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  1. Oklahoma Crude is a 1973 American comedy-drama western film directed by Stanley Kramer in Panavision. It stars George C. Scott, Faye Dunaway, John Mills and Jack Palance. It was entered into the 8th Moscow International Film Festival where Kramer won the Golden Prize for Direction. [2] The song "Send a Little Love My Way", sung by Anne Murray ...

    • $2,500,000 (US/ Canada rentals)
    • Henry Mancini
    • Stanley Kramer
  2. Aug 24, 1973 · Oklahoma Crude: Directed by Stanley Kramer. With George C. Scott, Faye Dunaway, John Mills, Jack Palance. In 1913, in Oklahoma, oil derrick owner Lena Doyle (Faye Dunaway), aided by her father (Sir John Mills) and a hobo (George C. Scott), is stubbornly drilling for oil despite the pressure from major oil companies to sell her land.

    • (1.4K)
    • Comedy, Drama, Western
    • Stanley Kramer
    • 1973-08-24
  3. Oklahoma Crude. Stanley Kramer 's "Oklahoma Crude" is a tough, straightforward, well-acted movie about a male-female confrontation, and if it had been made 20 years ago that would have been enough of a description. In these enlightened days of women's liberation, however, all sorts of additional messages have been read into the movie, and a lot ...

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  5. Summaries. In 1913, in Oklahoma, oil derrick owner Lena Doyle (Faye Dunaway), aided by her father (Sir John Mills) and a hobo (George C. Scott), is stubbornly drilling for oil despite the pressure from major oil companies to sell her land. It's oil boom time in Oklahoma, and Lena Doyle (Faye Dunaway), a hard-bitten, cyncial feminist has a fight ...

  6. Rent Oklahoma Crude on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video. A wildcatter (Faye Dunaway), her father (John Mills) and a boozing drifter (George C. Scott ...

    • (6)
    • Stanley Kramer
    • PG
    • George C. Scott
  7. Oklahoma Crude was a notable hit in the Soviet Union, where it resonated as an attack on capitalism and won an award at the 1973 Moscow International Film Festival. The train used on screen was the exact same train seen in High Noon (1952) -- an earlier Stanley Kramer production.

  8. Stanley Kramer. Director. Marc Norman. Writer. In 1913, in Oklahoma, oil derrick owner Lena Doyle, aided by her father and a hobo, is stubbornly drilling for oil despite the pressure from major oil companies to sell her land.

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