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

Thursday, February 15, 2018

SCHWARZENEGGER’S COMING, WESTWORLD’S RETURNING, ‘HIGH CHAPARRAL’ P.M. IS TALKING, TCM’S FEST-ING, AND MORE!


UPDATED 10:11 AM 2-16-18 -- SEE 'LOS ANGELES ITALIA FESTIVAL'

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER TO STAR IN WESTERN ‘OUTRIDER’


Okay, he’s not the King yet, but maybe the Kaiser of the Cowboys? The body-building champ, movie star and former Governor of California, whose only previous Western was Hal Needham’s 1979 comedy THE VILLAIN -- in which he played Handsome Stranger to Ann-Margaret’s Charming Jones, and Kirk Douglas’s Cactus Jack -- will be heading to the Amazon West, to star in the series OUTRIDER, for Producer Mace Neufield, who previously produced GODS AND GENERALS.

Set in the late 1800s, when Oklahoma was still Indian Territory, the story centers on a deputy assigned to capture a famous outlaw, with the help of a ruthless Federal Marshal (Schwarzenegger). As the tale progresses, alliances will shift, and the demarcation between hero and villain will be obscured.  The show will be co-written and exec-produced by Trey Callaway and Mark Montgomery.

‘WESTWORLD’ RETURNS IN APRIL!

As Superbowl fans learned last Sunday, WESTWORLD will be starting its second season, on HBO, on April 22nd. The teaser trailer, seen below, doesn’t give too much story away, but it does confirm that it will be a western WESTWORLD, not the eastern Samurai variation last season’s ending hinted at (Whew!). As with season one, HBO remains tight-lipped. So fasten your seatbelts!



AUTRY ‘SERGEANT RUTLEDGE’ SCREENING 2/17 INTRO’ED BY ‘LEFTY BROWN’ DIR.



As part of the Autry’s long-running ‘What is a Western?’ film series, they will be screening John Ford’s classic Western courtroom mystery, 1960’s SERGEANT RUTLEDGE. Tremendously daring for its subject matter even today, and one of the high points of Woody Strode’s career. He star as a Buffalo Soldier on trial for the rape and murder of a white child. The film also stars Constance Towers and Jeffrey Hunter.  I wrote an article on RUTLEDGE, and other Buffalo Soldier films, for True West Magazine, and had the privilege of speaking to both Ms. Towers, and Olympic Decathlon Gold Medalist Rafer Johnson, who played a Buffalo Soldier in the film. To read ‘Ford Set The Bar High’, click HERE.  The film will be introduced by Jared Moshé, director of the current Western THE BALLAD OF LEFTY BROWN. The program in the Wells Fargo Theatre begins at 1:30 pm, and admission is free with your museum admission. 




‘L.A. ITALIA FESTIVAL’ FEB. 25TH!
UPDATED 10:12 AM 2-16-18 -- DIRECTOR/STAR RICHARD HARRISON WILL INTRODUCE HIS FILM 'TWO BROTHERS IN TRINITY'


In two weeks the L. A. Italia Festival, the 13th annual celebration of Italian culture and especially Italian cinema, will begin on Sunday, February 25th, at the Chinese 6 Theatres in Hollywood, and run for a week, through Saturday, March 3rd, Oscar eve. This year’s festival will be dedicated to legendary Italian directors Franco Zeffirelli and Lina Wertmuller.  There are screenings of dozens of Italian movies, both new and classics, all free, on a first come, first seated basis. There are also special programs that require reservations, and the red carpet is often packed with stars. The schedule of films was announced last night, and there is just one Italian Western on the bill. On Saturday, at 4:50 pm, TWO BROTHERS IN A PLACE CALLED TRINITY, starring Richard Harrison, will be screened. The program notes, “Harrison wrote, produced and directed the film, and understandably, it is his personal favorite among the Italian westerns he appeared in.” It doesn’t say whether or not Harrison will attend; I’ll try to find out. To find out about all of the films being screened, and their times, go HERE.


TCM FESTIVAL – LOOKING FORWARD AND BACK


I was surprised to find this shot of me and Shirley
Jones on the Red Carpet at the TCM site!

The annual TCM Classic Movie Festival returns to the Chinese Theatre Complex and elsewhere around Hollywood, starting April 26th, and running through the 29th. This year’s theme will be that all-too-often ignored aspect of movies, the written word. According to TCM, “From original screenplays to unique adaptations to portrayals of writers real and imagined, we will celebrate the foundation of great film: the written word.”  The Fest will open with a screening at the Chinese IMAX of THE PRODUCERS, with writer/director Mel Brooks attending. Other guests already announced include writer/director Robert Benton, and actress Marsha Hunt.  


Dick Cavett introducing a film

Last year, although the number of Westerns featured was small, what there was, was choice. DAWSON CITY – FROZEN TIME is a fascinating documentary by Bill Morrison. A boomtown in the heart of the Yukon Gold Rush that started in1898, Dawson’s movie theatres were not only the hub of entertainment, they were the end of the line for movie prints that had made their way around the world. In 1978, a construction crew bulldozed an old sports club, and found hundreds of reels of film buried, some of them preserved, in the permafrost, most of them films thought to be lost forever. And that’s only the beginning of the story. The film is available from Kino-Lorber.


A frame from POLLY OF THE CIRCUS (1917)
partly decomposed, from DAWSON CITY


1952’s THOSE REDHEADS FROM SEATTLE was re-premiered at the Fest, not just restored, but seen in 3-D for the first time since its release. This lively movie from Paramount’s famous ‘Dollar Bills’, Bill Pine and Bill Thomas, was the first 3-D musical. It stars Gene Barry, Rhonda Fleming, Agnes Moorhead, and a bevy of singers and dancers, including the Bell Sisters, one of whom, to the audience’s delight, attended. It tells the story of a family of women that head to -- you guessed it -- Dawson City during the Gold Rush to be entertainers. This one is also available from Kino-Lorber. With their story overlap, I’m surprised REDHEADS and DAWSON aren’t offered as a set. 



