a north-western comedy set in the Klondike Gold Rush, starring Bob Hope, Bing Crosby and Dorothy Lamour.  It was introduced by Greg Proops, one of the improvisational comedians from WHOSE LINE IS IT ANYWAY?, who gave an excellent talk about the chemistry of Hope and Crosby in the ROAD pictures, and that underscoring the humor was the ruthlessness of their attempts to cut each other off in the pursuit of both money and Lamour.  It was hysterical.
 
France Nuyen
 

Next week, in Part 2, I’ll discuss the screenings of RIVER OF NO RETURN, HONDO and DELIVERANCE.


LEE VAN CLEEF IN ‘THE GRAND DUEL’ ON DVD


 

Blue Underground has just released a beautiful new version of 1972’s THE GRAND DUEL, starring Lee Van Cleef, directed by Giancarlo Santi from Ernesto Gastaldi’s screenplay. It’s one of the best of the Spaghetti Westerns from the end of the cycle. This was Santi’s first film as a director, but he’d made his bones as assistant director to Sergio Leone on THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY and ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST, as well as the excellent DEATH RIDES A HORSE.  Screenwriter Gastaldi has a staggering 121 writing credits, from cult horror favorites like VAMPIRE AND THE BALLERINA and WEREWOLF IN A GIRLS’ DORMITORY to Westerns like the ARIZONA COLT and SARTANA series, but is probably best known for MY NAME IS NOBODY – he even did uncredited script-work on Leone’s ONCE UPON A TIME IN AMERICA. 
 

The story revolves around wanted man Philip Vermeer (Peter O’Brien aka Alberto Dentice), hunted for murder by ex-Sheriff Clayton (Lee Van Cleef), and a passel of bounty hunters.  The dead man, Samuel Saxon, referred to as ‘The Patriarch,’ and only seen in dramatic black & white flashbacks, has three sons, a businessman; a lawman; and a flamboyant, syphilitic pock-marked ne’er-do-well, all of them obsessed with Vermeer’s capture and punishment.  Clayton is convinced Vermeer is being framed, and they join forces to learn and expose the truth.

 
 
 
 

Shot in unfamiliar and striking locations by Mario Vulpiani, edited by Roberto Perpignani, who also cut LAST TANGO IN PARIS and IL POSTINO, the film is full of striking compositions and sequences, among them Van Cleef slyly tipping Vermeer to the location of the bounty hunters, a remarkable chase shot from overhead, a nighttime attack on a stage-coach stop, and the wonderfully staged ‘grand duel’ at the end of the film.  There is also a sometimes haunting, sometimes thrilling score by Luis Bacalov and Sergio Bardotti.
'Killing of the Old Man' sequence
 
 
 



The degree of corruption in the town is striking, and because this is so common to the sub-genre, over the years, many American viewers have bristled at the sense that many Spaghetti Westerns are anti-American.  I think this is a misreading of the intent.  I think the corrupt and degenerate brothers who run the town, like the hooded thugs in DJANGO and the homosexual ‘Zorros’ of DJANGO KILL! are not references to America at all, but to Italian Fascism, which had, until a short time before these films were made, enslaved Italy.

 
from the duel

It would be disingenuous of me not to also mention that screenwriter and film historian C. Courtney Joyner and myself provide a commentary track, which has been well-reviewed (I didn’t  realize that people actually reviewed commentary tracks) and here are a couple of links for reviews of this version of THE GRAND DUEL: from 10K BULLETS, and from DVD LATESHOW.   Also included is a Spaghetti Western Trailer Reel featuring some of Blue Underground’s other fine releases.   The official release day is May 21st.  The price is $14.98.  You can learn more HERE.
 
50TH ANNIVERSARY OF ‘HUD’ AT AUTRY SATURDAY, MAY 11TH

On Saturday at 1:30, HUD will have its 50th anniversary marked with a screening at the Autry as part of their What is a Western ? series.  I’ve never seen HUD, but I’ve been hearing about it for years.  It earned three Oscars, for Best Actress Patricia Neal, Best Supporting Actor Melvyn Douglas, and Best Black & White Cinematography by James Wong Howe.  It stars Paul Newman as a selfish and reckless cowboy who risks his family’s ranch over a feud with his father.  Curator Jeffrey Richardson will introduce the film, discussing HUD’s unflinching social commentary as part of the Western genre’s transformation in the 1960s. 

