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  1. Burt Kennedy. Director; Screenwriter; Producer [on John Wayne] “Wayne was a stickler at work. He was fine if he realized you knew what you were doing. But if you ...

  2. Lawman. 1962. Dynamite and Gold. Good Guys and the Bad Guys. The Canadians. The Alamo: Thirteen Days to Glory. All the Kind Strangers. The Concrete Cowboys. The Deserter.

  3. The Good Guys and the Bad Guys: Directed by Burt Kennedy. With Robert Mitchum, George Kennedy, Martin Balsam, David Carradine. An aging lawman and an aging outlaw join forces when their respective positions in society are usurped by a younger, but incompetent Marshal, and a younger, but vicious gang leader.

  4. Feb 15, 2001 · Find a Grave Memorial ID: 6928688. Source citation. Motion Picture Director, Author. He was a writer of popular westerns. Among his films as writer: Seven Men From Now (1956), The Tall T (1957), Ride Lonesome (1959), and Comanche Station (1960). He directed Support Your Local Sheriff! (1967) and The Money Trap` (1965), among other popular films.

  5. Return of the Seven: Directed by Burt Kennedy. With Yul Brynner, Robert Fuller, Julián Mateos, Warren Oates. Two survivors of the original Magnificent Seven, Chris and Vin, recruit four new members to re-form the outfit and defend several Mexican villages from vicious bandits.

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  6. Coming to film from radio Westerns, Kennedy penned "Seven Men from Now" (1956), the first of four collaborations with director Budd Boetticher and the first of three with producer-director Andrew V. McLaglen. Moving from the typewriter to the director's chair by the early 1960s, Kennedy...

  7. Burt Kennedy’s “The Train Robbers” is a very curious Western, and it gets curiouser the more you think about it. I wonder if there’s ever been a Western as visually uncluttered as this one. Most of the action takes place in the high desert around Durango, Mexico, and Kennedy goes for clean blue skies, sculpted white sand dunes and human ...

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