Brand new factory sealed blu-ray of four timeless western's.
RIO CONCHOS: Nifty nonstop action in this western set in Texas after the Civil War. Ex-Confederate Army officer Lassiter (Richard Boone), revenging himself against Apache Indians who have massacred his family, recovers a stolen U.S. Army repeating rifle from some Apaches.
The U.S. Army arrests him, offering him his freedom if he leads a small group into Mexico consisting of an Army Captain (Stuart Whitman), a Buffalo Soldier sergeant (Jim Brown in his screen debut), a knife-wielding Mexican prisoner (Tony Franciosa), and an Apache woman warrior. After blasting their way through bandits and Apaches, they discover a meglomaniacal Confederate soldier (Edmond O'Brien) selling guns to the Apaches.
TAKE a HARD RIDE: A trail boss cowboy (Jim Brown) is teamed with a cool card shark (Fred Williamson) and a silent martial arts Indian (Jim Kelly). The black action trio had been in 'Three the Hard Way' the year before.
A dying cattleman (Dana Andrews) hires Brown to transport some money to Mexico. With Lee Van Cleef as a ruthless bounty hunter, a desperate hooker (Catherine Spaak), Barry Sullivan and Harry Carey Jr.
BUTCH & SUNDANCE the Early Years: Before the adventures that made them legends, they were charming mastermind Robert Leroy Parker, alias Butch Cassidy (Tom Berenger), and crack-shot outlaw Harry Longabaugh, soon to be known as the Sundance Kid (William Katt).
This is the prequel of how they met, their first clumsy robberies, the heroic dangers that bound them together, the secret that nearly tore them apart, and the impossible train heist that made them notorious for life.
LAST HARD MEN: Retired sheriff Sam Burgade (Charlton Heston) must save his daughter (Barbara Hershey) from escaped convict Provo (James Coburn) who kidnapped her as revenge for jailing him and accidently killing his wife.
Provo and his gang force a showdown with the reluctant former lawman by threatening bodily harm and worse to the daughter if he doesn't show. Solid work by all the leads raise this one above the usual genre fare.