The Cowboy Musketeer
The Cowboy Musketeer is a 1925 American silent western film directed by Robert De Lacey and starring Tom Tyler, Frankie Darro and David Dunbar.[1]
The Cowboy Musketeer | |
---|---|
Directed by | Robert De Lacey |
Written by | Buckleigh Fritz Oxford |
Starring | Tom Tyler Frankie Darro David Dunbar |
Cinematography | John W. Leezer |
Production company | Robertson-Cole Pictures Corporation |
Distributed by | Film Booking Offices of America |
Release date | December 13, 1927 |
Running time | 50 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent English intertitles |
A cowboy helps a woman find the hidden gold mine she has inherited from her father, before others can get their hands on it.
Cast
- Tom Tyler as Tom Latigo
- Frankie Darro as Billy Gordon
- Frances Dare as Leila Gordon
- David Dunbar as Tony Vaquerrelli
- Tom London as Joe Dokes
gollark: In languages such as Haskell, generics are extremely natural. `data Beeoid a b = Beeoid a | Metabeeoid (Beeoid b a) a | Hyperbeeoid a b a b` trivially defines a simple generic data type. It is only in the uncoolest of languages that this simplicity has been stripped away, with generic support artificially limited to a small subset of types, generally just arrays and similar structures. Thus, reject no generics, return to generalized, simple and good generics.
gollark: Great. Doing so. Thanks, syl.
gollark: Or at least... more consistent, which is kind of similar.
gollark: Perhaps it could be argued that generics are the natural state of things somehow, and simpler than no generics.
gollark: Oh, wait, this is easy. Anarchoprimitivism is derived from anarchism, i.e. the particularly "bee hierarchies" bit of leftism. I can reuse left-justification.
References
- Munden p.151
Bibliography
- Munden, Kenneth White. The American Film Institute Catalog of Motion Pictures Produced in the United States, Part 1. University of California Press, 1997.
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