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The posse heads for the ranch house where the cowhands encountered the outlaws and finds them still there. After a gun battle, three outlaws escape; the fourth kills Wiley but is then killed by Cole. Hogan begins shooting the corpse of the outlaw, claiming he wasn't dead and was the man who killed his brother. He then quits the posse.
Posse from Hell: Helen Caldwell [14] 1961 Splendor in the Grass: Angelina [14] 1961 Hey, Let's Twist! Sharon [14] 1966 A Fine Madness: Evelyn Tupperman [14] 1968 Bye Bye Braverman: Etta Rieff [14] 1969 Some Kind of a Nut: Bunny Erickson [14] 1971 Let's Scare Jessica to Death: Jessica [14] 1977 Opening Night: Dorothy Victor [14] 1984 Alphabet ...
The film's cast was rounded out with Gilbert Roland, Joanne Dru and Jim Backus. [53] Murphy's collaboration with Walter Mirisch on Cast a Long Shadow included an uncredited stint as co-producer. The film co-starred Terry Moore. [54] His performance in No Name on the Bullet was well received. The storyline follows the cool, jaded hired gun as ...
Posse from Hell (1958) Guns of Rio Conchos (1958) Seven Ways from Sundown (1959) Good Lord, You're Upside Down! (1963) Nobody Loves a Drunken Indian (filmed as Flap (1967) The Cowboy and the Cossack (1973) One Time I Saw Morning Come Home (1974) Clair Huffaker's Profiles of the American West (1976)
Battle at Bloody Beach, (aka Battle on the Beach in the UK and Australia), [3] is a 1961 American CinemaScope drama war film directed by Herbert Coleman and starring Audie Murphy who had previously worked together in Posse from Hell. The film also features Gary Crosby and introduces Alejandro Rey.
Posse from Hell: April 1961: The Secret Ways: co-production with Heath Productions April 1, 1961: Tomboy and the Champ: co-production with Signal Pictures May 1, 1961: Ole Rex: May 15, 1961: Wings of Chance: May 1961: The Pharaohs' Woman: U.S. distribution June 7, 1961: The Shadow of the Cat: The Curse of the Werewolf: June 8, 1961: The Last ...
Billy Eugene Hughes, Jr. (November 28, 1948 – December 20, 2005) was an American actor best known for various television and film roles he played during the 1960s. His Hollywood lineage included both his father (Bill Hughes) and uncle (Whitey Hughes), who were both stuntmen and film producers.
Morrow had support roles in Men in War (1957), directed by Anthony Mann, and was third billed in Hell's Five Hours (1958). He starred alongside Elvis Presley and an all-star supporting cast including Walter Matthau and Carolyn Jones in the movie King Creole (1958), directed by Michael Curtiz. Mann asked him back for God's Little Acre (1958).