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Boundary: Bleed area may not be visible.
by David Lee Guss
$47.00
This product is currently out of stock.
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Product Details
You'll never run out of power again! If the battery on your smartphone or tablet is running low... no problem. Just plug your device into the USB port on the top of this portable battery charger, and then continue to use your device while it gets recharged.
With a recharge capacity of 5200 mAh, this charger will give you 1.5 full recharges of your smartphone or recharge your tablet to 50% capacity.
When the battery charger runs out of power, just plug it into the wall using the supplied cable (included), and it will recharge itself for your next use.
Design Details
This Technicolor Western is a Ford remake of his 1919 Marked Men,starring Harry Carey (1878-1947). As with many of the director's former close... more
Dimensions
1.80" W x 3.875" H x 0.90" D
Ships Within
1 - 2 business days
This Technicolor Western is a Ford remake of his 1919 "Marked Men,"starring Harry Carey (1878-1947). As with many of the director's former close associates, they were barely speaking. (Ford sadly did not have any real friends, as any person of spine refused to bend to his dictatorial hand.)
Ford had not cast Carey for decades. But the very day he died the quarrelsome director offered his son, Dobe, the role that had been played by his father 29 years before. (An action the elder Carey had predicted; a complicated mixture of Irish guilt and loyalty.)
The remake was shot in the Mohave Desert in 130 degree heat,with Ford driving Dobe mercilessly, saying that Medal of Honor winner Audie Murphy (1924-1971) had begged him for the role.
The film opens with Ford's second-unit director Cliff Lyons, posing as the recently deceased actor, sitting atop Carey's horse, Sunny, silhouetted against a sunset on a MGM backlot hilltop, with the text: "Bright Star of the earl...
I first became obsessed with photography and motion pictures while growing up in post WW2 Manila in the Philippine Islands in the late 1940's/early 1950's. Film noirs were a particular influence. But my first love remains the theater. I acted in numerous amateur productions from 1958 to 1978. In 1979 I earned a MA in drama from the University of Arizona; earlier getting a BA in English from the University of Minnesota, where I co-founded the first film society on campus and ran it for four years. While at the U of A, I studied with the master black and white photo essayist W. Eugene Smith (1918-1978) the last year of his life. I am the last person cited in Jim Hughes' definitive biography of Gene, as I wrote about attending his final...
$47.00
David Lee Guss
Thanks. This film has gorgeous color. DLG
Penny Lisowski
Congratulations on your sale!
Diannah Lynch
Wonderful John Wayne! Congratulations on your sale!