West Gunfighter Figures
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![]() | 6x Britains Ltd 1:32 Herald WILD WEST LASSO COWBOYS & GUNFIGHTERS Figure Set NM! | ![]() | ![]() | US $24.99 | 25d 40m |
![]() | 7x Britains Ltd 1:32 Herald WILD WEST COWBOYS 2 GUN Cowboy GUNFIGHTER Figure Set | ![]() | ![]() | US $19.99 | 25d 39m |
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West Gunfighter Figures

swing doorsd of the wild west saloon?
burst open-inn walksbig peter -wild wiv fury"alrite alrite "--who did it-wat godamn varmit painted my horse blue?the huge figure of Jake the notorious gunfighter stands up"it was me and so wat?""well stammers pete-i was wondering if you dould giv it a second coat?" !! xx
The pair of them then went on to become the best of pals and every night they would er...erm...paint the town red ??
lololol.
x
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![]() | 6x Britains Ltd 1:32 Herald WILD WEST LASSO COWBOYS & GUNFIGHTERS Figure Set NM! | ![]() | ![]() | US $24.99 | 25d 40m |
![]() | 7x Britains Ltd 1:32 Herald WILD WEST COWBOYS 2 GUN Cowboy GUNFIGHTER Figure Set | ![]() | ![]() | US $19.99 | 25d 39m |
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| | The Gunfighter $6.99 The Gunfighter |
| | Gunfighter $12.49 Gunfighter - Masterprint |
| | The Gunfighter (Film) $60.54 High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles The Gunfighter is a 1950 western film starring Gregory Peck, Helen Westcott, Millard Mitchell and Karl Malden (who came back after a three year hiatus). This film was directed by Henry King. It was written by screenwriters William Bowers and William Sellers, with an uncredited rewrite by writer and producer Nunnally Johnson, from a story by Bowers and screenwriter and director Andre de Toth. Notorious but aging gunfighter Jimmy Ringo (Gregory Peck) tries to avoid the trouble that goes with a reputation as the fastest draw in the west. However, when a cocksure young man named Eddie (Richard Jaeckel) draws on him, Ringo has no choice but to kill him. Ringo is warned to leave the area because the deceased has three brothers who will be sure to seek revenge. Sure enough, they pursue him, but he takes them by surprise, disarming them and driving off their horses. Author: Miller, Frederic P./ Vandome, Agnes F./ McBrewster, John Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 60 Publication Date: 2010/07/31 Language: English Dimensions: 5.98 x 9.01 x 0.14 inches |
| | Cowboy Costume for Men - Gunfighter Cowboy $54.95 Bang bang! It's time for six-shooter and saloon revivals with this crafty costume! Our Gunfighter Cowboy Costume for Men comes with a knee-length black western duster, a double breasted black pinstriped vest, and a white dickey with attached matching light grey satin cravat! The Gunfighter Cowboy even comes with holsters and a hat for keeping the sun out of your eyes when you duel! This look is a Wild West winner! So grab this heroic Cowboy Costume for Men and be the last Gunfighter Cowboy standing at high noon! Gender: Male Theme: Traditional Size: XL Color: None |
| | Support Your Local Gunfighter $9.76 Rated: GSynopsis: Synopsis: The wild west just got wilder and a whole lot wackier! James Garner is back in the saddle again in Support Your Local Gunfighter, a powder keg of laughs in which the most dangerous gunslinger in the west isn't the fastest but the funniest! Gigolo con man Latigo Smith (Garner) needs to get something off his chestthe tattooed name of his most recent ex-fiancée. But while he's waiting for the local doctor to sober up and perform the operation, Smith overhears that local mining baron Taylor Barton (Harry Morgan) is looking to shut down his mining competition by hiring the notorious gunman, Swifty Morgan. Seizing the opportunity for an easy con, Smith passes off a reprobate cowhand (Jack Elam) as the dreaded Swifty and pockets the cash. Bankroll in hand, he plans to head for the hills until he falls for Barton's pistol-packin' daughter, Patience (Suzanne Pleshette). But when the real Swifty shows up looking for blood, Smith comes up with an outrageous scheme to save his hide, stop the mining feud and win over Patience and it might just work if it doesn't blow up the entire town!Bonus Features: Specifications: Box Office: |
