The Star Packer - Full Movie | John Wayne, Verna Hillie, George 'Gabby' Hayes, Yakima Canutt

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  • Опубликовано: 19 ноя 2018
  • He Dared Death In The Outlaw's Lair! John Travers (John Wayne) takes on a mysterious gang leader known as The Shadow in this vintage western from Hollywood’s Poverty Row. Director/writer Robert N. Bradbury (Blue Steel, Riders of Destiny) gets the best of a remarkable cast that includes George "Gabby" Hayes. Of interest to film buffs is that the feature was shot in various California locations by Oscar winning cinematographer Archie Stout (The Quiet Man).
    Director: Robert N. Bradbury
    Writers: Robert N. Bradbury
    Starring: John Wayne, Verna Hillie, George 'Gabby' Hayes, Yakima Canutt, Billy Franey, Eddie Parker, Earl Dwire, Thomas G. Lingham
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Комментарии • 18

  • @anthonyfrew1571
    @anthonyfrew1571 17 дней назад

    One of the best of John Wayne's early westerns

  • @paulstark6818
    @paulstark6818 Год назад +8

    Another great yarn I've seen these movies once if not twice and I'm surprised to see so few comments is thought whith so many western lovers there would be more thankyou for bringing so many memories of the good old days ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @bythesea4ever2010
    @bythesea4ever2010 Месяц назад

    Yak "more trouble more fun " Another great movie of John Wayne, Gabby Hays, Yakima Canutt, and Earl Dwyer just love the Old Western movies they are the best to watch any time of the day ❤❤👍👍

  • @zepequeno2359
    @zepequeno2359 Год назад +6

    having a good and pleasant time watching this old Jphn Wayne 's film 👏

  • @kerickwalters2749
    @kerickwalters2749 Месяц назад

    This is one of my favorite B Westerns that Wayne did

  • @joehamlet7576
    @joehamlet7576 8 месяцев назад +2

    Yakima Canutt as an Indian.... Man, they were really straining on this one. This is the 12th one of these 1930s John Wayne movies I have watched in the last two weeks. Yakima is much more convincing as a bad guy than an Indian. And Gabby Hayes with no beard. That is new, too! And he's the bad guy! What a hoot! :)

  • @peteraltman6374
    @peteraltman6374 5 месяцев назад +2

    I love these old westerns i can watch them over and over thx for bringing them to us it's really appreciated 👍

  • @oswaldocampos4873
    @oswaldocampos4873 5 месяцев назад +1

    Muy buena película, me hacen regresar al pasado recordando mi juventud. Gracias por compartir, saludos desde Perú.

  • @carloshespanha769
    @carloshespanha769 2 месяца назад +1

    Assistia antes do filme principal. São o máximo. Era sucesso de bilheteria

  • @markdeike5740
    @markdeike5740 8 месяцев назад +3

    Great movie

  • @dannykelly7486
    @dannykelly7486 3 месяца назад

    I like John Wayne and his movies

  • @charleshansrote2128
    @charleshansrote2128 6 месяцев назад +2

    GREAT 👍

  • @venussky4677
    @venussky4677 Год назад +3

    Nice

  • @GM-cf6jv
    @GM-cf6jv 4 месяца назад +2

    Wayne definitely became a better actor in the 40s but this younger time was his horse training with Yakima being the expert stuntman rider. Yakima apparently created the not exactly humane horse tripping stunt, pretty brutal on those fast moving horses, some being injured and having to be put down. Read about Yakima on Wikipedia, pretty tough dude!

    • @JE-western-rider
      @JE-western-rider 2 месяца назад +1

      Story time: Many, many years ago, I met an old cowboy in western Washington that worked in the b-western in the mid to later part of the 30's and he rode a few horses with trip wires or into trip pits.
      He showed me a display in his den and it had an old beat up saddle, cinch with a figure 8 ring, and the hobbles for the horse's front legs and said this was his stunt horse gear.
      He showed me how to rig the horse to throw it with one front leg and both front legs.
      For throwing a horse with all four legs, a wire would be wrapped around a trailer hitch on a truck to the figure 8 ring and all four legs. The driver would let out the clutch. The rider knows whats coming. As for the horse gets a big surprise - it goes straight down quickly and brutally.
      Then he started telling me a couple of stories about himself and a couple of other riders. It was dangerous work - near misses were common. There was no insurance and the men were on their own for medical care.
      As for the stunts, he called them gags, he usually got an extra 5 to 8 dollars and some whiskey to ride the horse fall. His description was blood chilling. He told me that as the horse's head hit the ground and he went sailing over the horses head, he could often hear the horse's bones snap / break and the horse's screams would dig into his memory.
      Many a time, he would know if the horse was dead before he stood up or turned around and looked at the horse. He figured that he rode 30 to 35 horse falls before he moved on and over three quater of them were severly crippled or killed. He basically said too bad horses, its a job.
      He said that once in awhile he would dream about riding one of the stunt horses and could still hear the animal's death scream. He said he worked the b-western for about a year - year and a half and then moved on.

    • @GM-cf6jv
      @GM-cf6jv 2 месяца назад +1

      That is a tale of misery. I often wonder how the horses faired on those falls and the men too not only in the horse trips but when the good guy pulls the bad guy off a speeding horse. Tough dudes, horses had no say in the script. I wonder what the real old west chases were like. Whats that Hollywood line”Thats entertainment”.

  • @lostat400
    @lostat400 3 месяца назад +4

    A lot of the movies today are unwatchable, no story, highly propagandised, too far fetched. These kind of movies are more for my liking.

  • @donmitchell1677
    @donmitchell1677 7 месяцев назад +1

    Love these John Wayne movies, but he took that shotgun and he’s responsible for everyone that died on that stage