“FILL YER HAND BRADLEY COOPER, YOU SUNUVABITCH!”


More headaches for the trouble-plagued set of JANE GOT A GUN, the new western starring and co-produced by Natalie Portman.  First, on the day the cameras were to roll in April, director Lynne Ramsey was a no-show. Then lead villain Jude Law quit because Lynne had quit.  He was replaced by Bradley Cooper – right after his SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK success.  But now Cooper is leaving because of his previous commitment to David O. Russell.  More details coming soon!

THE WRAP UP

That’ll have to do for today.  Happy Cinco de Mayo, and happy birthday to my mom, to Monica Lewis, and to Will ‘Sugarfoot’ Hutchins.  With Saturday being Stephanie’s and my 28th wedding anniversary, I’m a little surprised I got this posted and written tonight.  Next week I’ll have part two of my TCM Fest coverage, and soon I’ll have reviews of  a Pat Buttram biography, the home video release of BORDERTOWN, and ‘HOWDY KIDS!! A Saturday Afternoon Western Round-up’ from the Shout Factory.

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Contents Copyright May 2013 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved

Monday, January 31, 2011

DEPP STILL TALKIN’ TONTO










Johnny Depp, soon to be seen – actually heard -- in the animated pseudo-western Rango, is talking again about Jerry Bruckheimer’s many-years-in-the-planning remake of The Lone Ranger, in which Depp will play Tonto. The Disney film is planned for a 2012 release, and it’s coming from the same team that brought you the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise: director Gore Verbinski, and writers Ted Elliot and Terry Rossio.

Depp told Entertainment Weekly, “I think it’s going to be good, when we have a chance to put it up on its feet. What we’ve got so far screenplay-wise is really great, really funny.” Depp, who is part Cherokee, adds, “I always felt Native Americans were badly portrayed in Hollywood films over the decades. It’s a real opportunity for me to give a salute to them. Tonto was a sidekick in all the Lone Ranger series. [This film] is a very different approach to that partnership. And a funny one I think.”

Says producer Bruckheimer (from an earlier interview) about the screenplay, “They’re creating something that has a true-to-the-western feel, but adding other additional elements like we did in Pirates so it won’t be just a straight-ahead western.” Hopefully the recent Green Hornet debacle (not to mention Jonah Hex) will deter them going too far afield from the beloved Fran Striker stories. Incidentally, few moviegoers of today are aware that Striker created both The Green Hornet and The Lone Ranger, and that the Hornet character, Britt Reid, is the great nephew of John Reid, the Lone Ranger. If you’d like to read an in-depth chronology of the masked Reid family – and who wouldn’t – go here: http://www.pjfarmer.com/woldnewton/Reid.htm

Incidentally, no definitive word yet on who will play Tonto’s faithful masked companion.

(Photos top to bottom: artist rendering of Johnny Depp as Tonto, George Clooney as Lone Ranger; title card from Wanted:Dead or Alive; Trigger and Bullet pose with kids; posters from the movies whose names are on them; two more Indian Chiefs from the Allen & Ginter cigarette insert card series)

MEMORIES OF MCQUEEN: DEAD OR ALIVE

The excellent Steve McQueen western series Wanted: Dead or Alive is available on home video – I got seasons one and two in a package at Target for under twenty dollars -- and if you shop around you can get a set with the final season as well. If you’d like to know what making the series, and working with McQueen, was like, click HERE http://www.caucus.org/archives/10win_cowboy.html to read Cowboy by Norman S. Powell, from the Caucus Journal. Powell started as 2nd Assistant Director on Wanted, and graduated to production manager and eventually producer, working on, among many others, The Westerner, The Big Valley, several Gunsmoke TV movies, and was recently Emmy-nominated for producing ‘24’.

