Quentin Tarantino's Swinging Sixties: Film #3 (Sony Movie Channel UK) I love most Italian westerns, and I enjoy some American westerns. The same 7 buildings

While Apacheland is no more, there is a web site on it: So this 1965 Audie Murphy Western was Bucking the Trend.Not that Critics paid much Attention to Murph beforehand. It’s worth your time. It helps that they are reflected in one of the more contradictory among Hollywood leading men. It helps that they are reflected in one of the more contradictory among Hollywood leading men. On May 29, 1969, fire destroyed most of the ranch.

It was a 320-acre portion of a valley with a photographically perfect mountain for a backdrop." Verdict....Average,but it's Audie Murphy and that's good enough for me.Not a particularly memorable western, but worth watching for the theme alone.90% of the time, while watching westerns, I think "what in the fuck is going on?" Arizona Raiders is a 1965 American Techniscope Technicolor Western film directed by William Witney and starring Audie Murphy. He was always Overlooked and Ignored during His Career.So this one was given the Usual Dismissal, came and went Without Fanfare as was Par for the Course for Most of the War Hero’s Movies.But it’s an Above Average Western with an Epic Feel some Brutal Action, with Complex Alliances and Characters.It’s also a Treat for Movie Buffs to See Buster Crabbe, Looking…What's this, Audie Murphy not on the side of the angels?

Actors and actresses from around the world have worked on sets beneath the facade of Superstition Mountain. Gloria Talbott improbably portrays a member of the Yaqui people; she reports that "the old way, the way of the savage Yaqui" means employing cactus torture tactics against white raiders — in keeping with America's tradition of anti-Indigenous stereotypes and not with reality.The best thing about this film was the cactus torture, otherwise it’s a run of the mill b-grade matinee western. This one was the only I haven't seen before and it is as good as the other two. It has an exhausting quality as things simple get pushed and barely solved.
Watch a QT classic again and spot the references. Movies referenced in the film, movies Tarantino…Spaghetti, Euro, American, Mexican, Latin, Ostern, Asian, Comedy, Horror, Acid, Animation, Birth of Cinema, Weird, and more...all those films that lead to Tarantino classics. The opening is slam-bang, and the action staging is tops throughout. He found just the spot he wanted 15 miles from Tucson. The debate rages on even today.

It is technically a remake of Phil Karlson's The Texas Rangers which I saw the other day as is a strong film, but this is far more expansive and troubling in its historical tapestry. He packs the frame with bodies, masterfully uses the widescreen frame and keeps the editing jumping.
B Westerns in the 60s look so similar to TV of the period.This is an attempt to chronicle every single Western film ever made - be…Every movie mentioned in a positive manner by Tarantino in interviewsA list of all movies connected to "Once Upon A Time In Hollywood". This one was the only I haven't seen before and it is as good as the other two. Several film shorts were shot in the area between 1910-1920.

Not only his eyes but also his hands putting a brother to sleep, a physical gesture that could only be reproduced by someone who had already lived something like it. Audie Murphy gives a great performance and I love seeing an older Buster Crabbe playing a heroic archetype again. Insgesamt eine durchaus spannende Angelegenheit, auch wenn noch deutlich mehr aus der Ungewissheit rund um die wahren Absichten der beiden Hauptfiguren herauszuholen gewesen wäre.Well-made William Witney western with Audie Murphy fighting Quantrill's Raiders.

Part of 8 pages of info for the 1981 movie from the award winning '80s Movies Rewind.

One guy tries to leave early with the cash because he thinks…Top-shelf B western gold from Director William Witney.

I'm always beffudled by low-ratings on Letterboxd on films like these and I can only imagine it probably stems from an underwhelming final five minutes (which are fine, if unspectacular). Only 7 buildings survived. Generally, I'm looking for charisma, beautiful imagery, and tone.

Witney slow methodical direction takes it apart from most Murphy vehicles which tend to be more spare ands miniature in feeling. Or maybe also when he sighs, which translates a kind of existential desolation I have very few times seen so acurately portrayed. Now owned by Sue Birmingham, daughter of Spencer Stewart, it is located at 4369 S. Kings Ranch Road, Gold Canyon (about 7 miles east of Apache Junction), Arizona.