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Joe Kidd is a 1972 American Revisionist Western film starring Clint Eastwood and Robert Duvall, written by Elmore Leonard and directed by John Sturges. The film is about an ex-bounty hunter hired by a wealthy landowner named Frank Harlan to track down Mexican revolutionary leader Luis Chama, who is fighting for land reform .
Joe is a 2013 American independent Southern Gothic crime drama film directed and co-produced by David Gordon Green, co-produced by Lisa Muskat, Derrick Tseng and Christopher Woodrow and written by Gary Hawkins, based on Larry Brown's 1991 novel of the same name.
Joe Kidd: Frank Harlan [24] 1973 The Outfit: Earl Macklin [25] Badge 373: Eddie Ryan [26] Lady Ice: Ford Pierce [27] 1974 The Conversation: The Director: Uncredited [28] The Godfather Part II: Tom Hagen [21] 1975 The Killer Elite: George Hansen [29] Breakout: Jay Wagner [30] 1976 The Eagle Has Landed: Colonel Radl [31] The Seven-Per-Cent ...
James Lee Wainwright [1] (March 5, 1938 – December 20, 1999 [1]) was an American actor best known for his roles in films such as Joe Kidd (1972), [2] The President's Plane Is Missing (1973), Killdozer (1974), Bridger (1976, as Jim Bridger), The Private Files of J. Edgar Hoover (1977), Mean Dog Blues (1978), Battletruck (1982) and The Survivors (1983).
Joe's sentence followed his wife, original "RHONJ" cast member Teresa Giudice's, 11-month sentence that ended in December 2015. Joe started his prison stint in March 2016.
A Fistful of Dollars was directly adapted from Akira Kurosawa's Yojimbo (1961). It was the subject of a lawsuit by Yojimbo ' s producers. [6] Yojimbo ' s protagonist, an unconventional rōnin (a samurai with no master) played by Toshiro Mifune, bears a striking resemblance to Eastwood's character: both are quiet, gruff, eccentric strangers with a strong but unorthodox sense of justice and ...
With 'Wicked Part 1' in movie theaters on November 22, fans should keep an eye out for these 13 Easter eggs nodding to 'The Wizard of Oz' and the Broadway show.
Ten weeks before Joe was released in the United States, a real-life mass murder with similarities to the movie's climactic scenes occurred in Detroit, Michigan. On May 7, 1970, a railroad worker named Arville Douglas Garland entered a university residence and killed his daughter, her boyfriend and two other students.