Paramount Studio Head Archivist Andrea Kalas presented a talk, and clips from dozens of Republic Pictures in all imaginable genres. Paramount has acquired the entire Republic Library (minus, I assume, Gene Autry’s films, as he acquired all of them), and have for seven years been restoring them at the rate of 100 a year. Needless to say, this left all the Western fans in attendance salivating, but at the moment, no definite plans for releasing the films has been announced.


Peter Bogdonovich and Illeana Douglas

And speaking of things not yet announced, thus far only eighteen films have been announced for this year’s Fest, and there’s not a Western in the bunch. But last year they showed 83 films, so there’s plenty of space to squeeze in some oaters. Stand by for updates as we get closer to the event.

SPEND ST. PATRICK’S DAY WITH KENT MCCRAY!


Kent McCray with High Chaparral stuntwoman
Jackie Fuller

On Saturday, March 17th, Kent McCray, who produced or production-managed BONANZA, THE HIGH CHAPARRAL, and THE LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE, will be au the Autry, speaking about his career, and signing his new autobiography, KENT MCCRAY: THE MAN BEHIND THE MOST BELOVED TELEVISION SHOWS. A Q&A will be hosted by Dean Butler, who played Almanzo Wilder on LITTLE HOUSE, and other guests from McCray shows are expected. In addition to his extensive Western work, McCray spent years managing Bob Hope’s travels to entertain our troops around the globe. His friendship with Michael Landon, developed on the BONANZA set, led to a producing partnership on LITTLE HOUSE and HIGHWAY TO HEAVEN.
My next Round-up will feature an interview with McCray. And HERE is a link to the current True West Magazine, about McCray’s recent celebration of HIGH CHAPARRAL’s 50th Anniversary.



TWO-GUN HART – BY JEFF McARTHUR

A Book Review by Henry C. Parke



It’s not so surprising that a young man’s early association with Western actor William S. Hart would inspire him to become a real-life western lawman. It’s not the first time a man changed his name in tribute to his idol – magician Eric Weiss dubbed himself Harry Houdini after French illusionist Robert-Houdin. The stunner is the name that he changed: lawman and prohibition agent Richard ‘Two-Gun’ Hart had been Christened in Sicily as Vicenzo Capone, and his brother, Al Capone, would make quite a name for himself on the other side of the law!

Jeff McArthur tells a fascinating, and entirely fresh, story of a man who reinvented himself totally, yet could never totally escape his family’s influence. Hart was a remarkable complex man, and his successes and struggles throughout the Great Depression are, by turns, inspiring and infuriating.

As a teenager, I was obsessed with Depression-era gangsters, and I devoured every word I could find on Al Capone. There is more information on the life of Scarface Al, and insight into his character and personality here, than I have ever seen before, and with a good reason. For the first time, the Capone family has opened up to an author, and granted unprecedented access to MacArthur.

Whether your interest is in lawmen, criminals, or simply humanity, you will be astonished. TWO-GUN HART is published by Bandwagon Books.               

HEAVIES PLAY HEROES IN ALPHA RELEASE


Tom Tyler had a few standout sympathetic roles, as Captain Marvel in the Republic serial, and as Stony Brooke in some of the THREE MESQUITEERS entries. But most of his other outstanding, and best remembered roles were villains: Luke Plummer, the man who killed John Wayne’s brother in 1939’s STAGECOACH; King Evans in William Wyler’s THE WESTERNER (1940); and as the seemingly soulless gunman in POWDERSMOKE RANGE (1935). Likable, strong-jawed Kermit Maynard was as good an actor, and handsomer, than his superstar brother Ken Maynard, but no one else could do what Ken could with a horse. Kermit played countless drovers and henchmen and stagecoach drivers.  But once in a blue moon, these supporting players got a chance to shine, and in a new double-bill from Alpha Video, each man proves that he could carry a movie on their own.

In RIDIN’ THRU (1934), Tom Tyler and sidekick Ben Corbett come to the aid of a rancher-turned-dude-rancher friend whose horses are being rustled, and determine they’re being led away by a mysterious white stallion. In FIGHTING TROOPER (1934) Kermit Maynard stars as a Mountie sergeant whose superior, and personal antagonist, is murdered. While undercover, investigating a likely suspect, fur trapper LeFarge (LeRoy Mason), he grows to suspect LeFarge is being framed.



Also from Alpha is the long-thought-lost B Western DESERT MESA (1935), starring Wally West, a stuntman-turned-actor who pretty quickly turned back to stuntman. It's a story about two men, West and an old rancher (William McCall), whose paths cross as both seek the same man, who ruined their lives by killing West’s father and McCall’s wife. Not a great movie, but a surprisingly good print, it’s curious to note that as late as 1935, some poverty row Westerns felt almost like silents, between the stilted performances and West’s mascara. One of the more natural performances, as an unbilled sidekick named Art, is the film’s producer and director Art Mix, real name Victor Adamson, who was sued by Tom Mix to stop borrowing his last name.  It’s double billed with THE TEXAS TORNADO, aka RANCH DYNAMITE, from 1932, starring Lane Chandler as a Texas Ranger who takes on the identity of a Chicago gangster to infiltrate a gang. Master stuntman Yakima Canutt plays a henchman, and does stunt doubling in the spirited fights. It’s written and directed by Oliver Drake, who decades later would co-author Canutt’s excellent autobiography, STUNTMAN.

…and that’s a wrap! 


For your amusement, here are a few not quite 2” by 3” Swedish gum cards. My favorite is the one that identifies our most decorated soldier of World War II, and a fine Western actor, as Audrey Murphy. Things get lost in translation.

In the next Round-up, I’ll have my interview with Kent McCray, and a look at two upcoming Spaghetti Westerns from the folks who brought you 6 BULLETS TO HELL! And I’ll be updating this Round-up as titles become available for the TCM Classic Movie Festival.

Happy Trails!

Henry


All Original Contents Copyright February 2018 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved

Monday, February 16, 2015

L.A.\ITALIA FEST OPENS!



