Cowboy Movies

January 11, 2009

An American Tail: Fievel Goes West

Filed under: 1990's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 7:31 am
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An American Tail: Fievel Goes West is an animated film produced by Steven Spielberg’s Amblimation animation studio, presented by Universal Pictures. It is the sequel to 1986′s An American Tail. Don Bluth, the original film’s director, had no involvement with this sequel. Instead, it was directed by Phil Nibbelink and Simon Wells. Wells went on to do We’re Back! A Dinosaur’s Story, Balto, and The Time Machine, while Phil went on to co-direct We’re Back! A Dinosaur’s Story and direct his own independent features.

The film follows the story of a family of Jewish-Russian mice who emigrate to the Wild West. In the film, Fievel Mousekewitz is separated from his family as the train approaches the American Old West; the film chronicles Fievel and Sheriff Wylie Burp (played by James Stewart in his final film) teaching Tiger how to act like a dog. It is the second film released in the American Tail series, but the fourth installment in terms of the series’ fictional chronology.

It is the sole theatrical sequel to An American Tail, and was followed at the end of the 1990s by another two direct-to-video sequels, both of which took place chronologically before this film. A continuation of this installment, Fievel’s American Tails, aired on the CBS Television Network in 1992.

Production

An American Tail: Fievel Goes West was the first production for Steven Spielberg’s Amblimation animation studio, a collaboration of Universal Studios and Amblin Entertainment, whose offices were located in London. There, over 250 crew members worked on the project, which began in May 1989. At the time, Amblimation was also developing We’re Back! A Dinosaur’s Story, and a screen adaptation of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Cats, which never saw completion.

Owing to creative differences, Don Bluth parted ways with Steven Spielberg, with whom he had directed the original American Tail, as well as the first of 13 Land Before Time films. With no Bluth in sight for the sequel, Spielberg instead relied on Phil Nibbelink, a former Disney animator, and Simon Wells, the grandson of science-fiction author H.G. Wells, to direct the project.

The Frankie Laine song Rawhide is played at the tumbleweed scene of this film, although the version used is from The Blues Brothers.

In addition to a new voice actress, the character of Tanya was heavily redesigned as well. Tiger had minor changes, as does Yasha (the baby) and Fievel looks slightly older.

James Horner returned to write the score to the movie, reusing old themes and introducing new ones.

Reception & box office

Fievel Goes West was a critical failure upon its initial release. It was released in the United States on November 22, 1991 — the same day that another animated film, Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, was released. Beauty was the better-received universally, grossing over $110 million and eventually becoming a Best Picture nominee at the Oscars.

Commercially, West grossed less than its predecessor; it opened in fourth place with $3,435,625 despite being shown on nearly 1,700 theaters and eventually made just over $22 million domestically, and $40 million worldwide, for a total of $65,435,625.. By contrast, the original Tail made $47.4 million in the U.S. in 1986, a record at the time for non-Disney animated feature., and a further $36 million worldwide, for a total of $84 million.

