The Western genre, in particular, has experienced a resurgence on TV since the release of the first season of “Yellowstone.” The show’s popularity has led to the creation of a franchise ...
Yet, with the Western genre ... iconic films and TV shows, it's easy to forget that even the most popular modes of film making still come from humble beginnings. Airing from 1950-1956, The Cisco ...
While the history of animation dates back to the dawn of cinema's golden age, the first animated television show is often ...
In his new book, ‘And the Roots of Rhythm Remain,’ music impresario Joe Boyd traces the vast influence of global music. Here, ...
Though he became a well-regarded director starting in the 1970s, and a movie star around the middle of the 1960s ... 1950s films generally saw him in smaller roles, so it was the series Rawhide that ...
Billy Gibbons, 68, transformed his home into a 1950s haven after his parents died in the mid-90s. In his sepia lounge with rugged walls, he has an original Bakelite TV from as far back as 1949 ...
Kathryn Crosby, a 1950s Hollywood starlet who gave up her film career to marry Bing Crosby, the Oscar-winning actor, radio ...
As Game of Thrones‘ Tyrion Lannister, Peter Dinklage survived various near-death experiences almost exclusively via his wits — but in his new movie, the enjoyably dark Western The Thicket ...
NEW YORK, Sept. 16 (UPI) --The contemporary TV western Longmire may be finished filming for the foreseeable future, but several of its former cast members have exciting new projects coming out ...
Once disparaged as "spaghetti Westerns ... as Rowdy Yates on "Rawhide," the TV cattle herding series. What did Leone see in Eastwood, you know, in the mid-1960s when he cast him?
Despite the cinematic pedigree of many of those versions, it was the 1950s ... a Western town not far from where Sergio Leone shot his “Dollars” trilogy with Clint Eastwood in the 1960s ...
Once disparaged as "spaghetti Westerns," Leone's films helped revive the genre, and ushered in a unique visual style. In 2005, cultural historian Christopher Frayling reflected on Leone's influence.