The Michigan Kid
The Michigan Kid is a 1947 American Cinecolor Western film directed by Ray Taylor and starring Jon Hall, Victor McLaglen, Rita Johnson, and Andy Devine.
The Michigan Kid | |
---|---|
![]() Newspaper advertisement | |
Directed by | Ray Taylor |
Produced by | Howard Welsch |
Written by | Robert Presnell Jr |
Screenplay by | Roy Chanslor |
Based on | Rex Beach |
Starring | Jon Hall Victor McLaglen Rita Johnson Andy Devine |
Music by | Hans J. Salter |
Cinematography | Virgil Miller |
Edited by | Paul Landres |
Production company | Universal Pictures |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 69 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
It was Hall's first film after getting out of the army and filming began 15 April 1946.[1]
Plot
A former U.S. marshal (Jon Hall) rescues an instant heiress (Rita Johnson) from an outlaw's (Victor McLaglen) gang.
Cast
- Jon Hall as Michigan Kid / Jim Rowen
- Victor McLaglen as Curley Davis
- Rita Johnson as Sue Dawson
- Andy Devine as Buster
- Joan Shawlee as Soubrette
- William Ching as Steve Randolph Prescott (as William Brooks)
- Stanley Andrews as Sheriff of Rawhide
- Byron Foulger as Mr. Porter
- Milburn Stone as Lanny Slade
- Leonard East as Dave Boyd
- Charles Trowbridge as Banker John Nash
- Griff Barnett as Prentiss Dawson
- Dewey Robinson as Bartender
- Ray Teal as Sergeant
gollark: That happened to me too. I wonder what Discord *did*.
gollark: Well, not sci-fi level, but definitely nanotechnology and pretty advanced.
gollark: Lots of modern and not-that-modern technology is very impressive if you consider how complex it is. Like how CPUs are basically insanely advanced nanotechnology which they manufacture at the scale of, well, not individual atoms, but smallish groups of atoms, mass-produced and sold very cheaply.
gollark: So low-level architecture then.
gollark: Wait, do you mean architecture or process?
References
- Schallert, E. (1946, Apr 08). "Jon Hall in field anew; story deal sensational" Los Angeles Times
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.