Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Behind the scenes of the filming of Shane. Shane was expensive for a Western movie at the time with a cost of $3.1 million. [11] It was the first film to be projected in a "flat" widescreen 1.66:1 ratio, a format that Paramount invented to offer audiences a wider panorama than television could provide. [12]
Arvo Oswald Ojala (February 21, 1920 – July 1, 2005) was a Hollywood technical advisor on the subject of quick-draw with a revolver. [1] He also worked as an actor; his most famous role was that of the unnamed man shot by Marshal Matt Dillon in the opening sequences of the long-running television series Gunsmoke.
Shane is a western novel by Jack Schaefer published in 1949. It was initially published in 1946 in three parts in Argosy magazine, and originally titled Rider from Nowhere . [ 1 ] The novel has been printed in seventy or more editions, [ 2 ] and translated into over 30 languages, [ 1 ] and was adapted into the 1953 film starring Alan Ladd .
The opening chase scene features one of the best freerunning scenes put to cinema ... and that church fight remains one of the best gunfight scenes ever put to film. WATCH NOW. Twentieth Century Fox.
Shane is an American Western television series which aired on ABC in 1966. It was based on the 1949 book of the same name by Jack Schaefer and the 1953 classic film starring Alan Ladd . David Carradine portrayed the titular character in the television series, a former gunfighter and sometimes outlaw who takes a job as a hired hand at the ranch ...
The Hickok–Tutt shootout was a gunfight that occurred on July 21, 1865, in the town square of Springfield, Missouri between Wild Bill Hickok and gambler Davis Tutt.It is one of the few recorded instances in the Old West of a one-on-one pistol quick-draw duel in a public place, in the manner later made iconic by countless dime novels, radio dramas, and Western films such as High Noon. [1]
Andre Brandon deWilde (April 9, 1942 – July 6, 1972) was an American theater, film, and television actor. [1] Born into a theatrical family in Brooklyn, he debuted on Broadway at the age of seven and became a national phenomenon by the time he completed his 492 performances for The Member of the Wedding.
Shane Brando also discusses his strategy coming into the ABC reality TV series, why he auditioned for the show and the cast group chat. 'Claim to Fame' Star Shares 'Craziest' Memory with His ...