Characters

  • Fievel Mousekewitz (Phillip Glasser) is a mouse, and the main character of the American Tail franchise; in this installment, he is mostly seen with a cowboy hat on his head, that appears to be reversible into his trademark blue hat. Fievel dreams of fighting alongside his hero, Wylie Burp and being a western hero. Although Tiger and Wylie do much of the work in the final fight scene, Fievel is just as important. At the finale, Wylie gives him his own badge.
  • Tanya Mousekewitz (Cathy Cavadini) is Fievel’s sister, who dreams of becoming a singer, and gets her wish thanks to Miss Kitty in Green River. Near the end, she looks at her reflection in the water and washes off her makeup, implying that she realizes she was a star in her own right all along. She also gets two of the movie’s songs, “Dreams to Dream” and “The Girl You Left Behind.”
  • Mama & Papa Mousekewitz (Erica Yohn and Nehemiah Persoff) are Fievel’s parents. Papa is still an optimist about new things, especially moving out west.
  • Yasha Mousekewitz (no voice credited) is Fievel’s baby sister. Although she is seen more than she did in the original movie, she still only has a very minor role.
  • Tiger (Dom DeLuise) is the only cat friend of the Jewish-Russian mouse family. Throughout the movie, he is depicted as a wimp, being chased and bullied constantly by dogs, and revealed to be arachniphobic when he sees Chula for the first time. He later overcomes this fears, becoming more like a dog and taking on Chula after the spider threatens Miss Kitty.
  • Miss Kitty (Amy Irving) is a caricature of Dorothy Gibson and Tiger’s girlfriend. She leaves Tiger early on to go down to Green River, looking for a cat who’s more like a dog. She clearly regrets this decision later, in a scene where she remembers all the good times she had with Tiger. Although she is seen in the company of Cat R. Waul, she never shows any evil intentions or disliking of mice. In fact, it is implied that she was never even aware of Cat R. Waul’s plots in the first place. In the end, she is seen happily in the arms of Tiger.
  • Wylie Burp (James Stewart) is the aging lawdog of Green River, Fievel’s idol, and a caricature of the real Wild West lawman Wyatt Earp.
  • Cat R. Waul (John Cleese) is a caricature of J.P. Morgan and Fievel’s arch-nemesis. He is an aristocratic British cat who plans on exploiting the mice to do labor and then eat them. He has many henchmen and must force them to refrain from eating the mice at all times, or else his plan will fail. Although a convincing conman, he shows that he is not the world’s greatest actor in an early scene where he attempts to do a southern accent (which consists of him awkwardly throwing “y’all” (which, being a cat, he pronounces “yowl”) in at the ends of his sentences). Although later thrown out of Green River, he returns in the follow-up series, through his only accomplice here is Chula.
  • Chula the Tarantula (Jon Lovitz) is a caricature of Butch Cassidy and Fievel’s other arch-nemesis, and Cat R. Waul’s main sidekick. Several times throughout the movie, he attacks Fievel and comes very close to catching him at a few points, but is easily outwitted by the crafty mouse. He later takes Miss Kitty hostage, but is thrashed by an angry Tiger and is tossed out of town along with the rest of the cats. He is the only other returning villain in the follow-up series, along with Cat R. Waul.
  • Tony, Bridget, and Honest John from the first movie all make cameos. Tony and Bridget are seen during the Homestead Strike (presumably married, now with a child) and later when everyone is settling into Green River. Honest John is seen for a second during “Way Out West” when politicians are mentioned.
  • Additional Voices Charlie Adler, Jack Angel, Steve Bulen, Sherry Lynn, Mickie T. McGowan, Patrick Pinney & Frank Welker

Young Guns II

Filed under: 1990's Films,Featured Articles — Tags: — Wayne @ 7:28 am
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Young Guns II is a 1990 western film, and the sequel to Young Guns (1988). It stars Emilio Estevez, Kiefer Sutherland, Lou Diamond Phillips, Christian Slater, and features William Petersen as Pat Garrett. It was directed by Geoff Murphy.

It follows the life of William H. Bonney aka Billy the Kid (played by Emilio Estevez) in the years following the Lincoln County War in which Billy was part of “The Regulators” — a group of around 6 highly skilled gunmen avenging the death of John Tunstall — and the years before Billy’s documented death. The film, however, is told by Brushy Bill Roberts, a man who in the 1940s appeared claiming to be the real Billy the Kid.

While the film is not entirely historically accurate, it does show some of the key events leading up to Billy’s documented death, including his talks with Governor Lew Wallace, his capture by friend-turned-foe Pat Garrett, his trial and his subsequent escape in which he killed two deputies.

Soundtrack

Emilio Estevez originally approached Jon Bon Jovi to ask him for permission to include the song “Wanted Dead Or Alive” on the soundtrack. Bon Jovi didn’t feel the song was entirely appropriate (particularly the line “On a steel horse I ride”); however, he was inspired by the project and resolved to write a new song for the film that would be more in keeping with the period and setting. He quickly wrote the song ‘Blaze of Glory’, offering it to Estevez for inclusion in the film. Bon Jovi then went on to write and record several more songs, working with drummer Kenny Aronoff and legendary guitarist Jeff Beck. Blaze of Glory was Jon Bon Jovi’s debut solo album, released in 1990. It includes songs from, and inspired by, the movie Young Guns II, including the US #1 single “Blaze of Glory” which was later included on Bon Jovi’s 1994 compilation album Cross Road and the #12 hit ‘Miracle’. The Approximate sales were in excess of two million copies in the United States, making it an album that achieved success both commercially and critically. The film’s original score was composed by Alan Silvestri.

