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  1. Batjac co-produced with Victor Mature's Romina Productions. 1958: Escort West: United Artists: Nate H. Edwards & Robert E. Morrison: Francis D. Lyon: Victor Mature: Batjac co-produced with Victor Mature's Romina Productions. 1960: The Alamo: United Artists: John Wayne: John Wayne: John Wayne, Richard Widmark & Laurence Harvey: Best Sound

  2. 16 de nov. de 2022 · When Fellows parted ways with the star a few years later, Wayne changed the company's name to Batjac Productions ... Batjac turned out 26 theatrical features between 1952 and 1974.

  3. High And The Mighty, The (1954) -- (Movie Clip) Whistlin' Dan After the aerial credit sequence, the first order of business for director William A. Wellman, introducing his producing-partner and star John Wayne, as co-pilot Dan Roman, who meets mechanic Sneed (George Chandler), via the script from Ernest K. Gann, and the same team that made the hit Island In The Sky the previous year, in The ...

  4. The opening credits for the film include the following written title: "A Batjac Productions Panama Inc. Production in association with Robert Haggiag, Dear Film Productions, Rome, Italy." Publicity materials contained in the AMPAS Library file on the film adds that a novelization of the film, also entitled Legend of the Lost , by Bonnie Golightly was published after the film's release.

  5. Made by Wayne-Fellows Productions, co-owned by John Wayne (who took over the company at that time, renaming it Batjac), The High and the Mighty was distributed by Warner Bros. The Academy screening will take place on Thursday, May 24, at 7:30 p.m. at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills.

  6. 3 de abr. de 2014 · He also participated in numerous student theatrical productions. Winning a football scholarship to the University of Southern California, ... Wayne-Fellows Productions and Batjac Productions.

  7. Skeeter (Brandon De Wilde) visits Mississippi swamp neighbor Bonnie (Louise Beavers), and her hired man Gates (Sidney Poitier), wondering if they know about the odd dog he's found in the woods, in , 1956, directed by William A. Wellman. From the novel Good-bye, My Lady by James H. Street (Philadelphia, 1954).