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A Man Called Horse is a 1970 Western film directed by Elliot Silverstein, produced by Sandy Howard, and written by Jack DeWitt.It is based on a short story of the same name by the Western writer Dorothy M. Johnson, first published in 1950 in Collier's magazine and again in 1968 in Johnson's book Indian Country.
Copper, one of the horses ridden by Eddie Dean in his films; Denny, the buckskin gelding of The Man From Snowy River (also appeared in the sequel, The Man from Snowy River II) Diablo, the black and white pinto from the Cisco Kid movies; Dollar, the horse of John Wayne's character (John Bernard "J.B." Books) in The Shootist, 1976
The Horse Boy (2009) [1] Hochzeitsnacht im Regen (1967) Home in Indiana (1944) Hoofs and Goofs (1957) The Horse in the Gray Flannel Suit (1968) [1] The Horsemasters (1961) The Horsemen (1971) The Horse Whisperer (1998) [2] The Horse with the Flying Tail (1960) [1] Horsing Around (1957) Hot Tip (1935) The Hottentot (1922) The Hottentot (1929 ...
Giddyup! Watch some of the best horse movies of all time, including classics like Black Beauty, Secretariat, and The Horse Whisperer.
Horse trainer Uncle Willie is reincarnated as a Derby horse called October. Racing Luck [95] 1948 Two women enter horses in a race, wagering that whoever wins will own both. The Winner's Circle [96] [97] [98] 1948 A young girl is heartbroken when she's forced to sell her colt, Teacher's Pet. The Great Dan Patch [99] 1949
Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron (or simply Spirit) is a 2002 American animated Western film produced by DreamWorks Animation and distributed by DreamWorks Pictures.The film was directed by Kelly Asbury and Lorna Cook from a screenplay by John Fusco, based on an idea by Jeffrey Katzenberg, who produced the film alongside Mireille Soria. [4]
The Return of a Man Called Horse is a 1976 Western film directed by Irvin Kershner and written by Jack DeWitt.It is a sequel to the 1970 film A Man Called Horse, in turn based on Dorothy M. Johnson's short story of the same name, with Richard Harris reprises his role as Horse, a British aristocrat who has become a member of a tribe of Lakota Sioux.
Sundance judges called the film a "humanizing look at the life and bizarre death of a seemingly normal Seattle family man who met his untimely end after an unusual encounter with a horse". [8] The film was picked up for distribution by THINKFilm , whose executive said, "The film is extreme more in its formalism than in terms of graphic content."