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Boss Nigger (also known as Boss and The Black Bounty Killer) is a 1975 blaxploitation Western film directed by Jack Arnold, starring former football player Fred Williamson, who also wrote and co-produced the film. It is the first film for which Williamson was credited as screenwriter or producer.
Films about bounty hunters, private agents working for bail bonds who capture fugitives or criminals for a commission or bounty.The occupation has traditionally operated outside the legal constraints that govern police officers and other agents of the state.
Paul's brother Johnny is an ex-cop turned bounty hunter in Boston. When he arrives in Los Angeles he finds him in his brother's house, he is associated by the police assigned to protect him; in a second ambush, however, the killers manage to kill Paul in his home, so Johnny goes on their trail to take revenge. [1]
The scene featuring Scully being beaten up by the bounty hunter was primarily performed by a stunt woman. [3] The stiletto weapon, often referred to as the " gimlet ", used by the bounty hunter was constructed from aluminium and acrylic, and activated by a pneumatic hose hidden in actor Brian Thompson's sleeve. [ 6 ]
"Han shot first" refers to a controversial change made to a scene in the film Star Wars (1977), [a] in which Han Solo is confronted by the bounty hunter Greedo in the Mos Eisley cantina. In the original version of this scene, Han shoots Greedo dead. Later versions are edited so that Greedo fires at Han first.
Spike Spiegel, a bounty hunter, and his partner Jet Black head to the Tijuana asteroid colony on their ship, the Bebop, to track down a bounty-head named Asimov Solensan.. Asimov, also known as "The Red-Eyed Coyote", is wanted for killing members of his own crime syndicate and stealing a cache of a dangerous combat drug known as Bloody-E
The scene is a direct reference of the film For a Few Dollars More (1965) where the Man with No Name (Manco is the nickname he uses for the film) is forced to team up with another bounty hunter. [19] These plot point would be reused for the season's finale for the episode " Chapter 8: Redemption ", and the second season's sixth episode ...
Domino is a 2005 action crime film directed by Tony Scott with a screenplay by Richard Kelly from a story by Kelly and Steve Barancik.An international co-production between France, the United States, and the United Kingdom, [2] the film is inspired by Domino Harvey, the English daughter of stage and screen actor Laurence Harvey, who became a Los Angeles bounty hunter.