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Campfire Kahuna
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And can’t use Quiet Man


Thanks all

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McQ and The Sands of Iwo Jima.

Last edited by ar15a292f; 09/25/23.
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Dang, you're fired up this morning.


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Hellfighters


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John Wayne was kinda a azzhole in real life.

But then again many actors and actresses were or are.

People put em up on a pedalstel and kinda wanta emulate them in their role persona and hero worshipp them.



What was that one movie they made in like a nuclear test site or nuclear fall out area???
Ghengis Khan movie???

That would be my fave non western " Duke" movie then.

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Hellfighters or Hatari......it's a toss up between those for me.


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I tried going vegan, but then realized it was a big missed steak.
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The Conqueror is the movie about Genghis Khan.

Last edited by 19352012; 09/25/23.

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Wake of the Red Witch...Joe


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Wings Of Eagles - 1957, directed by John Ford.
I was 13, and it was long my favorite.

Haven't seen it since.

IC B3

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Originally Posted by slumlord
And can’t use Quiet Man

No wonder. Nobody got their kneecaps drilled, nobody planted a bomb in the pub, nary a Black and Tan anywhere and hardly a word about the English.

It sucked.


"...if the gentlemen of Virginia shall send us a dozen of their sons, we would take great care in their education, instruct them in all we know, and make men of them." Canasatego 1744
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Originally Posted by Teal
Hellfighters

+1.


didn’t the same cast of characters play in alot of the JW movies?


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They Were Expendable
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Originally Posted by BigDave39355
Originally Posted by Teal
Hellfighters

+1.


didn’t the same cast of characters play in alot of the JW movies?


Pretty common back in the old 'Studio contract' days...


CASTING IN THE STUDIO ERA


Quote
During the Hollywood studio era, each company cast its films in-house, using mostly contract players. Sometimes, if the unit making the film felt that certain roles could not be cast with studio personnel, they looked outside for actors unattached to a studio, actors with nonexclusive studio contracts, or those whose home studio was willing to loan them out. The casting of the Hollywood-on-Hollywood classic Sunset Boulevard at Paramount in 1949 is instructive. For the role of the delusional former silent movie star, director Billy Wilder (1906–2002) and producer Charles Brackett (1892–1969) looked for someone who actually had been as big a star as the fictional Norma Desmond. After interviewing a number of 1920s movie queens, Wilder and Brackett cast Gloria Swanson (1899–1983), who had retired from the screen in 1934. For the role of Max, Norma's servant, ex-director, and ex-husband, Erich von Stroheim (1885–1957) was cast. The former director, who supported himself in the sound era as an actor and had acted for Wilder in Paramount's Five Graves to Cairo (1943), returned to play a role almost humiliatingly like himself. Most of the other parts were cast in-house. William Holden (1918–1981), a journeyman leading man in routine pictures who had joint contracts with Paramount and Columbia, took over the role of the gigolo writer Joe Gillis after Montgomery Clift (1920–1966), the hot young free-lance actor who had first been signed, backed out. Sunset Boulevard , released in 1950, made Holden a major star. Betty Schaefer was played by Nancy Olson (b. 1928), a contract ingenue. In a film that called for real-life Hollywood personalities to play themselves, the most important of these roles could be cast with a contract employee, namely Cecil B. DeMille (1881–1959), who helped found Paramount and nearly thirty years before had made Gloria Swanson a star at the studio. The result is as perfectly cast a film as one can find.

The studio with the largest stable of actors, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), boasting of 'More Stars Than
Erich von Stroheim and Gloria Swanson in Billy Wilder's Sunset Boulevard (1950).
There Are in Heaven," worked its contract stable like a self-contained stock company. The "major minors," Columbia and Universal, relied upon and benefited the most from other companies' contract players. James Stewart (1908–1997), an MGM contract player from 1935 until his induction into the US Army in 1941, was mostly ill-used by his home studio, which could not determine his "type"—comic actor or romantic lead. Frank Capra (1897–1991), the anomalous star director at Columbia, asked to borrow Stewart for the male lead opposite house star Jean Arthur (1900–1991) for You Can't Take It with You (1938). Capra and Columbia borrowed Stewart for Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939), again opposite Arthur, in a film that turned out to be a star-maker for Stewart. Also in 1939, MGM loaned out Stewart to Universal for Destry Rides Again , a western comedy that launched the new career of Marlene Dietrich (1901–1992), the former Paramount star whom Universal had just signed. Both films clicked, confirming Stewart's comic gifts, his unique bashful magnetism, and his ability to project emotion, sincerity, and visionary passion. MGM, having been shown Stewart's value by the smaller studios, put his new stardom to proper use in The Shop Around the Corner and The Philadelphia Story (both 1940).

Sometimes, when seeking to duplicate the success of another studio, MGM was not above borrowing supporting actors whom a rival studio had made known in certain types of roles. Gene Lockhart (1891–1957) and Charles Coburn (1877–1961) played businessmen to whom the hero appeals for help in Twentieth Century Fox's Story of Alexander Graham Bell (1939), a major hit. MGM borrowed Coburn and Lockhart for its own biopic of an American inventor-industrialist, Edison the Man (1940).

During the studio era, and later on television, type-casting was the rule. Studio casting directors thought of Charles Coburn when looking for a wise, gruff, and lovable (or a roguish, gruff, and lovable) old man; Gale Sondergaard (1899–1985) fit the bill for an exotic or sinister "foreign" woman; C. Aubrey Smith (1863–1948) was Hollywood's embodiment of Merrie Old England; and so on. Marion Dougherty, one of the first independent casting directors in the 1950s and 1960s, compared casting in the studio system to "ordering a Chinese meal: one from column A and one from column B. That's why you'd see the same actor in the same kind of roles" (Kurtes, "Casting Characters," p. 40)

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Too many that I like ro really pick one. I watched McQ and Brannigan last night. Another is Donavon's Reef.
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Our forefathers did not politely protest the British.They did not vote them out of office, nor did they impeach the king,march on the capitol or ask permission for their rights. ----------------They just shot them.
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My vote goes to this one as well


You get out of life what you are willing to accept. If you ain't happy, do something about it!
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Flying Tigers. That's the one that made me dream of being "John Wayne: Fighter Pilot".

It's a cliche to claim that an actor was a jerk in real life, and that has been said here about the Duke. Nothing I've ever read even suggests he was anything but a great guy to know.


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Sands of Iwo Jima


drover


223 Rem, my favorite cartridge - you can't argue with truckloads of dead PD's and gophers.

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