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The Ambush (Serbo-Croatian: Zaseda, Serbian Cyrillic: Заседа) is a 1969 Yugoslav black-and-white feature film written and directed by Živojin Pavlović. [1] It is considered to be one of the greatest achievements of the Yugoslav Black Wave .
Ken Burns, the legendary documentarian has examined nearly every era of American history. We ranked all of his films, from Baseball to The Vietnam War.
The film premiered at the 2000 Toronto International Film Festival. [3] Despite receiving generally positive reviews for its story, direction, Farrell's performance, screenplay, and emotional weight, the film was a box-office bomb, grossing only $148,701 worldwide. It was one of Schumacher's best reviewed films in his filmography.
The Damned (1969 film) Dance of Death (1969 film) David Copperfield (1969 film) A Day in the Death of Donny B; De Sade (film) Dead End (1969 film) Deiva Magan; Deliver Us from Evil (1969 film) Destroy, She Said; Dillinger Is Dead; Director (1969 film) Dombey and Son (1969 TV series) Don Segundo Sombra (film) Don't Let the Angels Fall; Downhill ...
Burns’ documentary doesn’t examine this particular shawl detail, although many other bits in different pictures are scrutinized. In fact, those are among the program’s most absorbing moments.
Ambush is a 1950 American Western film starring Robert Taylor, John Hodiak and Arlene Dahl. Directed by Sam Wood , the film is based on the serial story Ambush by Luke Short in The Saturday Evening Post (25 December 1948 – 12 February 1949).
The outlaws catch up and rob the burning train compartments. Flagg and McKay ambush them and kill most of them in the ensuing gunfight. McKay meets Waco as he is about to escape. Waco manages to wound McKay, who then shoots him dead. McKay remarks to Flagg, "I thought I could beat him [Waco]" to which Flagg replies "You did beat him."
It was released by Toho International in the United States with English subtitles as The Ambush on December 18, 1970. [1] The film was re-issued in 1971 under the title Machibuse. [1] It is also known in English as Incident at Blood Pass. Actors Toshiro Mifune and Shintaro Katsu performed in movies produced by each other. Earlier, in January of ...