The Pinto Bandit
The Pinto Bandit is a 1944 American Western film written and directed by Elmer Clifton. The film stars Dave O'Brien, James Newill, Guy Wilkerson, Mady Lawrence, James Martin and Jack Ingram. The film was released on April 27, 1944, by Producers Releasing Corporation.[1][2][3]
The Pinto Bandit | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Elmer Clifton |
Produced by | Alfred Stern |
Screenplay by | Elmer Clifton |
Starring | Dave O'Brien James Newill Guy Wilkerson Mady Lawrence James Martin Jack Ingram |
Cinematography | Edward A. Kull |
Edited by | Charles Henkel Jr. |
Production company | Alexander-Stern Production |
Distributed by | Producers Releasing Corporation |
Release date |
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Running time | 56 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Plot
Cast
- Dave O'Brien as Tex Wyatt
- James Newill as Jim Steele
- Guy Wilkerson as Panhandle Perkins
- Mady Lawrence as Kitty Collins
- James Martin as Walter Collins
- Jack Ingram as Tom Torrant
- Ed Cassidy as Doc Garson
- Budd Buster as P.T. Heneberry
- Karl Hackett as Sheriff Bisbee
- Bob Kortman as Draw Dudley
- Charles King as Spur Sneely
gollark: Some of the particularly !!FUN!! ones are in probability and uncertainty, which humans are especially awful at.
gollark: ddg! wikipedia list of cognitive biases
gollark: Possibly. But in general, by sneaking a thing into the category via technicalities or quoting the definition and saying "see, it obviously fits" or something like that, you can make people treat it like a central member of the category.
gollark: This is something called the "noncentral fallacy", where because a thing is an *edge-case example* of a category, you taint it with all the connotations of everything else in the category.
gollark: A lot of political arguments are also something like "abortion is murder" / "abortion is important for choice", where you just associate it with badness/goodness tangentially to taint it with that badness/goodness.
See also
The Texas Rangers series:
- The Rangers Take Over (1942)
- Bad Men of Thunder Gap (1943)
- West of Texas (1943)
- Border Buckaroos (1943)
- Fighting Valley (1943)
- Trail of Terror (1943)
- The Return of the Rangers (1943)
- Boss of Rawhide (1943)
- Outlaw Roundup (1944)
- Guns of the Law (1944)
- The Pinto Bandit (1944)
- Spook Town (1944)
- Brand of the Devil (1944)
- Gunsmoke Mesa (1944)
- Gangsters of the Frontier (1944)
- Dead or Alive (1944)
- The Whispering Skull (1944)
- Marked for Murder (1945)
- Enemy of the Law (1945)
- Three in the Saddle (1945)
- Frontier Fugitives (1945)
- Flaming Bullets (1945)
References
- "The Pinto Bandit (1944) - Overview". TCM.com. Retrieved 2019-12-01.
- Hal Erickson. "The Pinto Bandit (1944) - Elmer Clifton". AllMovie. Retrieved 2019-12-01.
- "The Pinto Bandit". Catalog.afi.com. Retrieved 2019-12-01.
External links
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