Fabio Testi and wife Antonella Liguori


The Tenth Annual Los Angeles, Italia Film, Fashion and Art Fest opened on Sunday at the Hollywood & Highland complex, at the Chinese Theatre multiplex.  The second movie shown, at three p.m. that afternoon, was the only actual Western of the week-long event, and a rarely seen one: TWO BROTHERS IN TRINITY, shown to honor its star and co-director (with Renzo Genta), Richard Harrison.  Richard Harrison is a unique honoree at the Fest, for he is neither Italian by birth nor parentage.  But he was a very popular American star of Italian movies. 



Handsome and muscular, he played small supporting roles in U.S. films, usually characters in uniform, until moving to Italy in the early 1960s, where he became a star in sword & sandal films, ala Steve Reeves.   He also starred in spy thrillers, crime films and Spaghetti Westerns, and later on a slew of Ninja films.  TWO BROTHERS IN TRINITY is a likable Western comedy in the ‘Trinity’ oeuvre, although not an official part of the ‘Trinity’ series that starred Terrence Hill and Bud Spencer.  In TWO BROTHERS, two half-brothers from the same mother, Richard Harrison and French-born Donald O’Brien, each inherit half of their mother’s gold-rich property, near the town of Trinity.  Very different in outlook, cad Harrison wants to build a brothel, while his Mormon Minister brother wants to build a church, and they have to fight prospectors, outlaws and each other to get their hands on the gold.  It’s fast, physical and fun, with a good balance of Western and comedy elements. 

Before TWO BROTHERS IN TRINITY screened, an official from the fest apologized for the quality of the copy, explaining that it was the only one available, and was in fact Mr. Harrison’s personal copy.  The color was so washed out as to be in black and white, and the image was grainy and not sharply focused, although happily, as you got involved in the story, you forgot the film’s technical flaws.  But it served to reinforce the importance of film preservation.  When a film like this has been seen around the world and released on video, it’s easy to assume it is ‘safe’ by the sheer number of copies out there; but those copies degrade, too.

At 6 o’clock the Fest red carpet began, and to my delight, the very first man to walk its length was Fabio Testi, star of the astonishing Western FOUR OF THE APOCALYPSE, and several others, THE GARDEN OF THE FINZI-CONTINIS, and who recently co-starred with Franco Nero in LETTERS FROM JULIETTE.  I asked him, “When are you going to do FIVE OF THE APOCALYPSE?”

FABIO TESTI: (laughs) You mean FOUR.

HENRY: You’ve done FOUR so far; when are you doing FIVE? 

FABIO TESTI:  (laughs) I don’t know.  We did four (westerns), and I hope (to do more), but I think the Western movie, more or less, is finished now.    Or maybe we can make the new one.

HENRY:  We need you to bring it back.

FABIO TESTI:  I’m ready.  We need money and a director – that’s all!

HENRY:  I’ll bring ‘em!

FABIO TESTI:  Thank you, thank you! 

Moments later, along came Hayley Westenra, a singer from New Zealand, who told me about collaborating on an album with the legendary composer Ennio Morricone. 


Hayley Westenra


HAYLEY WESTENRA: An incredible experience as you can imagine, very surreal.  I made an album with him, in Rome, a few years back.  So we spent the summer there, working with his orchestra, his team of people.  And I wrote some lyrics for this album as well, for some of his pieces.

HENRY: In English?

HAYLEY WESTENRA: In English. Gabriel’s Oboe, and some lyrics from a piece from MALENA, one of his films, and La Calipha.  It was an incredible experience. 

Below is a short video on the making of that album, Paradiso, and a cut from it, I don’t own anything, from ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST. 





Then along came John Landis. 


John Landis


HENRY:  When are you going to do a Western follow-up to THE THREE AMIGOS?

JOHN LANDIS:  You know what?  Walter Hill once said to me, and it’s true, “If they knew how much fun it was to make a Western, they wouldn’t let us.”  It’s the most fun.  I worked in a lot of Spaghetti Westerns.  But making THREE AMIGOS was such fun – I mean it was a comedy, but it was a Western.  Riding around on horses, it’s the most fun.  I love the genre.  It’s hard to get a Western made these days. 

HENRY:  But they are happening, the last few years.

JOHN LANDIS:  I hope so, I would love to – I love Westerns.

Next I talked to Graham Moore, who has an excellent chance of winning the Oscar for Best Screenplay Adaptation for THE IMITATION GAME. 

HENRY:  How difficult is it to take a story where so much of the action is so cerebral, and try to make it understandable and exciting to watch?


Graham Moore


GRAHAM MOORE:  That was one of the great challenges of making this film, was trying to recreate Alan Turing’s subjective experience of the war, and of breaking Enigma, on screen.  My approach, and all of our approach on the film, was to tell Alan’s story, and to, in each moment, imagine what did this feel like for Alan.  So we wanted the code-breaking section, for example, to feel like a thriller, because Alan Turing experienced it as a thriller.  You imagine he’s this 27-year-old mathematician, he’s never been outside of a university in his life, and now he’s working alongside the head of MI-6 on extremely high-level espionage work.  He’s literally living inside of a James Bond novel.  And we wanted to create that feeling on-screen because that was his experience of it. 

HENRY:  Is this a period, historically, that you were interested in before this project came along?

GRAHAM MOORE:  You know, I had been interested in Alan Turing for a long time.  I was lucky enough to have been exposed to Alan Turning’s story as a teenager.  Growing up I went to Space Camp, and computer programming camp; I was a hugely techy kid, and among awkward techy kids like myself, without a lot of friends, Alan Turing was a source of tremendous inspiration, a great hero.  And it always amazed me after I did not become a computer programmer, but became a writer, that no one had a made a film about him.  I felt like if anyone’s life story deserved to be told on screen, it was Alan Turing’s.   

HENRY:  Is this a story that you wrote and brought to people?

