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A Good Idea from One of my Buddies

It’s all your Fault, Leonard! So blame him not me!

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One of my Former Substitute Teachers from LA Court School, named Leonard. Who was one of the few Subs that I could trust with my class & students completely.Image result for Godzilla

 Here above is a close likeness of what he looked like in my classroom.
But enough of usual libel & other stuff. Anyways, He was kind enough to up & gave me this idea about this story. He also  mentioned this great line about Watches & Guns.Image result for guns of Red River (1948 film) - Wikipedia
Cherry: There are only two things more beautiful than a good gun: a Swiss watch or a woman from anywhere. Ever had a good… Swiss watch?
It’s a great line because it is absolutely based on cold hard facts. Now I have been lucky enough to own both of these objects. a Breitling (Grenchen) for example and maybe a gun or two.
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As they are also one of the few things that have never let me down so far. That and flowers for the Boss when I push the envelope too far.Image result for flowers to wife meme
 
So here are a few examples of them. As you can guess they are not a cheap hobby to acquire. Some of them rank up there buying a rifle from Holland & Holland price wise. 
But if it makes a man happy. Who am I to quibble? Right? 
 
 
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Here also are a few of the gun scenes also from this fine film.
Of course it’s only Colt Single actions and Winchester Lever Actions. Shotguns? What’s a shotgun. They did not have them right?
Image result for john wayne guns
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Plus the good guy is always crack shot and the Baddies can’t hit the broad side of the ocean. But then hey it’s a Mid Century Film, what did you expect?Image result for clint eastwood shooting somebody in the back
Not him right?
 
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It must of been an interesting collection of conversations between Montgomery Cliff and the Duke off scene. I can not imagine two different kinds of folks / life styles.
Here is some more information that is probably true also!
Thanks for your time on this matter! My Paypal Button is also lonely.
Grumpy

Red River (1948 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Red River
Redriverposter48.jpg

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Howard Hawks
Produced by Howard Hawks
Screenplay by
Story by Borden Chase
Starring
Music by Dimitri Tiomkin
Cinematography Russell Harlan
Edited by Christian Nyby
Distributed by United Artists
Release date
  • September 30, 1948 (USA)
Running time
133 minutes (Pre-release) 127 minutes (Theatrical)
Country United States
Language
  • English
Budget $2.7 million[1]
Box office $9,012,000[2]

Red River is a 1948 American western film directed and produced by Howard Hawks and starring John Wayne and Montgomery Clift, giving a fictional account of the first cattle drive from Texas to Kansasalong the Chisholm Trail. The dramatic tension stems from a growing feud over the management of the drive, between the Texas rancher who initiated it (Wayne) and his adopted adult son (Clift).
The film’s supporting cast features Walter BrennanJoanne DruColeen GrayHarry CareyJohn IrelandHank WordenNoah Beery, Jr.Harry Carey, Jr. and Paul FixBorden Chase and Charles Schnee wrote the screenplay, based on Chase’s original story (which was first serialized in The Saturday Evening Post in 1946 as “Blazing Guns on the Chisholm Trail”).
In 1990, Red River was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.”

