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High Plains Drifter is a 1973 American Western film directed by Clint Eastwood, written by Ernest Tidyman, and produced by Robert Daley for The Malpaso Company and Universal Pictures. The film stars Eastwood as a mysterious stranger who metes out justice in a corrupt frontier mining town. [ 4 ]
The Drifter, a 1965 novel by J. T. Edson, the fifth installment in the Waco series; The Drifter, a 1969 novel by Will Cook; The Drifter, a 1991 novel by Joyce Thies; The Drifter, a 1994 novel by Richie Tankersley Cusick; The Drifter, a 1995 novel by Vicki Lewis Thompson, the second installment in the Urban Cowboys series
Drifter is a 2016 American post-apocalyptic thriller film [2] directed by Chris von Hoffmann. It stars Aria Emory, who co-wrote the film with von Hoffmann, and Drew Harwood as brothers who become stranded in a town run by cannibals. It was released in October 2016 in Australia and February 2017 in the US.
The Western is a genre of fiction typically set in the American frontier (commonly referred to as the "Old West" or the "Wild West") between the California Gold Rush of 1849 and the closing of the frontier in 1890, and commonly associated with folk tales of the Western United States, particularly the Southwestern United States, as well as Northern Mexico and Western Canada.
Dead Silence is a 2007 American supernatural horror film directed by James Wan and written by Leigh Whannell. The film stars Ryan Kwanten as Jamie Ashen, a young widower returning to his hometown to search for answers to his wife's death.
The Dead: Mark E. Rogers: Combines themes of the Rapture and zombies Story 1989 Disease "On the Far Side of the Cadillac Desert with Dead Folks" Joe R. Lansdale: Bacteria causes the dead to rise. A bounty hunter chases his quarry and encounters an evil cult. Film 1989 Eco A Visitor to a Museum: Konstantin Lopushansky
The revisionist Western is a sub-genre of the Western fiction. [1] [2] [3] Called a post-classical variation of the traditional Western, the revisionist subverts the myth and romance of the traditional by means of character development and realism to present a less simplistic view of life in the "Old West".
Randall Lee Smith (June 29, 1953 – May 10, 2008) [1] was an American convicted murderer from Pearisburg, Virginia. [2] He pleaded guilty shortly before trial commenced to two counts of second-degree murder in the deaths of hikers Robert Mountford Jr. and Laura Susan Ramsay, both 27-year-old social workers from Maine who were murdered by Smith while hiking the Appalachian Trail in May 1981.