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Very much enjoyed SUMMERFIELD'S FILM. And said so on Amazon. |
Friday, April 29, 2016
Scott Adlerberg's Winning Streak Continues
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Under Burning Skies: The Americano, Hombre, and Backshot
The Americano (1955, film)
You have to love low-budget RKO Pictures for always throwing
in everything but the kitchen sink. In the first thirty minutes of The
Americano, Glenn Ford on a trip to sell three Brahman bulls in Brazil,
encounters piranhas, crocodiles, mountain lions, snakes, and a desperado named
el Gato played by Cesar Romero! Silly, undemanding, pulp Western grounded by
the ever reliable Ford and mucho on-location filming of Brazil that’s astounding
to behold. But, without a doubt, Romero steals every scene, and as I watched
The Americano I realized I would rather be watching a story about the colorful
el Gato.
Film flub: Ford’s horse quite clearly changes back and forth
between two different animals.
Hombre (1967, film)
Paul Newman is John Russell, reared for a period by Apaches
and now as an adult would prefer to live with them. He returns to the land
of the white man when his biological father dies leaving a boardinghouse to
John. Traveling by stagecoach with the standard cliché of passengers (Hollywood
is all but unpredictable) they are held up by Cicero Grimes (menacing
perfection by Have Gun, Will Travel’s Richard Boone) and it’s up to John to
lead them to safety. This socially conscious Western has aged well thanks to a
strong cast that also includes Richard March, Martin Balsam, and Diane Cilento.
Trivia: The photo that closes the film is that of Jimmy Santiago McKinn captured by Apaches in 1885.
Backshot (2015, novel) by Ed Gorman

Note: another superb Ed Gorman story is Relentless that I
reviewed for Macmillan’s Criminal Element blog.
Wednesday, April 27, 2016
FROM DUNDEE'S DESK: Noteworthy Reads: MAGE, MAZE, DEMON by Charles All...
FROM DUNDEE'S DESK: Noteworthy Reads: MAGE, MAZE, DEMON by Charles All...: When it comes to writing heroic fantasy --- or sword and sorcery, if you will --- nobody captures the drive and raw energy of the lat...
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Dust Up
I feel obliged, for the first time, to insert myself into the proceedings. Back in 1994, as a military policeman in the US Army, I was deployed to Haiti as part of President Clinton’s Operation Uphold Democracy to return Jean-Bertrand Aristide to power. From the instant we landed at the airport to cheering crowds, I was taken in with the kind people who were non-reticent in approaching us with thanks and their desire to share thoughts on their country. Reading Dust Up took me...
Sunday, April 24, 2016
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