Reception

Box office performance

Young Guns II opened on August 1, 1990 in the United States in 1,770 theaters, accumulating $8,017,438 over its opening weekend. It finished third for the weekend, behind Ghost (in its fourth week) and Presumed Innocent (in its second week). The film went on to gross $44,143,410 domestically.

Critical response

Young Guns II was poorly received by the majority of professional critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film received 25% overall approval out of 12 reviews. Roger Ebert, who gave Young Guns II 2 stars out of 4, stated that “the screenplay feels unfinished, the direction is ambling, but the performances are interesting.”

Cast

  • Emilio Estevez as William H. “Billy the Kid” Bonney
  • Kiefer Sutherland as Josiah Gordon “Doc” Scurlock
  • Lou Diamond Phillips as Jose Chavez y Chavez
  • Christian Slater as “Arkansas” Dave Rudabaugh
  • William Petersen as Patrick Floyd “Pat” Garrett
  • Alan Ruck as Hendry William French
  • R.D. Call as D.A. Rynerson
  • James Coburn as John Chisum
  • Balthazar Getty as Tom O’Folliard
  • Jack Kehoe as Ashmun Upson
  • Robert Knepper as Deputy Carlyle
  • Tom Kurlander as J. W. Bell
  • Viggo Mortensen as John W. Poe
  • Leon Rippy as Robert “Bob” Ollinger
  • Tracey Walter as Beever Smith
  • Bradley Whitford as Charles Phalen

Quigley Down Under

Filed under: 1990's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 7:26 am
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Quigley Down Under is a 1990 western film. It was originally intended to star Steve McQueen in 1980, but after an illness by the star the project was suspended and not filmed until a decade later. Directed by Simon Wincer, the film runs 119 minutes, and is rated PG-13 in the United States.

Trivia

The firearm used by Quigley is a custom 1874 Sharps Rifle. The gun used for filming was a replica manufactured for the film by the Shiloh Rifle Manufacturing Company of Big Timber, Montana. Tom Selleck later donated the rifle to the National Rifle Association as a fund-raising item.[citation needed]

Quotes

Quigley, describing the rifle:

It’s a lever-action single shot, breech loader. Usual barrel length’s thirty inches. This one has an extra four. It’s converted to use a special forty-five caliber, hundred and ten grain metal cartridge, with a five-hundred forty grain paper patch bullet. It’s fitted with double set triggers, and a Vernier sight. It’s marked up to twelve-hundred yards. This one shoots a mite further.

Cast

  • Tom Selleck as Matthew Quigley
  • Laura San Giacomo as Crazy Cora
  • Alan Rickman as Elliott Marston
  • Chris Haywood as Major Ashley-Pitt
  • Ron Haddrick as Grimmelman
  • Tony Bonner as Dobkin
  • Jerome Ehlers as Coogan
  • Conor McDermottroe as Hobb
  • Roger Ward as Brophy
  • Ben Mendelsohn as O’Flynn
  • Steve Dodd as Kunkurra
  • Karen Davitt as Slattern
  • Kylie Foster as Slattern
  • William Zappa as Reilly
  • Jonathan Sweet as Sergeant Thomas

Dances with Wolves

Filed under: 1990's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 7:24 am
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Dances with Wolves is a 1990 epic film which tells the story of a Civil War-era United States lieutenant who travels to the American Frontier to find a military post. He eventually befriends a local Sioux tribe. Developed by director/star Kevin Costner over five years, the film (released November 9, 1990) has high production values and won 7 Academy Awards (1990) and the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. Much of the dialogue is in the Lakota language with English subtitles, unusual for a film at the time of its release. It was shot in South Dakota and Wyoming.

In 2007, Dances with Wolves was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant”.

Production

Originally written as a spec script by Michael Blake, it went unsold in the mid-1980s. It was Kevin Costner who, in early 1986 (when he was relatively unknown), encouraged Blake to turn the screenplay into a novel, to improve its chances of being adapted into a film. The novel manuscript of Dances with Wolves was rejected by numerous publishers but finally published in paperback in 1988. As a novel, the rights were purchased by Costner, with an eye to his directing it. Actual filming lasted from July 18 to November 23, 1989. Most of the movie was filmed on location in South Dakota, but a few scenes were filmed in Wyoming. Filming locations included the Badlands National Park, the Black Hills, the Sage Creek Wilderness Area, and the Belle Fourche River area. The buffalo hunt scenes were filmed at the Triple U Buffalo Ranch near Pierre, South Dakota, as were the fort Sedgwick scenes, the set being constructed on the property.