GRAHAM MOORE:  That’s right: I wrote it on spec.  I met our producers, Nora Grossman and Ido Ostorowsky, and they had never produced a film before, and I had never written a movie that had been produced before.  So we all jumped together, and spent a year just working on the script on our own, without any money, any corporate anything behind us, because we thought it was such an important story, such a beautiful story that we wanted to be involved in telling.

HENRY:  What’s your next project?

GRAHAM MOORE:  I’m finishing my second novel.  It’s nice to go back to some quiet time in bookland. 

HENRY:  Do you plan to alternate screenplays and novels?

GRAHAM MOORE:  Yuh, my first novel came out four years ago.  I had this grand plan that I was going to take six months off, write this Alan Turing script, and then go right back into the second book.  (laughs) That was five years ago; for lots of happy reasons it’s taken longer then I might have imagined, but so now I’m very happy to go back to the book, and I might go do a movie after that. 

Next up was Rory Kennedy, a documentary filmmaker who is, indeed, one of those Kennedys.  Her documentary, ETHEL, was nominated for an EMMY, and her new film, LAST DAYS IN VIETNAM, is nominated for an Oscar.  I asked her why she chose to make a film about the mass evacuation from Saigon at the end of the Vietnam War.


l to r, Pascal Vicedomini, Antonio Verde,
Rory Kennedy & Fabio Testi


RORY KENNEDY: This is a documentary that I feel very passionate about.  It’s a story that many people in this country think they know; it’s an important chapter in our nation’s history, but few of us actually know what really happened during those last 24 hours.  I think it’s important.  I think it’s relevant today because we’re struggling to get out of Iraq and Afghanistan, and I think that this film raises important questions about what happens to the people left behind, and our responsibilities to them.  We didn’t do it very well in Vietnam, so I’m hoping we’ll learn a few lessons and do it better as we’re struggling with the same issues today.   

When the red carpet was done, we moved into the theatre, for some entertainment, and presentation of awards.  The Fest coincides with the 100th anniversary of the birth of Frank Sinatra, and in recognition of that event, opera singer Vittorio Grigolo sang two Sinatra songs beautifully.   Robert Davi, a character actor who made a name for himself as cops and crooks in films like GOONIES and DIE HARD, is also a talented singer who specializes in Sinatra music.  Working with his sextet, which includes members of Frank Sinatra’s orchestra, Davi performed a terrific set with the classic arrangements. 


Robert Davi


One of the high points of the evening was Franco Nero, who was presenting an award to Jimmy Kimmel, telling the story of his meeting Frank Sinatra when he’d flown into the country to make CAMELOT. 


Jimmy Kimmel flanked by Franco Nero and Kimmel's mother


The Fest continues through Saturday.  On Tuesday night at 8:30, MAN, PRIDE AND VENGEANCE, starring Franco Nero, will be shown.  Presented in the guise of a Spaghetti Western, it’s actually based on Carmen, the novel that is the basis of Bizet’s opera.  (Courtney Joyner and I just did audio commentary for BLUE UNDERGROUND, which will be released shortly.)  At 10:15 pm, TIS PITY SHE’S A WHORE will play, starring Fabio Testi, who will attend.  Wednesday at 3:45 pm, BLOOD BROTHERS screens, and Fabio Testi will attend.  At 6 pm, MASTER STROKE, a spy thriller, will play, honoring Richard Harrison, but I don’t know if he will attend.  There will be many other interesting Italian movies playing throughout the week, all of them free, on a first come, first serve basis.  Here is the link for the full schedule: http://www.losangelesitalia.com/



Remember that the Oscars will be held next Sunday, at the same venue, and streets are already being blocked off, so give yourself extra time for finding your way in to parking – you can get parking validation at the Chinese box office.  I would say ‘take the train,’ but check first if you do, as I’ve heard a rumor that the Hollywood and Highland station may be closed.


Franco Nero and Fabio Testi


THAT’S A WRAP!

Have a great week, folks!  Happy Presidents Day

Happy Trails,

Henry

All Original Content Copyright February 2015 by Henry C. Parke – All Rights Reserved


Monday, April 18, 2011

MEEK'S NOT MILD



When I cut short a phone conversation by telling a friend that I had to get to a screening of MEEK’S CUTOFF, he asked me what it was about. I told him, a lost group of pioneers who meet up with an Indian who might be trying to save them, or might be leading them into a trap. My friend, who is not even a Western fan, commented, “Yeah, like there’s a chance that an Indian in a movie could be the bad guy, leading them into a trap.” He had a point. For most of the history of film, the Indian could be friend or foe, but ever since Iron Eyes Cody stood by the side of the road, crying, while people tossed trash at his feet, the ‘Noble Savage’ image has been pretty-much unbreakable. The good news is, this is a story based on fact, and fact is not nearly as pat, and neat, as fiction.

And MEEK’S CUTOFF is not a neat story – it’s a dusty, sweaty, sore-muscled one, as three wagons of emigrants follow one Stephen Meeks through an endless, baking desert. The story-telling is also not neat, but naturalistic, documentary in style – not in the self-conscious, jerky-camera way, but in the sense that you are watching real people, real events, and no one is casually giving you the back-story. You only see people sullenly on-the-move. It takes some time to gather that they followed Meek off the main path of the Oregon Trail because he claimed to know a shortcut, and it takes longer to learn that he promised to have them delivered in two weeks, but it’s already been five. And if you were going by the word of the pompous braggart Meek, you’d never know that they are lost at all.

Meek is played by Bruce Greenwood, unrecognizable under a mass of beard and mustache which provides him a visage somewhere between Bill Cody and Charles Manson. He seems not a conscious villain, but a fool who doesn’t realize how far beyond his depth he is. But one cannot be sure of his motives. Michelle Williams, Oscar-nominated this past year for BLUE VALENTINE, stars as Emily, the least cowed of the pioneers, and Will Patton plays her husband, Solomon.

