Ad
related to: bakersfield marketplace movies tucson
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Old Tucson Studios is a studio just west of Tucson where several film and television westerns were filmed, including 3:10 to Yuma (1957), Cimarron (1960), The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976), and Rio Bravo (1959).
Old Tucson Studios. Old Tucson (aka Old Tucson Studios) is an American movie studio and theme park just west of Tucson, Arizona, adjacent to the Tucson Mountains and close to the western portion of Saguaro National Park. Built in 1939 for the movie Arizona (1940), it has been used for the filming location of many movies and television westerns ...
The Loft Cinema. Coordinates: 32.236381°N 110.923558°W. The Loft Cinema marquee at sunset in Tucson, AZ. The Loft Cinema is a nonprofit art house cinema located in Tucson, Arizona. [1] The Loft Cinema screens first-run independent American and foreign films and documentaries, as well as classic art films and special events.
G. The Gay Desperado. Ghost Town (1988 film) The Girl Stage Driver. Goats (film) The Gun and the Pulpit.
80 minutes. Country. United States. Language. English. Gunsmoke in Tucson is a 1958 American CinemaScope Western film directed by Thomas Carr and written by Paul Leslie Peil and Robert L. Joseph. The film stars Mark Stevens, Forrest Tucker, Gale Robbins, Vaughn Taylor, John Ward and Kevin Hagen. The film was released on December 7, 1958, by ...
Fox Theatre in Redwood City, California. Fox Theatres was a large chain of movie theaters in the United States dating from the 1920s either built by Fox Film studio owner William Fox, or subsequently merged in 1929 by Fox with the West Coast Theatres chain, to form the Fox West Coast Theatres chain. [2] Fox West Coast went into bankruptcy and ...
W. What Ever Happened to Aunt Alice? White Line Fever (film) Categories: Films set in Pima County, Arizona. Tucson, Arizona in fiction.
Walk the Proud Land is a 1956 American CinemaScope Technicolor Western film directed by Jesse Hibbs and starring Audie Murphy and future Academy Award winner Anne Bancroft. Filmed at Old Tucson Studios, [2] it recounts the first successful introduction of limited self-government by John Clum (1851–1932), Indian agent for the San Carlos Apache ...