Because of budget overruns and production delays, and after the fiasco of Michael Cimino’s Heaven’s Gate, then considered one of the most mismanaged Westerns in film history, Costner’s project was satirically dubbed “Kevin’s Gate” by Hollywood critics and skeptics during the months prior to its release.

The language spoken in the film is a fairly accurate, although simplified[citation needed], version of the actual Lakota language. Lakota Sioux language instructor Doris Leader Charge (1931–2001) was the on-set Lakota dialogue coach and also portrayed Pretty Shield, wife of Chief Ten Bears, portrayed by Floyd Red Crow Westerman.

According to the “Making Of” documentary on the Special Edition Dances With Wolves DVD, not all of the buffalo were computer animated and/or puppets. In fact, Costner and crew employed the largest domestically owned buffalo ranch, with two of the domesticated buffalo being borrowed from Neil Young, and used the herd for the hunting scene. The hunt chase was filmed live and Costner did his own stunts for the shots. The only computer animation and puppetry special effects that were used were for the shots of the buffalo falling.

Despite portraying the adopted daughter of Graham Greene’s character Kicking Bird, Mary McDonnell, then 37, was actually two months older than Greene, and less than two years younger than Tantoo Cardinal, the actress playing her adoptive mother. In addition, McDonnell was extremely nervous about shooting her sex scene with Kevin Costner, requesting it be toned down to a more modest version than what was scripted.

Reception

Dances with Wolves was extremely popular, garnering $184 million in U.S. box office sales, and $424 million in total box office sales worldwide. The film is often praised for its humanistic portrayal of American Indians, because it went beyond the typical Hollywood portrayal of either the “noble” or the “blood-thirsty savage.” Because of the film, the Sioux nation adopted Costner as an honorary member.[10] In 2007, the Library of Congress selected Dances with Wolves for preservation in the United States National Film Registry.

Cast

  • Kevin Costner as Lt. John J. Dunbar/Dances With Wolves
  • Mary McDonnell as Stands With A Fist
  • Graham Greene as Kicking Bird
  • Rodney A. Grant as Wind In His Hair
  • Floyd Red Crow Westerman as Chief Ten Bears
  • Tantoo Cardinal as Black Shawl
  • Jimmy Herman as Stone Calf
  • Nathan Lee Chasing His Horse as Smiles A Lot
  • Michael Spears as Otter
  • Jason R. Lone Hill as Worm
  • Charles Rocket as Lt. Elgin
  • Robert Pastorelli as Timmons
  • Larry Joshua as Sgt. Bauer
  • Tony Pierce as Spivey

Back to the Future Part III

Filed under: 1990's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 7:20 am
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Back to the Future Part III is the third installment of the Back to the Future trilogy. The film is a science fiction western, using the time travel premise of the series to take Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) and Dr. Emmett Brown (Christopher Lloyd) back to the Old West of 1885.

Release

The movie grossed US$23 million in its first weekend of US release and $87.6 million altogether in US box office receipts – $243 million worldwide. On December 17, 2002 Universal Studios released Back to the Future Part III in a boxed set with the first two films on DVD and VHS which did extremely well. In the DVD widescreen edition there was a minor framing flaw that Universal has since corrected, available in sets manufactured after February 21, 2003.

In 1990 the movie won a Saturn Award for Best Music for Alan Silvestri and a Best Supporting Actor award for Thomas F. Wilson. In 2003 it received AOL Movies DVD Premiere Award for Best Special Edition of the Year, an award based on consumer online voting. The film received a Thumbs Up from Gene Siskel and a very marginal Thumbs Down from Roger Ebert on Siskel & Ebert.

Video and computer games

LJN released an NES game called Back to the Future Part II & III, a sequel to their game based on the first movie. An arcade Back to the Future Part III game was also released that would eventually be ported to several home video game systems, including the Sega Mega Drive. However, the games ended up being a critical flop due to their odd level design, and few references to the films (In the video game Back to the Future there are no settings, events, items or characters from the movie other than Marty). Gametrailers.com placed it at number eight in their “Top Ten Worst Movie Based Games.”

