Randolph Scott
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Assorted References
- “Ride the High Country”
- In Ride the High Country
…old friend Gil Westrum (Randolph Scott), another ex-lawman, agrees to assist him. Gil’s young friend and protégé Heck Longtree (Ron Starr) also accompanies them on the dangerous journey. Along the way they rescue a desperate young woman, Elsa Knudsen (Mariette Hartley), from a horrific life with her abusive father.…
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- In Ride the High Country
association with
- Boetticher
- In Budd Boetticher: Westerns
…writer Burt Kennedy and actor Randolph Scott for a series of taut, psychologically complex westerns. The first was Seven Men from Now (1956), with Scott as an ex-sheriff who methodically tracks down the seven criminals who killed his wife; Lee Marvin was impressive as an opportunistic villain. The Tall T…
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- In Budd Boetticher: Westerns
- De Toth
- In André De Toth
… (1952); the first two starred Randolph Scott, with whom De Toth would work with many times. Last of the Comanches (1953) was a remake of Zoltan Korda’s Sahara (1943), with Native Americans standing in for the Nazi hordes of the original.
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- In André De Toth
- Enright
- In Ray Enright
…Marlene Dietrich, John Wayne, and Randolph Scott (who made six other films with Enright); and ‘Gung Ho!’: The Story of Carlson’s Makin Island Raiders (1943), with Scott playing Colonel Thorwald, a character based on U.S. Marine officer Evans Carlson.
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- In Ray Enright
- Hathaway
- In Henry Hathaway: Early work
The western starred Randolph Scott, and over the next several years the two men made a number of B-films in the genre. In 1934 Hathaway moved to more prominent properties with Now and Forever, which starred Shirley Temple and two of the day’s biggest stars, Gary Cooper and…
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- In Henry Hathaway: Early work