Plot

Thomas Dunson (John Wayne) is a stubborn man who wants nothing more than to start up a successful cattle ranch in Texas. Shortly after he begins his journey to Texas with his trail hand Nadine Groot (Walter Brennan), Dunson learns that his love interest (Coleen Gray), whom he had told to stay behind with the California-bound wagon train with the understanding that he would send for her later, was killed in an Indian attack.
Despite this tragedy, Dunson and Groot press on. That night, Dunson and Groot, keeping watch, hear a group of Indians planning to attack them. They kill the Indians, and on the wrist of one, Dunson finds a bracelet he had been left by his late mother. One day before, he had presented it to his young love as he left the wagon train. The bracelet reappears significantly later in the film.
The next day, an orphaned boy named Matthew Garth (played as a boy by Mickey Kuhn and as an adult by Montgomery Clift) wanders into Dunson and Groot’s camp, traumatized and babbling incoherently. He had been part of the wagon train Dunson had left, and had come back from finding a strayed cow to see the ruins of the train. He is the sole survivor of the wagon train. Dunson adopts him and ties the boy’s cow to his wagon, alongside a bull Dunson already owned.
With only the bull and the cow, Dunson, Groot and the boy enter Texas by crossing the Red River. In search for land they travel through Texas, finally settling in deep South Texas near the Rio Grande. Upon arrival, Dunson proudly proclaims all the land about them as his own.
Two Mexican men appear on horseback and inform Dunson that the land already belongs to their boss, a Spanish grandee whose family held the land by patent from the King of Spain. Dunson dismisses this inconvenient fact and, thanks to a quicker draw in a showdown, kills one of the men and tells the other man to inform the Spanish don that Dunson now owns the land. Dunson names his new spread the Red River D, after his chosen cattle brand for his herd. Fatefully, he promises to add M (for Matt) to the brand, once Matt has earned it.
Fourteen years pass and Dunson now has a fully operational cattle ranch. With the help of Matt and Groot, his herd now numbers over ten thousand cattle, but he is also broke as a result of widespread poverty in the southern United States. Due to its loss of the American Civil War, the South cannot afford Dunson’s beef. Dunson decides to drive his massive herd hundreds of miles north to the railhead at Sedalia, Missouri, where he believes they will fetch a good price.
After Dunson hires some extra men to help out with the drive, including professional gunman Cherry Valance (John Ireland), the perilous northward drive starts. Along the way, they encounter many troubles including a stampede sparked by one of the men, Bunk Kenneally (Ivan Parry), making a clatter while trying to steal sugar from the chuck wagon. This leads to the death of Dan Latimer (Harry Carey Jr). Despite Bunk knowing what he did caused all these problems, Dunson wants to make an example of him by whipping him; but when Bunk draws his gun in self-defense as Dunson is about to whip him, Matt shoots Bunk in the arm, knowing that Dunson would have shot to kill. The wounded Bunk is sent to make his way home on his own.
Continuing with the drive, Valance relates around the campfire one evening that the railroad has reached Abilene, Kansas, which is much closer than Sedalia. When Dunson confirms that Valance had not actually seen the railroad, he ignores what he regards as a rumor in favor of continuing on to Missouri.
Deeper problems arise when Dunson’s tyrannical leadership style begins to affect the men. One of the two chuck wagons was destroyed in the stampede, causing morale to drop as the men live on nothing but beef and roasted grain “coffee”. Dunson tells the men he is broke and cannot buy more supplies, even if they turned back to get them. When he announces he intends to lynch two men who had deserted the drive and taken a sack of flour and 100 rounds of ammunition with them and been recaptured by Cherry Valance, Matt rebels.
With the help of Valance and the other men, Matt takes control of the herd in order to drive it along the Chisholm Trail to the hoped-for railhead in Abilene, Kansas. Valance and Buster (Noah Berry Jr.) become his right hand men. Face to face, Dunson curses him and promises to kill him when next they meet. The drive turns toward Abilene, leaving the lightly injured Dunson behind with his horse and a few supplies. Matt and his men are well aware that Dunson will try to recruit a posse to pursue and attack them.
On the way to Abilene, Matt and his men repel an Indian attack on a wagon train made up of gamblers and dance hall girls. One of the people they save is Tess Millay (Joanne Dru), who falls in love with Matt. They spend a night together and he gives her Dunson’s mother’s bracelet, evidently given to Matt by Dunson in earlier years. Eager to beat Dunson to Abilene, he leaves early in the morning—the same way Dunson had left his lady love with the wagon train 14 years before.
Later Tess encounters Dunson, who has followed Matt’s trail to the gamblers’ wagon train. He sees her wearing his mother’s bracelet. Weary and emotional, he tells Tess what he wants most of all is a son. She offers to bear him one if he will abandon his pursuit of Matthew Garth. Dunson sees in her the same anguish that his beloved had expressed when he left her. Despite that, he resumes the hunt. Tess Millay in her wagon accompanies him.
When Matt reaches Abilene, he finds the town has been eagerly awaiting the arrival of such a herd to buy and ship it east by rail. Unknowingly, he has completed the first cattle drive along what would become famous as the Chisholm Trail. He accepts an excellent offer for the cattle. He also meets Tess again, who has preceded Dunson into town.
Shortly thereafter, Dunson arrives in Abilene with his posse, to fulfill his vow to kill Matt. Cherry Valance tries to keep the two apart, but Dunson beats him to the draw, badly wounding him while Valance inflicts a flesh wound on Dunson. Dunson and Matt begin a furious fistfight, which Tess interrupts by drawing a gun on both men, shooting wildly and demanding that they realize the love that they share. Dunson and Matt see the error of their ways and make peace. The film ends with Dunson advising Matt to marry Tess, and telling Matt that he will incorporate an M into the Red River D brand as he had promised 14 years before, because he had earned it.

Cast[edit]

  • John Wayne as Thomas Dunson
  • Montgomery Clift as Matthew “Matt” Garth
  • Walter Brennan as Nadine Groot
  • Joanne Dru as Tess Millay
  • Coleen Gray as Fen
  • Harry Carey as Mr. Melville, representative of the Greenwood Trading Company[3]
  • John Ireland as Cherry Valance
  • Noah Beery Jr. as Buster McGee (Dunson Wrangler)
  • Harry Carey Jr. as Dan Latimer (Dunson Wrangler)
  • Chief Yowlachie as Two Jaw Quo (Dunson Wrangler)
  • Paul Fix as Teeler Yacey (Dunson Wrangler)
  • Hank Worden as Sims Reeves (Dunson Wrangler)
  • Ray Hyke as Walt Jergens (Dunson Wrangler)
  • Wally Wales as Old Leather (Dunson Wrangler)
  • Mickey Kuhn as Young Matt
  • Robert M. Lopez as an Indian
  • Shelley Winters as Dance Hall Girl in Wagon Train (uncredited)
  • Dan White as Laredo (Dunson Wrangler) (uncredited)
  • Tom Tyler as Quitter (Dunson Wrangler) (uncredited)
  • Ray Spiker as Wagon Train Member (uncredited)
  • Glenn Strange as Naylor (Dunson Wrangler) (uncredited)
  • Chief Sky Eagle as Indian Chief (uncredited)
  • Ivan Parry as Bunk Kenneally (Dunson Wrangler) (uncredited)
  • Lee Phelps as Gambler (uncredited)
  • William Self as Sutter (Wounded Wrangler) (uncredited)
  • Carl Sepulveda as Cowhand (Dunson Wrangler) (uncredited)
  • Pierce Lyden as Colonel’s Trail Boss (uncredited)
  • Harry Cording as Gambler (uncredited)
  • George Lloyd as Rider with Melville (uncredited)
  • Frank Meredith as Train Engineer (uncredited)
  • John Merton as Settler (uncredited)
  • Jack Montgomery as Drover at Meeting (uncredited)
  • Paul Fierro as Fernandez (Dunson Wrangler) (uncredited)
  • Richard Farnsworth as Dunston Rider (uncredited)
  • Lane Chandler as Colonel (uncredited)
  • Davison Clark as Mr. Meeker (uncredited)
  • Guy Wilkerson as Pete (Dunson Wrangler) (uncredited)

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