As the days and weeks stretch on, water getting scarce, and only ten-year-old Jimmy (Tommy Nelson) still finding Meek’s tales inspiring, things are becoming desperate. Then, to add to the growing panic, with all the men off searching for water, Emily spots an Indian watching her! In one of the films most strikingly real moments, she runs back to the wagons to get a rifle and fire a signal – two shots in the air. But because it’s 1845, the rifle is a muzzle-loader, and even moving as quickly as she can, the process of putting shot and wad and powder down the barrel, ramming it home, priming the hammer and firing – and doing it twice – takes what seems like forever, all without a cut.

After much supposition about what the Indian wants -- Meek’s guess being to skin them all alive -- Meek and Solomon capture the Indian (Rod Rondeaux) and lead him back to the camp. In a situation which must have happened often but is rarely dramatized, the pioneers are completely unable to communicate with the Indian, or he with them. We understand what the pioneers want: water, and not to be killed in their sleep. Meek wants to kill the Indian then and there, but the others have no faith in him anymore, and think the Indian may lead them to water. Rondeaux gives an ominous and frequently chilling performance as the enigmatic Indian. His long speeches are sometimes offhand, and often seemingly bitter, and we are often as maddened as the pioneers who cannot fathom what he is saying. Will they let him lead them? If they do, where will he take them?

The look of the film, shot by first-time-feature cinematographer Christopher Blauvelt, is often striking. Comparisons will be made to Terrence Malick’s DAYS OF HEAVEN (1978), for all the women in bonnets doing hard labor, and he manages to communicate the horrid monotony of the situation without making it monotonous to watch – from arid and dusty riverbeds to compositions that bring Charles Russell to mind. There are painfully beautiful shots of the moon shooting through the clouds.

The most visually arresting sequence involves the lowering of a wagon down a hill, beautifully shot by Blauvelt, and directed and edited by Kelly Reichardt. Reichardt, whose previous films include WENDY AND LUCY (2008) and OLD JOY (2006), and screenwriter Jon Raymond, have clearly set out to tell a story that may occur in the ‘West’ without being a traditional ‘Western.’ To a great extent, they succeed, but ironically, though there is little gunplay, what there is is among the most memorable scenes. And the most heart-grabbing moments are the iconically Western images of a watchful Indian glimpsed on a horse, then suddenly disappearing.

And there are some basic rules to filmmaking that are true for any genre, and those rules are broken at the filmmaker’s peril. Just as we know that if you show a gun, you need to fire it eventually, if you show a very pregnant woman in a lost wagon-train, she had better give birth or have a miscarriage at some point. And if, while lost in the desert, you find gold, and mark it for your return, you’d better return, or say something about it.

My biggest complaint is that with such a tiny cast – nine people – several had very little to do. Paul Dano, so good in LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE and THERE WILL BE BLOOD, does little more than calm down his hysterical wife, played by Zoe Kazan. The third couple, Shirley Henderson and Neal Huff, get even less.

I enjoyed this movie, but I do caution you that it is not a traditional Western, and when the lights went up at my screening, I heard an incredulous, “That’s it?” from more than one voice. While it is all well done, not enough happens. While the comparisons to Malick are obvious, the director whose naturalism it brought to my mind – and I consider this a major compliment – is D.W. Griffith. He did RAMONA effectively in 17 minutes. He would have told MEEK’S CUTOFF in two reels at most.









SPAGHETTI WESTERN FESTIVAL DRAWS STARS AND THE STAR-STRUCK

On Saturday, March 19th, the First Los Angeles Spaghetti Western Festival was held at the El Portal Theatre, in North Hollywood. The event, the brainchild of John Antoniou, brought together fans, filmmakers, video-sellers, and seven stars of the genre: Robert Woods, Mark Damon, Richard Harrison, Brett Halsey, Jack Betts (known onscreen as Hunt Powers), Michael Forest and Dan Van Husen. One of the most startling aspects of the phenomenon of Spaghetti Westerns is that, while the American film industry has been making westerns for eight years more than a century (counting 1903’s GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY as the first), Spaghetti Westerns started in 1962 with SAVAGE GUNS, and petered out around ten years later. I don’t know if anyone has counted how many American Westerns there are, but in one decade, the Italians made six hundred! So all the leading men we see are roughly the same age, because they are the only generation of Spaghetti Western stars.

The program began with a 10:30 a.m. screening of GATLING GUN starring Robert Woods. To read my review of the film, click HERE. To buy the DVD from Dorado Films, CLICK HERE.

The screening was followed by a Q&A with star Robert Woods, which was conducted by Tom Betts, editor of the influential magazine and now site, Westerns All’Italiana.
http://westernsallitaliana.blogspot.com/

Among the insights revealed was the reason Woods did most of his own stunts. “I’m so tall (6’7”) that there were no Italians tall enough to double me, so I did all my own stunts.” One of the roughest looking scenes in GATLING GUN is when Woods is dragged by a horse. “I had a sled, under my shirt. It was a breast-plate, a wooden piece that fit over your chest, but with all the twists and turns I was pretty bruised, I’ve got to tell you.” To read my interview with Robert Woods, CLICK HERE.

“The first (Spaghetti Western) I did was in 1963, and that one was bought by MGM. When they saw that there was a market – an American market – for these films, that’s when they came to America to get actors, when Leone came. He wanted Bronson, but Bronson wanted too much money. Then they wanted Eric Fleming, but he was already doing a film, and he called up (his RAWHIDE costar) Clint Eastwood and said, ‘Get over to the Beverly Hills Hotel, they’re casting a film.’” Woods was longer in Italy than most of the others, living in a little colony of American actors. “I was there for 16 years, from 1962 to 1978.”

Next there were trailers, then a screening of DEAD MEN DON’T COUNT, which is available on DVD from Wild East ProductionsCLICK HERE to learn more.