Cast

  • Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly (aka “Clint Eastwood”) and Seamus McFly
  • Christopher Lloyd as Dr Emmett “Doc” Brown
  • Mary Steenburgen as Clara Clayton
  • Thomas F. Wilson as Buford “Mad Dog” Tannen and Biff Tannen
  • Lea Thompson as Maggie McFly and Lorraine Baines McFly
  • James Tolkan as Marshal James Strickland
  • Elisabeth Shue as Jennifer Parker
  • Jeffrey Weissman as George McFly
  • Matt Clark as Chester, the bartender
  • Dub Taylor as Saloon Old-Timer #1
  • Harry Carey, Jr. as Saloon Old-Timer #2
  • Pat Buttram as Saloon Old-Timer #3
  • Burton Gilliam as Colt Gun Salesman
  • Richard Dysart as Barbed-Wire Salesman
  • Michael Peter Balzary (Flea) as Needles
  • ZZ Top as the band at the dance

Young Guns

Filed under: 1980's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 7:15 am
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Young Guns is a 1988 action/western film first made by Morgan Creek Productions and released by 20th Century Fox (in North America) and Vestron Pictures (outside North America). It was directed by Christopher Cain and written by John Fusco.

Its stars include Emilio Estevez, Kiefer Sutherland, Lou Diamond Phillips, Charlie Sheen, Dermot Mulroney, and Casey Siemaszko. It also features Terence Stamp, Terry O’Quinn, Brian Keith, and Jack Palance. Young Guns is a fictionalized retelling of the adventures of Billy the Kid (Estevez) during the Lincoln County War, which took place in New Mexico during 1877-1878. It was filmed in and around Los Cerrillos, New Mexico.

Plot

John Tunstall, an educated Englishman and cattle rancher in Lincoln County, New Mexico, hires wayward young gun men to live and work on his ranch. Tunstall’s ranch is in heavy competition with another well-connected rancher named Murphy and their men clash on a regular basis. Tunstall recruits Billy and tensions escalate into the murder of Tunstall. Billy (Estevez), Doc (Sutherland), Chavez (Phillips), Dick (Sheen), Dirty Steve (Mulroney), and Charlie (Siemaszko), consult their lawyer friend Alex who manages to get them deputized and given warrants for the arrest of Murphy’s murderous henchmen.

Billy quickly challenges Dick’s authority as leader of the group, vowing revenge to Murphy and the men responsible for killing Tunstall. The men call themselves “The Regulators” and begin to kill many of the men they are charged with arresting, most of them by Billy’s own hand.

Cast

  • Emilio Estevez as Billy the Kid
  • Kiefer Sutherland as Doc Scurlock
  • Lou Diamond Phillips as Jose Chavez y Chavez
  • Charlie Sheen as Richard “Dick” Brewer
  • Dermot Mulroney as “Dirty Steve” Stephens
  • Casey Siemaszko as Charlie Bowdre
  • Terence Stamp as John Tunstall
  • Jack Palance as Lawrence G. Murphy
  • Terry O’Quinn as Alexander McSween
  • Sharon Thomas as Susan McSween
  • Geoffrey Blake as J. McCloskey
  • Alice Carter as Yen Sun
  • Brian Keith as Buckshot Roberts
  • Tom Callaway as “Texas” Joe Grant
  • Patrick Wayne as Pat Garrett

The Man from Snowy River II

Filed under: 1980's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 7:12 am
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The Man from Snowy River II is a 1988 Australian film, the sequel to The Man from Snowy River. It was released in the United States as Return to Snowy River, and in the United Kingdom as The Untamed.

Reprising their roles from the 1982 film were Tom Burlinson (as “Jim Craig”) and Sigrid Thornton (as “Jessica Harrison”), while Brian Dennehy appeared as “Harrison”.

Soundtrack

  1. “Long Way from Home”
  2. “Man from Snowy River II”
  3. “By the Fireside”
  4. “Eureka Creek”
  5. “Back to the Mountains”
  6. “Skill at Arms”
  7. “Jessica’s Sonata #2″
  8. “Pageant at Harrison’s”
  9. “Gathered to the Fray”
  10. “Alone in the Mountains”
  11. “Farewell to an Old Friend” — (Now Do We Fight Them)
  12. “You Should be Free”
  13. “Closing Credits”

Music note

Bruce Rowland, who composed the music for this film, also composed the music for “The Man from Snowy River” 1982 film.

