Resultado de búsqueda
22 de abr. de 2024 · “Cowboy” Delmer Daves (born July 24, 1904, San Francisco, California, U.S.—died August 17, 1977, La Jolla, California) was an American writer and director of motion pictures who worked in a number of genres but was best known for his westerns, which include Broken Arrow (1950), The Last Wagon (1956), and 3:10 to Yuma (1957). Early work.
- Michael Barson
Hace 22 horas · Expertly directed by Delmer Daves using sharp and striking black-and-white cinematography, which was crucial to bring out the intensity and subtlety of the plot.
Hace 22 horas · 1:47:47. The Revengers - Roll Studio. Roll Studio. Todd, an alleged murderer, along with his captors, travels towards a wagon train of women and children. However, when Apaches attack them, Todd is entrusted with the safety of the survivors. Initial release: September 21, 1956 Director: Delmer Daves Story by: Gwen Bagni; (as Gwen Bagni Gielgud)
- 94 min
- Roll Studio
6 de may. de 2024 · Delmer Daves’s 3:10 to Yuma (1957) is relatively modest in scale—the heart of the film is a duel of wills and words between two men cooped up in a hotel room—but few westerns can match its visual beauty or its largeness of spirit.
6 de may. de 2024 · And given the real history of the American West, details both admirable and terrible, it should be no surprise that the Old West in particular has been a popular milieu for cinematic exploration, with the likes of John Ford, Howard Hawks, Sam Peckinpah, John Sturges, Delmer Daves, Clint Eastwood, Anthony Mann, and many others making invaluable contributions.
Hace 2 días · Directed by Delmer Daves in 1957 and later reimagined by James Mangold in 2007, the title itself encapsulates a journey fraught with tension, moral dilemmas, and the timeless struggle between good and evil. At its surface, “3:10 to Yuma” refers to a specific train departing at 3:10 destined for the town of Yuma.
19 de abr. de 2024 · 1. RETORNO AL PASADO (Out of the Past) Jacques Tourneur (EEUU, 1947) 2. PERDICIÓN (Double Indemnity) Billy Wilder (EEUU, 1944) 3. EL SILENCIO DE UN HOMBRE (Le Samouraï) Jean-Pierre Melville (FRA/ITA, 1967) 4. EL INFIERNO DEL ODIO (Tengoku to Jigoku) Akira Kurosawa (JAP, 1963) 5. VÉRTIGO (DE ENTRE LOS MUERTOS) (Vertigo) Alfred Hitchcock (EEUU, 1958)