PIONEERS OF TELEVISON FOLLOW-UP

If you haven’t had a chance to catch the Western segment of Pioneers of Television on PBS, check your listings, because it’ll probably be shown again, and it’s well-worth catching. Focusing on just a few series rather than trying to tell the whole story of TV Westerns in one hour, you’ll learn a lot about Gunsmoke, Bonanza, The Big Valley and Daniel Boone from an impressive array of actor interviews. Either they’ve been working on this project for a long time, or they have many sources for their interviews, because several of their subjects – Robert Culp, Fess Parker – have passed away, and a few, like Buddy Ebsen, have been gone quite some time. A PBS website HERE http://www.pbs.org/opb/pioneersoftelevision/pioneering-programs/westerns/ has several interview clips, and to my surprise, most or all of them are outtakes from the show. So if you want to hear William Shatner tell how Timothy Carey tried to strangle him on camera in Gunsmoke, you’ll have to go there. Incidentally, I’ve also watched the sci-fi episode of this series, and it was equally entertaining. The upcoming episodes, a new one every Tuesday, will examine crime stories, kiddie tv, late night shows, sitcoms, variety shows and game shows.

TRIGGER AND BULLET AT THE CATTLE INDUSTRY ANNUAL CONVENTION IN DENVER

If you’re going to be in Denver from February 2nd to the 5th, stop at the RFD-TV booth and have your picture taken with Trigger and Bullet! And on the 2nd through the 4th, Dusty Rogers and the High Riders will be performing at 5:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m.

SCREENINGS

IN NEW YORK

THE FILM FORUM – FRITZ LANG IN HOLLYWOOD


On Wednesday, February 2nd, as part of their Fritz Lang In Hollywood series, the Film Forum will present a double bill of The Return of Frank James (1940), with Henry Fonda as Frank, John Carradine as dirty little coward Bob Ford, and Gene Tierney; and Western Union (1941) from the Zane Grey tale, starring Robert Young, Randolph Scott and John Carradine – both with brand spankin’ new 35 MM prints!

On Sunday and Monday, February 6th and 7th, they’ll present Clash By Night (1952), starring Barbara Stanwyck, Robert Ryan and Marilyn Monroe, and Rancho Notorious (1952), starring Marlene Detreich, Arthur Kennedy and Mel Ferrer.

IN LOS ANGELES

GENE AUTRY DOUBLE FEATURE SATURDAY FEB. 5TH AT THE AUTRY


Starting at noon, the Autry will screen Shooting High (1940), costarring Jane Withers, Jack Carson and Charles “Ming The Merciless” Middleton; and Sioux City Sue (1946), costarring Sterling “Winnie the Pooh” Holloway. It’s scheduled to be screened in the tiny Imagination Gallery’s Western Legacy Theater, but last time they had such a big turnout that they had to move it to the Wells Fargo Theatre. And on Saturday February 12th they’ll be showing The Searchers – and the Magnificent Seven is coming in April!

AND ON THE TUBE

On Saturday, February 5th , RFD-TV will show Roy Rogers in UNDER CALIFORNIA STARS (1948), with direction by action whiz William Whitney and script by the excellent Sloan Nibley. The plot involves the theft of Trigger (!), and costars Jane Frazee, young Michael Chapin, not-so-young Andy Devine, and the singers by which all other western groups are measured, Bob Nolan and the Sons Of The Pioneers.

WESTERN EVENTS ON THE HORIZON

FEB. 18TH-21ST – WHISKEY FLAT DAYS IN KERNVILLE

Events include a parade, rodeo, frog-jumping contest, food, music and melodramas. For more info, call 760-376-2629, or visit kernvillechamber.org.


FEB. 19TH-20TH – CIVIL WAR WEEKEND AT CALICO GHOST TOWN


Events include Civil War reenactments, authentic encampments, drills, music, living history displays, period fashion shows, and a reading of Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. To learn more, call 800-86-CALICO (862-2542) or visit calicotown.com.

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.

It's almost eleven Monday night, and I've still got to outline about a dozen episodes for the first season of my proposed series, so I'd better get at it -- I'll post some pictures to go along with the above on Tuesday.

Have a great week!

Adios,

Henry

All Contents Copyright January 31st, 2011 by Henry C. Parke -- All Rights Reserved