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Night Passage is a 1957 American Western film directed by James Neilson and starring James Stewart and Audie Murphy. [2] The film was the first American production to utilize the Technirama process by Technicolor. This process helped make the blue skies crisper and brighten the autumn footage photographed by cinematographer William H. Daniels.
In a small town in 1880s Colorado, a gang of outlaws led by Drago (Morgan Woodward) rob a train and kidnap a saloon singer, Uvalde (Joan Staley).Determined to chase them down, the sheriff, Chad Lucas (Audie Murphy), forms a posse which includes Uvalde's fiancé, Nate Harlan (Warren Stevens), Mark Emerson, Nicos, and Lucas's deputy Cap (Denver Pyle) – who is secretly in league with the outlaws.
The program had previously been involved in the making of five feature films, as it attempted to incorporate one full-length movie every year into its curriculum. [14] One of its past projects, Extraordinary (2017), was released in 600 theaters nationwide, making it the first film in the United States to be both theatrically distributed and ...
The 1930s: The Great American Movie Genres... Confessions of a Co-Ed (1931) dir. Dudley Murphy; Love Me Tonight (1932) dir. Rouben Mamoulian; The Golem: How He Came into the World (1920) dir. Carl Boese and Paul Wegener; Frankenstein (1931) dir. James Whale; Eyes Without a Face (1960) dir. Georges Franju; Audition (1999) dir. Takashi Miike
Flight Risk is Gibson's first movie as a director since 2016's Hacksaw Ridge. Wahlberg previously told PEOPLE in June 2024 that he, Gibson, Dockery and Grace shot the new movie in just 22 days.
When Murphy's wife Yvonne McGuinness suggested the 2021 Claire Keegan book, a resonant bestseller, he was stunned to find the rights available. "It was a miracle in a way, and meant to be," says ...
The Guns of Fort Petticoat is a 1957 American Western film produced by Harry Joe Brown and Audie Murphy for Brown-Murphy Pictures. It was based on the 1955 short story "Petticoat Brigade" by Chester William Harrison (1913–1994) [2] that he expanded into a novelization for the film's release.
Cillian Murphy revealed that when he landed his breakthrough role in “28 Days Later,” the actor didn’t consider it a zombie movie. Murphy, a first-time Oscar nominee for his work in ...