Nominations for the movie

  • Nominated for 1988 AFI Award for Best Achievement in Sound
  • Nominated for 1989 Motion Picture Sound Editors Golden Reel Award for Best Sound Editing – Sound Effects

Walker

Filed under: 1980's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 7:10 am
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Walker is an acid western by British director Alex Cox based on the life story of William Walker (Ed Harris), the American adventurer who invaded Mexico in the 1850s and made himself President of Nicaragua shortly thereafter. It was written by Rudy Wurlitzer and scored by Joe Strummer, who also plays a small role as a member of Walker’s army. The film, released in 1987 and which by the end is intentionally full of anachronisms such as helicopters, Zippo lighters, automatic rifles, and a car passing a horse carriage, was made in Nicaragua during the American-sponsored Contra War.

Historical inaccuracies

There is no evidence that Walker ever met Vanderbilt or received his support, as the movie suggests. Rather, Walker was supported by Vanderbilt’s competitors, Charles Morgan and Cornelius Garrison, owners of the Nicaragua Transit Company in his time.

Ellen Martin, Walker’s fiance, died in 1850. In the movie she is present at his 1854 trial for violating US neutrality laws after he invaded Baja and Sonora Mexico, and died shortly thereafter.

Soundtrack

Joe Strummer had worked previously with Cox on Sid and Nancy and Straight to Hell, contributing songs to their respective soundtracks. He wanted to compose an entire score for a film and Walker afforded him such an opportunity. After filming his small part in the film, he would go back to his room and record bits of music onto a four-track cassette using an acoustic guitar and a little plastic synthesizer with guitarist Zander Schloss. They drew inspiration from local music played in bars – a mix of reggae, calypso and Brazilian music.

Reception

Rita Kempley wrote, “it’s gross as it is muddled as it is absurd”, in her review for the Washington Post.In his review for Newsweek, David Ansen wrote, “His scenes have no shape, his characters are stick figures, the wit is undergraduate and his soggy set pieces of slow-motion carnage are third-rate Peckinpah imitations.”Jay Scott gave the film a positive review in the Globe and Mail: “Cox exposes the limitations of historical drama in Walker with a calculated disregard of its conventions.” Vincent Canby also praised Cox’s film in the New York Times: “Walker is witty, rather than laugh-out-loud funny. Without being solemn, it’s deadly serious…Walker is something very rare in American movies these days. It has some nerve.”

Director Alex Cox was never employed again by a major Hollywood studio, and his subsequent films have received only limited distribution in the United States. In an interview with The A.V. Club, Cox said, “Distribution is controlled by the studios, and I’ve been on the blacklist of the studios for the last 20 years… The last movie I was asked to direct was The Running Man… which was actually quite a good film, I thought. I would have liked to have done The Running Man. It was just that Walker happened at the same time.”

Cast

  • Ed Harris as William Walker
  • Peter Boyle as Cornelius Vanderbilt
  • Sy Richardson as Capt. Hornsby
  • Marlee Matlin as Ellen Martin
  • Xander Berkeley as Byron Cole
  • Rene Auberjonois as Maj. Siegfried Hennington
  • William O’Leary as James Walker
  • Gerrit Graham as Norvell Walker
  • Richard Masur as Ephraim Squier
  • Miguel Sandoval as Parker French
  • Alfonso Arau as Raousset
  • John Diehl as Stebbins

¡Three Amigos!

Filed under: 1980's Films,Featured Articles — Tags: — Wayne @ 7:08 am
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¡Three Amigos! is a 1986 comedy western film, produced by George Folsey, Jr. and Lorne Michaels. John Landis directed for HBO Films. Steve Martin, Chevy Chase, and Martin Short star. The movie was written by Steve Martin, Lorne Michaels, and Randy Newman. Randy Newman contributed three original songs: “The Ballad of the Three Amigos”, “My Little Buttercup” and “Blue Shadows”, while the musical score was composed by Elmer Bernstein. It was shot in Simi Valley, California, Coronado National Forest, Old Tucson Studios, and Hollywood. It was originally entitled The Three Caballeros and Steve Martin was to be teamed with Dan Aykroyd and John Belushi.