This screening was followed by a Q&A with the film’s star, Mark Damon, again conducted by Tom Betts. For some reason, Damon played a lot of characters with the same first name. “I was Johnny in this one, then Johnny Oro, then Johnny Yuma.” Damon won the audience over by asking, “You all clapped a lot, and I wonder if it’s because you really enjoyed this picture, or because you probably knew I was in the audience, and that I was going to talk afterwards.” After our applause convinced him we really like the movie, an early ‘buddy’ picture with Anthony Stephan, he continued. “I did this movie about forty years ago, and since then I’ve acted in another five or six pictures, and quit, and since then I’ve produced seventy pictures and distributed about 300, and I tell you, you forget. Most of what I saw tonight I don’t remember having done. I thought it was kind of cute, actually. I don’t remember seeing it at all. Anthony Stephan was a great guy who was very much a loner, very closed. And very wooden, yes.” Incidentally, among the films Damon has produced are 9 1/2 WEEKS, DAS BOOT, LOST BOYS, THE NEVERENDING STORY and MONSTER, which won Charlize Theron her Oscar.

Looking back at Spaghetti Westerns, one thing that strikes Damon is, “…how many of those films were forerunners of some of the great movies of today. So many movies that had great success afterwards, that were not westerns, were based on so much of what happened in those Spaghetti Western years. The director of this particular film I had not known before, a Spanish director, and what I saw tonight was very interesting, because he had a great eye. Some of the scenes, where you have the bad guys running off in the distance, (seen through) this boy’s legs just swinging – you had a lot of those nice touches. So many of the directors that I have worked with were really very talented. They tried to do much more than was necessary. I was actually very pleased to see this film. Much better than I thought. The title, in Italian, means something different. DEAD MEN DON’T COUNT. In Italian, the title means ‘There Are So Many Dead Men That You Can’t Count Them.’ More dead in this film than in almost any other Western ever!”

Next there were more coming attractions, then the one whose runaway success started it all, A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS, the film introduced by David Frangioni, author of CLINT EASTWOOD ICON: THE ESSENTIAL FILM ART COLLECTION. Following this was the highpoint of the event, a panel discussion, moderated by Tom Betts, with all of the guests. One of the first questions raised was how each of the guests got into the business of Spaghetti Westerns.

MARK DAMON: I had been acting in America for some years. I went to Italy to do a picture – it was cancelled, I was stuck there. Then I went off to do a picture called THE LONGEST DAY, in Paris. And met a guy, a director named Sergio Corbucci, who said, “You did The Longest Day, right?” I said, “Si.” He said, “Why don’t you come and do a picture for me?” “What’s the name of the picture?” He said, “THE SHORTEST DAY.” It was a spoof on The Longest Day. I believe I’m the only actor in the world who appeared in both The Longest Day and The Shortest Day. Corbucci and I became friends – he was a great director – great, fun comedy director. Of course, all of us here know who Sergio Corbucci was. One day he says, “I’m gonna do a Western. Why don’t you do it?” I said, “Well, I’ve never ridden a horse before.” He said, “You’ll learn.” I said, “Western heroes are usually tall and blond. I’m not tall and I’m not blond.” “It doesn’t matter.” “Why do you want me?” “You’re American.” I said, “That’s the only reason?” He says, “I like you. And you’re American.” Because at that time you had to have American names as stars of Westerns, because they figured that if they had an American name, whether he was a big name or not, they could sell the movies to America. I had never been in a Western before, never rode a horse before, but I got a start simply because I had an American name.

ROBERT WOODS: I was working at a theatre in Paris, I was doing Checkov’s THE CHERRY ORCHARD. A producer came to see it, and he offered me a movie. At the time I said no thank you. The next dy he came with a contract for five pictures, with money I could only dream of. I said, yes that’s how it all began, in Barcelona.

MIKE FOREST: I went to Italy in ’68. There was a film that was going to be done, and I thought if I was there, I’d have a good chance at getting it. It was 100 RILFES, Raquel Welch, Jim Brown, and as luck would have it, I was on that film for three months. We shot it in Spain, and that was the beginning of my career in Italy. Prior to that, though, I had been working in dubbing. And I did an awful lot of what we called ‘dubbage’ in those days.

HUNT POWERS – How I got to Rome, and became Hunt Powers (instead of Jack Betts). It was because of a phone call I made. I was on my way home, stopped off to call my agent Paul Kohner, he said there was an Italian producer who had been in New York for three weeks, can’t find an actor. If you want to drop by… I was there in ten minutes! By then (director) Franco Giraldi had seen some of my stuff, and he spoke very, very little English. But we instantly had a connection. He said to me, “Do you ride the horse?” I said, “Yes, I ride all the time.” I had never been on a horse in my life. He said, “Do you shoot a gun?” I said, “Si. I’ve won several prizes for sharp-shooting.” I’d never had a gun in my hand in my life. But there was something about the meeting between the two of us. And he said, “Can you be in Rome Tuesday at Cinecitta Studios?” I said, “Yes, I can.” He said, “I have only one thing, I never make a decision without my wife. We’re leaving for Rome tonight. Would you mind coming by the hotel to meet my wife and finalize the casting?” I went to the Beverly Wilshire Hotel, knocked on the door, and this gorgeous blonde opens the door, and says, “Madonna! It’s Sugar Colt!” Instantly, like that. So the next day I called (a friend) and told him, you’ve got to teach me how to get on a horse!

Moderator Tom Betts pointed out that one of the pleasures of watching a Spaghetti Western was watching our own history from a different point of view. “It’s a European view of our history. I always like them because they showed a roughness, where in a lot of American films, you went into a town, all the building were clean. In the real West, people had to struggle, they didn’t have things being shipped out, they had to make it from what they had. The faces were burned from the sun and hard work, and that’s what shows up here, because they used people who lived (in the villages), so it’s a rougher, maybe truer view of what our west looked like.”

HUNT POWERS: A lot of people don’t realize that these were actual villages. These weren’t sets. They didn’t have telephone wires and TV antennas – even though they look like elaborate sets, the Spanish villages were Spanish villages. The Western towns were built, but the villages were actual villages, and the people who lived there were extras.

RICHARD HARRISON: I loved Italy in the ‘60s, and into the ‘70s. It was the most fantastic place I’d ever been – it was like a little child going to Disneyland. I suppose we were there at the best time. For me it was everything was wonderful, the food was wonderful, people treated us like royalty. I learned one thing though, when they say to you (the Italian phrase that translates to) ‘you are more than a brother to me’, watch out!

