Showing posts with label Robert Mitchum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Mitchum. Show all posts

Friday, July 5, 2013

100 Years of the Hollywood Western (1994) (TV)

TV REVIEWS : Tip of the Hat to 'The Hollywood Western'
November 25, 1994|KEVIN THOMAS


Jack Haley Jr.'s "100 Years of the Hollywood Western" manages to survey with some insight and admirable comprehensiveness a genre with more than 20,000 titles, spanning footage taken of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show a century ago to a spate of Westerns currently in production.

Sure-fire entertainment, it's deeper on research--the clips are terrific--than on thought. The special's hosts are Charles Bronson, James Coburn, James Garner, Gene Hackman, Robert Mitchum, Kurt Russell and Jane Seymour.

Haley points out that the "Old West" lasted only a few decades but captured the popular imagination enduringly with its endless possibilities for tales of high adventure. He and co-writers Aubrey Soloman and Phil Savenick touch many bases, and they constantly keep us aware of the movies' peerless capacity to turn sometimes sketchy history into potent myth; in doing so, they also manage a tip of the hat to the most famous Westerns.

What they might have made clearer is that the Western became America's morality play, and that the difference between John Wayne and Clint Eastwood is that, in the 1960s, Sergio Leone and the spaghetti Western injected an existential quality to Westerns, blurring the distinction between the good guys and the bad guys.

Once past a nod to pioneer Bronco Billy Anderson, William S. Hart, who brought realism to the Western, and Tom Mix, who brought glamour to it, Haley gives the silent era short shrift; surely, "Covered Wagon" and "The Iron Horse" rate at least mentions. (Serials--silent and talkie--aren't dealt with at all.)

There are apt discussions of the treatment of legendary historical figures, and there are entire sequences devoted to cliche expressions, lawmen, gunslingers, saloons, singing cowboys, Native Americans, frontier women and the eradication of the buffalo.

John Ford and John Wayne were so inextricably linked that Haley is able to deal with Ford's career in the context of the Wayne homage. Most other major directors of Westerns barely rate a mention, however, even though their films are glimpsed. You'll not hear the names of Budd Boetticher, Raoul Walsh, Michael Curtiz or Anthony Mann; perversely, Haley credits the direction of Mann's 1960 remake of "Cimarron" to his former father-in-law, Vincente Minnelli.

100 Years of the Hollywood Western (1994) (TV)
Hosts: Charles Bronson, James Coburn, James Garner, Gene Hackman, Robert Mitchum, Kurt Russell and Jane Seymour

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Nightkill (1980)

The wife of a wealthy industrialist finds herself caught-up in a web of intrigue & murder created by her own deceit.

Nightkill (1980) 
Cast: Robert Mitchum, Jaclyn Smith, James Franciscus, Mike Connors, Fritz Weaver, Sybil Danning

Monday, March 23, 2009

Promises to Keep (1985) TV Movie

A man who left his family thirty years ago, is diagnosed with a terminal illness. Before going to the hospital for treatment, he decides to return home. However, his son finds his actions hard to forgive.




Promises to Keep (1985) TV Movie
Cast: Bentley Mitchum, Christopher Mitchum, Claire Bloom, Jane Sibbett, Richard Partlow, Robert Mitchum, Tess Harper

One Shoe Makes It Murder (1982) TV Movie

A once-famous private eye is hired to find the missing wife of a Las Vegas casino owner.

One Shoe Makes It Murder (1982) TV Movie
Cast: Angie Dickinson, Howard Hesseman, Mel Ferrer, Robert Mitchum

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Brotherhood of the Rose (1989) TV Movie

Romulus and Remus are two CIA agents, their direct instructor is John Elliott.

Based on a novel by David Morrell and filmed entirely in New Zealand, this terrific film is unabashedly old-fashioned escapist espionage fare. Peter Strauss and David Morse play polar-opposite CIA agents, code names Romulus and Remus. Their superior-and father figure-is crusty CIA official Robert Mitchum. Though Romulus and Remus are devoted to Mitchum, he is only concerned with the greater good of the service-a philosophy that has become despotic over the years. Now Mitchum has determined that Romulus is expendable. Escaping from CIA assassins, Romulus and Remus stumble into a vast rule-the-world conspiracy called The Brotherhood of the Rose. Also starring Connie Sellecca, James B. Sikking, M. Emmet Walsh, and Veronica Hamel.

Brotherhood of the Rose (1989) TV Movie
Cast: Peter Strauss, Robert Mitchum, Connie Sellecca, David Morse, James Sikking, M. Emmet Walsh, James Hong