Derivative references

  • Mexican film directors Guillermo del Toro, Alejandro González Iñárritu, and Alfonso Cuarón were dubbed the “Three Amigos” by the press when their films received nominations in the 2006 Academy Awards. The filmmakers share a genuine friendship and made several media appearances together.
  • Fergus McCann, the chairman of Celtic Football Club described players Pierre van Hooijdonk, Paolo Di Canio and Jorge Cadete as the “Three Amigos” when in dispute over an alleged salary agreement.
  • Three young pitchers the New York Yankees will rely upon for the 2008 season, Ian Kennedy, Joba Chamberlain, and Phil Hughes have been dubbed the “Three Amigos”.
  • In an early 2008 ESPN “This is SportsCenter.” commercial, Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce and Ray Allen of the Boston Celtics brainstorm with Scott Van Pelt about their collective nickname. The last idea that the three Celtics come up with (before settling on Van Pelt’s nickname) is “The Three Amigos.” The three then follow with the Amigo’s Demonstration.

Cast

  • Steve Martin as Lucky Day, the de facto leader of the Amigos
  • Chevy Chase as Dusty Bottoms, the dimmest of the three Amigos, and a pianist
  • Martin Short as Ned Nederlander, a former child star, and a genuine quick-draw artist
  • Patrice Camhi (aka Patrice Martinez) as Carmen, a beautiful villager of Santo Poco who summons the Three Amigos
  • Alfonso Arau as El Guapo, the evil leader of the Mexican bandits
  • Tony Plana as Jefe, El Guapo’s right-hand man
  • Joe Mantegna as film producer Harry Flugleman

Silverado

Filed under: 1980's Films — Tags: — Wayne @ 7:06 am
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Silverado is a 1985 American Western film, first released on July 10, 1985. It was directed by Lawrence Kasdan and written by Lawrence and Mark Kasdan. The movie features an ensemble cast, including Kevin Kline as Paden, Scott Glenn as Emmett, Danny Glover as Malachi “Mal” Johnson, Kevin Costner as Jake, John Cleese as Sheriff John T. Langston and Brian Dennehy as Sherriff Cobb.

Trivia

  • Lawrence Kasdan offered the role of Jake to Kevin Costner in part to make up for having cut Costner’s scenes in The Big Chill.
  • Earl Hindman, who plays J.T. (the brother-in-law of Emmett and Jake), plays Wilson on the television series Home Improvement, although he is hardly recognizable since a running gag of the series is to always obscure his face. At one point, J.T. is gagged, in a manner similar to the “face-hiding” that Wilson used.
  • The final line of Silverado, “We’ll be back!”, shouted by Jake as he and Emmett ride into the sunset, has had countless fans wishing that a follow-up movie had been made (a 1999 nationwide video poll chose Silverado as the film “Most Deserving of a Sequel”), but time has eliminated that possibility.
  • John Cleese’s first line: “What’s all this then?” is a direct reference to the words often uttered by law enforcement officers who entered the scene of a crime in Monty Python’s Flying Circus.
  • Kevin Costner owns a casino in Deadwood, South Dakota called the Midnight Star, after the saloon in the movie. He had wanted to name the casino Silverado, but there was already a casino by that name in Deadwood.
  • The church featured in this film is also shown in the Guns N’ Roses video “November Rain”.

Awards

Silverado’s score by Bruce Broughton was nominated for the Academy Award for Original Music Score in 1985. It lost to Out of Africa.

1986 Academy Awards (Oscars)

  • Nominated – Best Original Score — Bruce Broughton
  • Nominated – Best Sound Mixing — Donald O. Mitchell, Rick Kline, Kevin O’Connell, David M. Ronne

1986 Casting Society of America (Artios)

  • Nominated – Best Casting for Feature Film: Drama — Wallis Nicita

Cast

  • Rosanna Arquette     Hannah
  • Ray Baker     Ethan McKendrick
  • John Cleese     Sheriff John T. Langston
  • Kevin Costner     Jake Hollis
  • Brian Dennehy     Sheriff Cobb
  • Jeff Fahey     Deputy Tyree
  • James Gammon     Dawson
  • Scott Glenn     Emmet Hollis
  • Danny Glover     Malachi ‘Mal’ Johnson
  • Jeff Goldblum     Calvin ‘Slick’ Stanhope
  • Earl Hindman     J.T. Hollis
  • Linda Hunt     Stella

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