MARK DAMON: He’s absolutely right. I remember getting the feeling that the national game among most of the Italian movie-makers was who can you screw the most, who is the closest to you. Other than Sophia Loren. But Richard is right – it was such a magic time, we were treated like Magnificent Strangers (the original title for A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS) -- bigger than life American actors. One of the differences I remember is that if a film role came up for an Italian, and he couldn’t do it, he wouldn’t tell anyone. But if a film role came up and an American couldn’t do it, he’d call up other Americans. We were very close that way.

HUNT POWERS: It was truly delightful to live there – it changed my entire life. La dolce vita. The whole way I live, the way I thought about life. The Italians taught me one thing, in work, play, in play, work. The most important thing to Italians is this moment, right now. Enjoy the moment – the work, the lunch – truly la dolce vita. I miss it very much.

ROBERT WOODS: What I loved about making films in Italy is that it was collaborative. In American filmmaking in general, everything was segregated. You move a light and the grip will kill you. There, everybody collaborates to do a film. Granted, on a low budget, but still we all worked together to get a good result. Every time I left a shoot, after eight or ten weeks of work, I felt like weeping, because these were people I might not see again, and we were a family. If you ever get a chance to go to Europe, the lifestyle is so much healthier. I love America – I’m American – but I’m telling you, the way they live life is the way we all should.

MIKE FOREST: Someone once asked me, what was it like to be in Italy for ten years? I said I was on a party for ten years. It really was – it was like being at a party. Playing – I played a lot of tennis and golf in those days, you were working or you were having a few drinks and dinner and so forth, it was a wonderful time.

MARK DAMON: Very first picture I did in Italy, I had a character, that I decided to give an Irish accent to, so I worked a week, perfecting my accent. And I remember my first day I had a big speech, walking and talking, and I had it down pat, and I couldn’t wait to start. So I start walking, talking, walking – and suddenly I realize that there’s no boom. There was no recorder. I said, “Stop! Where’s the sound?” The guy looks at me like I’m crazy. They explain to the director, who didn’t speak English. And he says, tell the boy to relax. We do all the dubbing afterwards, we don’t care what he sounds like.

Tom asked the group if there was ever trouble with stunts.

RICHARD HARRISON: I admired the stuntmen. I didn’t have to do any stunts, and it’s a stupid thing for actors to do stunts.

ROBERT WOODS: Thank you.

RICHARD HARRISON: I went to the hospital many times. And I saw a lot of people killed. Because as you all know, they really didn’t have many safety precautions. I remember in one film, I had a hatchet I was supposed to throw at a mob, so I go like that (makes a throwing gesture, freezing with the hand extended), I stopped with the hatchet like that. The director said, “What are you doing?” “I can’t go any further.” “Why not?” “Because I can’t really throw the hatchet!” “Why not? They’re only extras.”

MARK DAMON: I remember how they used to have horses fall. These days they have ways to bend down and (make it look like they trip). Then they would just put a wire across, so the horses would really stumble, break legs and everything. It was the beginning of stunt work in Westerns, sword and sandals. And like Richard said, in every single picture I did, I got hurt. And one of the reasons was, I wanted to show the crew that I was macho enough to do some of my own stunts. Being just a mediocre athlete, I pushed myself, to be as good as I could, to show what I could do.

BRETT HALSEY: When I started off making the sword-fighting pictures, (the stunt men) were masters, but when we got to the Westerns, we had to show off. I remember one time I had a scene where I ride a horse right in front of a train, bad guys are chasing me, and I said I can do it. Then when I saw the dailies, it could have been my wife, the figure was so small.

When asked if anyone ever had trouble getting paid, EVERY hand went up.

MARK DAMON: They would offer you something called cambiati, which we all know about. It’s a promissory note – it means you’re supposed to pay at a certain time. You say, “You don’t have the money to pay me now. What if you don’t have the money to pay me then?” He says, “You sue us.”

ROBERT WOODS: And by then they’ve changed their company name.

Why did the genre end?

MARK DAMON: You could make Westerns very cheaply, that sold very very well overseas, and you could make a lot of money. So what happened was, 80% of the production in Italy at that time were Westerns or action pictures. And people just got tired of them. There were just too many, and the quality got worse and worse, and there are just so many ways to tell a Western (story). And in about 1970, ’71, I wasn’t getting any mnore offers for any kind of picture. They said, “Well, you’re a capelloni – a guy in a ten gallon hat” – and the fact was we were all typed as that, and most of us had to seek others areas. I quit acting and went into distribution. Now suddenly it’s all come back, and spaghetti westerns are considered classics, and their stories are being (re)told in so many different ways. I don’t think the Western, as such, will ever come back.

ROBERT WOODS: Tarantino changed everything by using spaghetti Western influence – it’s in all (of) Tarantino’s work. This kind of genre still works, whether it’s modern or it’s Western.

DAN VAN HUSEN: They’re starting to make remakes of some of the Spaghetti westerns. This year I’m in the remake of a Western called CUTTHROATS NINE, with Harvey Keitel, and it’s going to be filmed in Canada. At the same time, I’m talking about a western by Danny Garcia, DOLLARS FROM HELL, so they’re doing Westerns again. (Dan and Brett Hallsey are also both in THE SCARLET WORM).

ROBERT WOODS: I’ve had so many close calls: I fell off a water-wheel on SEVEN GUNS FOR THE MACGREGORS on my back – some really awful stuff. But I loved it! The honest truth was, it was fun; it was all playing cowboys and Indians.

After the panel, there was a signing for David Frangioni’s book, and band The Insect Surfers played a tribute to the classic scores of Ennio Morricone. It was a great event, and all that attended hope that it is only the first of many. If you’d like to get a feel for the event, CLICK HERE to see a brief but excellent video by Salvatore Seberganido.

