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THE OUTLAW. Doc Holliday (Walter Huston) meets the notorious Billy the Kid (Jack Beutel), who has stolen his horse. Doc's old friend Pat Garrett, now a sheriff, wants to arrest the Kid for murder, but Doc helps his young friend flee to a hideout, where Billy meets Rio (Jane Russell), a beautiful young woman who soon finds herself falling in love with him. As Doc and Billy try to evade the law, they run into a series of adventures involving Indians and gunfights, culminating in a fierce showdown. Under the control of director/ producer Howard Hughes, THE OUTLAW became both a classic Western and a tribute to the charms of its leading lady, 19-year-old Jane Russell, whose cleavage was featured prominently in the film's publicity. As a result, THE OUTLAW became one of the most controversial films of the 1940s, leading to a protracted battle with censors that only added to the film's allure. The story of Pat Garrett, Doc Holliday, and Billy the Kid sharply veers from historical reality but the result is a fun and engaging classic that stands out from other Westerns of the era.
THE DEADLY COMPANIONS. Peckinpah's first feature follows a funeral procession through hostile Apache territory led by the man who accidentally killed the boy in the coffin. The soldier who made the promise of protection to the boy's mother hopes to settle more than one score at the end of the journey. Director Sam Peckinpah's first feature film. Brian Keith, Maureen Ohara
KANSAS PACIFIC. Though the Civil War has yet to start, the conflicts have already risen to the surface. In the 1860s, railway employees do anything to postpone work on the Kansas Pacific line because they side with the Confederates in the budding War Between The States. Meanwhile, those partisan to the North step up progress. Then the U.S. Army assigns an engineer, John Nelson, to the tracks to see the project to completion. Nelson does not realize, though, that he has just stepped into a microcosm of the brewing battle that will ultimately pit brother against brother. Sterling Hayden
ONE-EYED JACKS. Stanley Kubrick was originally set to direct this revenge western about an outlaw who seeks vengeance on a sheriff who once was his close friend; instead, star Marlon Brando took it over. This 1961 Western is Marlon Brando's only directorial effort. It's the Old West of 1880, and Brando stars as Kid Rio, who along with his partner, Dad Longworth (Karl Malden) are bank robbers who are caught holding up a Mexican bank. Longworth gets away and allows his partner to get caught and go to jail. When Rio is released five years later, he goes out to seek revenge; however, he is surprised to find his partner is married with a stepdaughter and sheriff of a town. Complications set in when Rio himself falls in love with the stepdaughter.
JOHN WAYNE. American legend. Iconic cowboy. The King of Westerns. With a career spanning fifty years and over two hundred films under his belt, John Wayne is still today's most renowned Western hero. See The Duke shine in two of his best films: Hell Town, and The Man from Utah.
HOPALONG CASSIDY. Western Hero. Television and Film Icon. Idolized Role Model. The Cowboy Who Did Right. Hopalong Cassidy, who rode into the hearts of millions as the good-guy of the West, is a shining piece of American history. William Boyd stars as the cowboy in black, with his trusty stallion Topper, in these two classic, original Western films: Border Patrol and Doomed Caravan!
ROY ROGERS. Roy Rogers changed the face of Western films with his light-hearted productions that represented the values America was founded on. Today, Hollywood's great singing cowboy lives on in classic Westerns Hands Across the Border, Billy the Kid Returns, and The Eyes of Texas.
GENE AUTRY. Academy Award® nominee and record-breaking musical recording artist Gene Autry was the ultimate hero and quintessential "good" Cowboy in more than eighty Western films. See the silver screen entertainer in Riders of Whistling Pines and The Big Show.
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