| | The Gunfighter's Pledge $16.99 The Gunfighter's Pledge |
| | Invitation To A Gunfighter $6.99 Invitation To A Gunfighter |
| | Elvis Gunfighter $34.99 Elvis Gunfighter - Stand Up |
| | Death of a Gunfighter $9.99 Death of a Gunfighter - Masterprint |
| | The Gunfighter, 1917 $34.99 The Gunfighter, 1917 - Giclee Print |
| | Cinema Classics Collection - Rawhide/The Gunfighter/The Garden of Evil - 3-Disc Set (DVD) $30.84 Film legends rule the Old West in this collection of 20th Century Fox classics. Susan Hayward and Tyrone Power go up against a group of outlaws in RAWHIDE, Gregory Peck contemplates giving up the only life he knows in THE GUNFIGHTER, and THE GARDEN OF EVIL is an essential Western featuring Hayward, Gary Cooper, and Richard Widmark. |
| | The Molo, Venice, Looking West with Figures Promenading $49.99 Franz Richard Unterberger The Molo, Venice, Looking West with Figures Promenading - Giclee Print |
| | Gunfighter Ballads And Trail Songs $6.49 Gunfighter Ballads And Trail Songs |
| | Gunfighter Ballads And More $6.49 Gunfighter Ballads And More |
| | Terracotta Figures, Lalji Temple, Kalna, West Bengal, India $24.99 Terracotta Figures, Lalji Temple, Kalna, West Bengal, India - Photographic Print |
| | Death of a Gunfighter, 1969 $34.99 Death of a Gunfighter, 1969 - Giclee Print |
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Old West gunfighter featured on Web
"the Good, the Bad and the Ugly" Ends Sergio Leone's Spaghetti Western Trilogy
Copyright © 2008 Ed Bagley
The Good, The Bad and The Ugly (Il buono, il brutto, il cattivo in Italian) - 4 Stars (Excellent)
After enjoying unexpected commercial success with "A Fistful of Dollars" and "For a Few Dollars More", Italian Director Sergio Leone ends his trilogy of "Spaghetti Westerns" with "The Good, The Bad and The Ugly".
Amazingly, even at this point in his masterful direction of western movies made in Spain, Leone would not enjoy a nickel's worth of adulation from the critics as only the Laurel Awards would give a single award to Clint Eastwood for Action Performance, and that was as runner-up.
Hollywood and its stars ignored Sergio Leone just like they have Johnny Depp. They refuse to recognize that even westerns or pirate pictures can be artfully done and have unique acting performances. Clint Eastwood is The Man With No Name, and Johnny Depp is the perfect pirate as Captain Jack Sparrow. There will never be another equal of either in these roles.
At least one film director, screenwriter and actorQuentin Tarantinohas identified Leone's The Good, The Bad and The Ugly as "the best-directed film of all time." It was Tarantino who gave moviegoers "Reservoir Dogs". "Pulp Fiction" and "Kill Bill (Vol. 1 and Vol.2)" among others.
But back to Leone, who helped write the screenplay with mostly Luciano Vincenzoni. It was Vincenzoni who came up with the premise for filmthree rogues looking for some treasure at the time of the America's Civil Warand its title.
The triangle of rogues included The Good (Clint Eastwood, a professional gunfighter referred to as "Blondie" in this film who would become The Man With No Name in subsequent western films spun off of his character), The Bad (Lee Van Cleef, a self-centered hit man referred to as "Angel Eyes") and The Ugly (Eli Wallach, a self-centered outlaw referred to as "Tuco").
Long story short, the plot involves first establishing the three rogues as bona fide killers. Blondie then becomes a pseudo bounty hunter in partnership with Tuco, turning him in for the bounty, rescuing him before he is hanged, and repeating the process until Blondie leaves Tuco in the desert to die. Tuco survives, and lives to find Blondie and return the favor.
As Blondie is about to die while being forced to walk across the desert by Tuco, they are interrupted by an out-of-control, driverless carriage loaded with dead bodies. Except one body, Bill Carson, lives long enough to tell Tuco where $200,000 in gold is buried in exchange for water. While Tuco goes for water, Carson tells Blondie the exact grave in a cemetery where the gold can be found. Suddenly they have a compelling reason to become partners again.
