Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

  1. Anuncio

    relacionado con: john wayne the searchers
  2. Free shipping on qualified orders. Free, easy returns on millions of items. Find deals and compare prices on popular products at Amazon.com

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The Searchers (en España, Centauros del desierto; en Argentina, Chile y México, Más corazón que odio) es una película estadounidense de 1956 basada en la novela homónima de Alan Le May, dirigida por John Ford y con John Wayne, Jeffrey Hunter, Vera Miles, Natalie Wood y Ward Bond como actores principales.

  2. The Searchers is a 1956 American epic Western film directed by John Ford and written by Frank S. Nugent, based on the 1954 novel by Alan Le May.

  3. The Searchers: Directed by John Ford. With John Wayne, Jeffrey Hunter, Vera Miles, Ward Bond. An American Civil War veteran embarks on a years-long journey to rescue his niece from the Comanches after the rest of his brother's family is massacred in a raid on their Texas farm.

    • (97K)
    • Adventure, Drama, Western
    • John Ford
    • 1956-05-26
  4. Centauros del desierto es una película dirigida por John Ford con John Wayne, Natalie Wood, Jeffrey Hunter, Ward Bond .... Año: 1956. Título original: The Searchers. Sinopsis: Texas. En 1868, tres años después de la guerra de Secesión, Ethan Edwards, un hombre solitario, vuelve derrotado a su hogar.

    • Estados Unidos
    • Winton C. Hoch
    • John Ford
  5. Star Wars. In Theaters At Home TV Shows. In this revered Western, Ethan Edwards (John Wayne) returns home to Texas after the Civil War. When members of his brother's family are killed...

    • (54)
    • John Wayne
    • John Ford
    • Warner Brothers
  6. John Wayne stars with his son Patrick Wayne, Ward Bond and Natalie Wood in this classic Western about a Civil War veteran from Texas who will stop at...

  7. 25 de nov. de 2001 · John Ford's “The Searchers” contains scenes of magnificence, and one of John Wayne's best performances. There are shots that are astonishingly beautiful. A cover story in New York magazine called it the most influential movie in American history.