And speaking of tributes to Morricone, at the event I met a composer named Chris Casey, who gave me a CD of his music. I’ve been listening to it a lot while writing this piece. If you’re in a good, or a bad, or an ugly mood, and you’d like to take a listen, go HERE.

(Spaghetti Western pics: Robert Woods; Mark Damon; Mike Forest;Robert Woods, Mark Damon and Richard Harrison; Brett Halsey and Hunt Powers; Hunt Powers, Mike Forest, Dan Van Husen)



“IF THEY MOVE…KILL ‘EM.”

Today, Sunday April 17, 2011, would have been the 93rd birthday of actor William Holden, who died far too young, at the age of 63. Holden, who won his Oscar for STALAG 17 (1954), and was nominated for SUNSET BOULEVARD (1951) and NETWORK (1977), was wonderful in every kind of film, from sports stories like GOLDEN BOY (1939) to war movies like BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI (1957) to sophisticated comedies like SABRINA (1954), but he certainly excelled in Westerns. For many, his most indelible performance was at Pike in THE WILD BUNCH (1969), but among his others were ARIZONA (1940), TEXAS (1941), THE MAN FROM COLORADO (1948), STREETS OF LAREDO (1949), ESCAPE FROM FT. BRAVO (1953), THE HORSE SOLDIERS (1959), ALVAREZ KELLY (1966), THE WILD ROVERS (1971) and THE REVENGERS (1972).

As part of their series on the Civil War, TCM will be showing a double bill of his best on Monday night, starting with THE HORSE SOLDIERS at 10:00 p.m. Pacific, followed at 12:15 a.m. by ESCAPE FROM FORT BRAVO.



PAUL HARPER OF ‘THE WILD BUNCH’

Unless you’ve been reading the Round-up almost from the very start, you haven’t read my piece about actor Paul Harper, who played Ross, one of the bounty hunters in THE WILD BUNCH. You can read it HERE.

http://henryswesternroundup.blogspot.com/2010/02/western-events-spaghetti-and-otherwise.html

Yesterday I was surprised and delighted to hear from Oregon Sue, who writes Daily Drivel HERE.
www.OregonSue.blogspot.com.

She’d been searching online for a picture of Paul, and the one she found led her to my write-up. She tells me, “Paul was a friend of ours, and a very funny man. He gave my husband a hat William Holden wore in THE WILD BUNCH. Something you may not have known about him, he was a Reserve Deputy Sheriff for L.A. County. To make his part in The Wild Bunch more “exotic,” for a better word, the studio offered him $20,000 to have all his teeth pulled. He did. Then later he did those Pace (Picante Sauce) commercials – “Get a rope!” – where he snickered and showed off his lack of teeth! Just fyi.” I hadn’t realized that it was Paul Harper driving the wagon in the Pace Picante Sauce commercial, but I found it HERE.

And when I looked at a few more of them – people post everything on Youtube – I was surprised and delighted to learn that at least two other Pace commercials featured cast-members from THE WILD BUNCH! To see Bo Hopkins, click HERE.

To see Dub Taylor, click HERE.

I wonder if the folks at Pace did it on purpose?

EASTER-EGG HUNT WITH A SENSE OF HISTORY!

Los Encinos State Historical Park will be holding their traditional Easter Egg Hunt on Saturday, April 23rd, from 1 pm to 3 pm. In addition to eggs, they’ll have traditional games, a blacksmith, old time music, tours of the historic adobe and performers in period costume. Admission is free. Donations are welcome. Please bring your own baskets.
The Egg Hunts will be grouped as follows:
1:00-1-3 y ears old
1:30: 4-6 years old
2:00: 7 years and up
Los Encinos State Historic Park is located at 16756 Moorpark in Encino, East of the intersection of Balboa and Ventura Blvds.

THE CIVIL WAR LIVES ON TCM!

On Wednesday, April 20th, Turner Classic Movies continues their examination of the War Between The States with a second night of Civil War-themes Westerns. At 5:00 pm it’s ALVAREZ KELLY (1966), directed by Edward Dmytryk from a script by Franklin Coen, and starring William Holden, Richard Widmark, Patrick O’Neal, Don ‘Red’ Barry and Harry Carey Jr. At 7:00 pm Michael Curtiz directs Errol Flynn, Randolph Scott, Miriam Hopkins, Humphrey Bogart and everyone else under Warner Brothers contract in VIRGINIA CITY (1940). There’s a rousing Max Steiner score, Charles Middleton (Ming the Merciless) as Jefferson Davis, and keep your eyes peeled for Tarleton twin and future man of steel George Reeves as a telegrapher. At 9:15 it’s THE SIEGE AT RED RIVER (1954), directed by Victor Mate’ from a Sidney Boehm screenplay, about the battle for possession of a Gatling gun. It stars Van Johnson, lovely Joanne Dru, Richard Boone before he was Paladin, and Milburn Stone before he was Doc. At 10:45 pm it’s GREAT DAY IN THE MORNING (1956) directed by Jacques Tourner, starring Robert Stack, Alex Nicol, Virgina Mayo, Ruth Roman and Raymond Burr. At 12:30 am, HANGMAN’S KNOT (1952), written and directed by Roy Huggins, with second unit direction by Yakima Canutt, stars Randolph Scott, Donna Reed, Lee Marvin and Claude Jarman Jr. Finally, at 2:00 am it’s DEVIL’S DOORWAY (1950), directed by the outstanding Anthony Mann, starring Robert Taylor, Louis Calhern, Edgar Buchanan and Paula Raymond, and featuring costumes by Walter Plunkett, and more 2nd unit by Yakima Canutt. All times are west-coast.

HAPPY TRAILS THEATRE ON RFD-TV

On Thursday, April 21st, from 2:30 pm to 4 pm, Roy and Dale and Pat Brady fight Roy Barcroft and hoof-and-mouth in DOWN DAKOTA WAY (1949), directed by William Whitney from a script by John Butler and Sloan Nibley.




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.

Well Pardners, it's 1:30 in the a.m., so I'm going to post this now, and tomorrow I'll put up the pictures, and a few more items.

Have a great week!

Henry

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