Dressed in the Confederate uniforms of the dead men, Tuco takes Blondie, who is near death, to a local Catholic mission run by Tuco's brother, a priest. Blondie's recovery goes well, but Tuco's reconciliation with his brother does not.
Blondie and Tuco leave the mission and end up being captured by Union soldiers, and taken to a prison camp where Angel Eyes (now a Union sergeant) takes personal charge of torturing the captives. Angle Eyes is aware of the gold, has his enforcer beat Tuco senseless, and learns the name of the cemetery. He then turns Tuco in for the bounty, frees Blondie (who knows the exact location) and he and his gang of 5 thugs head for the cemetery with Blondie.
Tuco manages to escape on the way to his hanging, turns up in a town the Union forces have bombed silly, and runs smack into Blondie, Angel Eyes and his band of 5. Blondie and Tuco manage to kill all 5 thugs as Angel Eyes escapes, and now all three are headed for the cemetery.
On their way to the cemetery, Blondie and Tuco run into a full blown Civil War battle over a bridge crossing a river to the cemetery. They witness the continual carnage, blow up the bridge, and then the soldiers from both sidesas well as Blondie and Tucomove on.
Once in the cemetery, it is inevitable that the three rogues face off in one of the greatest western showdowns ever filmed. The confrontation is full of Leone's masterful panoramic shots, extreme close-ups and clever sequence of final events. If you have not seen this film, you must, it may be the greatest western film ever made. If you have seen it, you should see it again to better appreciate Sergio Leone's masterful direction.
There are many great moments in this film. Two of my favorites involved Tuco. In the first, while Tuco is in the bombed-out town, he manages to find a bathtub and take a bath. While doing so, a bounty hunter (remember than Tuco still has a price on his head) confronts him buck naked in the tub.
At the start of the film, the bounty hunter is one of three gunmen who confront Tuco and Tuco shoots all three. The one that confronts Tuco lost his right arm but lived and now shoots with his left arm. He reminds Tuco of his distress and, while doing so, Tuco kills him with his gun that is hidden beneath the bubble bath water. Tuco then utters this memorable line: "When you have to shoot, shoot, don't talk."
The other scene I love is when Tuco walks miles and miles out of the desert and into a town with a gun shop in front of him. After dousing himself in a water trough, he confronts the proprietor, remakes a pistol out of parts from three other pistols, and then steps outside to test the weapon.
He hits three standing figures downrange, turning them sideways, and then fires three shots to cut each in half. Two figures fall immediately and the third remains standing. Tuco takes a mouthful of whiskey, and then jumps and as he lands, the third target falls. This is a guy film, and you really need to be a guy to fully appreciate what I am sharing here. Tuco's role in this scene helped invent the word cool.
Because Sergio Leone spoke barely any English and Eli Wallach spoke barely any Italian, the two communicated in French. Because an international cast was employed, only Eastwood, Van Cleef and Wallach spoke in English, and were dubbed in Italian for the debut release in Rome. All other international cast members spoke mostly French or Spanish and were dubbed later. This accounts for the fact that none of the dialogue in the film was completely in sync.
From virtually no acclaim at the time, Sergio Leone's "The Good, The Bad and The Ugly" is now regarded as a classic by many critics. It was part of Time's "100 Greatest Movies" of the last century, and it is one of the few films which enjoy a 100% certified fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes (rottentomatoes.com). The Good, The Bad and The Ugly is currently ranked no less than 5th among the Internet Movie Database Top 250, all of which is not too shabby for an Italian guy directing an American Western.
Even master movie critic Roger Exert gives Leone his just due as an excellent director, and acknowledges two other Sergio Leone films as unquestioned masterpieces"Once Upon a Time in the West" (1968) and "Once Upon a Time in America" (1984).
Sergio Leone was born into the cinema. His father was Roberto Roberti (aka Vincenzo Leone), one of Italy's cinema pioneers, and his mother was actress Bice Valerian. Sergio Leone was born in Rome in 1929 and died in Rome in 1989 from a heart attack. He remains one of the great directors in film history.
About the Author
Read more of my movie reviews on action adventure films, including:
"Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl" with Johnny Depp as Captain Jack Sparrow
"Pirates of the Caribbean: "Dead Man's Chest" with Johnny Depp as the perfect pirate
"Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End" with Johnny Depp
Find my articles at:
http://www.edbagleyblog.com
http://www.edbagleyblog.com/MovieReviews.html
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