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Movies about horses constitute a popular film genre. Some examples include: This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (May 2017) 0–9
Silent film about a lord who tries to interfere with a lady's horse. Desert Gold: 1919 Australian film starring the famous racehorse Desert Gold: A Dead Certainty [4] 1920 A British film about a rider pressured to fix a race. The Sport of Kings [5] 1921 A man (Victor McLaglen) looks out for his young ward and her racehorse. The Kentucky Derby ...
The following list of cowboys and cowgirls from the frontier era of the American Old West (circa 1830 to 1910) was compiled to show examples of the cowboy and cowgirl genre. Cattlemen, ranchers, and cowboys
The bond between a cowboy and his horse is an important part of the cowboy mythology created by dime novels, pulp fiction stories, and Western cinema. [4] Movies featuring Wonder Horses embellish this relationship between man and beast while heightening the exceptional and heroic qualities of the cowboy by his association with a remarkable ...
By: Donna Freydkin. For Oscar winner Denzel Washington, one of our last remaining true movie stars and icons, playing bounty hunter Sam Chisolm in the remake of "The Magnificent Seven" proved to ...
A misfit group of New Mexico cowboys find themselves on the journey of a lifetime when their undersized thoroughbred racehorse qualifies for the Kentucky Derby. Based on the inspiring true story of Mine That Bird, the cowboys face a series of mishaps on their way to Churchill Downs, becoming the ultimate underdogs in a final showdown with the world's racing elite.
Contemporary Western Kenny Rogers as The Gambler: Dick Lowry: Kenny Rogers, Bruce Boxleitner, Harold Gould, Clu Gulager, Lance LeGault, Lee Purcell, Ronnie Scribner, Noble Willingham, Christine Belford: Made for television Western The Legend of Alfred Packer: Jim Roberson: Patrick Dray, Ronald Haines: Biographical Western Lobo Negro: Rafael ...
The films were at the time collectively known as "Hoppies". In the films, Hopalong, or "Hoppy", and his white horse, Topper, travel through the Old West while dispensing justice, usually with two companions: one young and trouble-prone with a weakness for damsels in distress, the other older, comically awkward and outspoken. [2]