The Price of Power (Italian: Il prezzo del potere, 1969) is a Spaghetti Western directed by Tonino Valerii. The film stars Giuliano Gemma as the hero Bill Willer who tries to get revenge against the killers of his father while at the same time trying to prevent an assassination plot against president James Garfield (played by Van Johnson, with José Suárez playing Vice President Chester A. Arthur) in 1881.Read More »
Western
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Tonino Valerii – Il prezzo del potere AKA The Price of Power AKA A Bullet for the President (1969)
Tonino Valerii1961-1970ActionEuro WesternsItalyWestern -
John Huston – The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean (1972)
John Huston1971-1980USAWesternQuote:
Outlaw and self-appointed lawmaker, Judge Roy Bean, rules over an empty stretch of the West that gradually grows, under his iron fist, into a thriving town, while dispensing his own quirky brand of frontier justice upon strangers passing by.Read More » -
Anthony Mann – Devil’s Doorway (1950)
USA1941-1950Anthony MannWestern

Devil’s Doorway (1950)
Quote:
After the Civil War, a highly decorated Shoshone Indian veteran plans to raise cattle in Wyoming but white farmers plan to grab fertile tribal lands by pitting the whites against the Indians.Read More » -
Budd Boetticher – The Man from the Alamo (1953)
1951-1960Budd BoetticherDramaUSAWestern

Synopsis:
The Man From the Alamo manages to pack a few nuances and surprises in its traditional western plotline. During the siege at the Alamo, John Stroud (Glenn Ford) is chosen by lot to leave the fort and warn the families of the mission’s defenders of the impending arrival of General Santa Ana. But when everyone around him is wiped out by the Mexicans, Stroud has no proof that he was ordered to leave his post, and is therefore branded a coward. He spends the rest of the film performing acts of conspicuous bravery to clear his name–and also tracks down the film’s real villain, Jess Wade (Victor Jory), who robbed the Alamo victims of their possessions after the smoke cleared. Julie Adams, Chill Wills, Hugh O’Brien, Neville Brand, Arthur Space and future soap-opera star Jeanne Cooper round out the cast. — Hal EricksonRead More » -
Enzo G. Castellari – Quella sporca storia nel west AKA Johnny Hamlet (1968)
1961-1970DramaEnzo G. CastellariEuro WesternsItalyWesternBack from the Civil War, Johnny Hamilton learns that his father was murdered by Santana the bandit and that his mother Gertrude married his uncle Claude but Johnny is determined to find out the truth.Read More »
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Bethel Buckalew – Revenge of the Virgins (1959)
1951-1960Bethel BuckalewEroticaUSAWesternPlot Synopsis from AMG
This is an entry in the short-lived genre of “nudie” westerns. In this one, a tribe of Indian women (topless, of course) vow to protect their land from a group of white men who want to take it. They decide to use any means necessary to do it.
Brian GusseRead More » -
George Sherman – Three Texas Steers (1939)
1931-1940ActionGeorge ShermanUSAWesternNancy Evans, lovely circus owner, has a ranch that she’s never visited, but for sentimental reasons won’t sell to Mike Abbott. Her partners, secretly in league with Abbott, sabotage the circus to force Nancy to sell the ranch; instead, she goes there to live. Will her neighbors, the Three Mesquiteers, be a match for the secret swindlers? And what’s so valuable about that run-down ranch anyway?Read More »
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Oscar Apfel & Cecil B. DeMille – The Squaw Man (1914)
1911-1920Cecil B. DeMilleOscar ApfelSilentUSAWesternA chivalrous British officer takes the blame for his cousin’s embezzlement and journeys to the American West to start a new life on a cattle ranch.Read More »
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George Sherman – Red River Range (1938)
1931-1940ActionGeorge ShermanUSAWesternThe Three Mesquiteers was the umbrella title for a series of fifty-one B-westerns released between 1936 and 1943. The films featured the characters Stony Brooke, Tucson Smith and Lullaby Joslin or Rusty Joslin as the threesome; played by many B-western stars of that era. In 1938, John Wayne took over for Robert Livingston as Stony Brooke and starred in eight Mesquiteers films between 1938 and 1939, he was joined by Ray Corrigan as Tucson Smith and Max Terhune as Lullaby Joslin for the first six and Raymond Hatton as Rusty Joslin for the last two… all eight films were directed by George Sherman (Big Jake). Read More »






