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All the Boys Love Mandy Lane; All the Fine Young Cannibals; All the Pretty Horses (film) American Folk; American Sniper; American Violet; American: The Bill Hicks Story; Amerigeddon; And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself; Angels in Stardust; Apache Ambush; The Apostle; Arrowhead (1953 film) As Long as They're Happy; Assassin's Creed (film) The ...
Afro-American Work Songs in a Texas Prison; Ain't Them Bodies Saints; The Alamo (1960 film) The Alamo (2004 film) Alamo: The Price of Freedom; The Alamo: 13 Days to Glory; All of Me (2013 film) All the Pretty Horses (film) Amanda & Jack Go Glamping; Amerigeddon; The Andromeda Strain (film) Angels Sing; Any Given Sunday; The Apostle; Appaloosa ...
The replica of the Alamo built for John Wayne's film The Alamo (1960). Alamo Village is a movie set and tourist attraction north of Brackettville, Texas, United States.It was the first movie location built in Texas, originally constructed for and best known as the setting for The Alamo (1960), directed by John Wayne and starring Wayne, Richard Widmark, Laurence Harvey and Frankie Avalon.
Part or all of these movies/shows either take place, or are set, in Houston, Texas or the surrounding area: The Houston Story (1956) - starring Gene Barry and Barbara Hale (of Perry Mason) Hellfighters (1968) - with John Wayne; Brewster McCloud (1970) – first film to be filmed inside the Astrodome; The Getaway (1972) – filmed in Huntsville ...
The Glass Menagerie, 1950; Panic in the Streets, 1950; Adventures of Captain Fabian, 1951; Drums in the Deep South, 1951; I'd Climb the Highest Mountain, 1951; Show Boat, 1951; A Streetcar Named Desire, 1951
A. File:A Clean Sweep film Opening titles (1958).png; File:A Colour Box.jpg; File:A Day Called X title card.png; File:A Desk for Billie 1956 title.png
The second of three stories about Texas movie stars. The actors in this group started their careers after 1960. 'The stars at night are big and bright': Deep in the heart of Texas movie stars post ...
The cover to the 1928 edition of Texas History Movies, which was given out to schoolchildren in Texas. Texas History Movies was a "popular racist comic strip that ran in The Dallas Morning News in the late 1920s". [1] [2] The strip had text by John Rosenfield, Jr., and pictures by Jack Patton. [3]