Friday, June 29, 2007

Viewer alert: Lonesome Dove

Great news for fans of Lonesome Dove: The classic miniseries will be presented for the first time in a brand-new, digitally re-mastered edition over the next four Saturdays on the ION television network. The first segment airs from 9 to 11 p.m. EDT tomorrow (June 30), and the final installment will be shown July 21.To find an ION station in your area, click here.

And just in case that's not quite enough Wild West action for you: ION also will air the 1993 made-for-TV Western Rio Diablo -- starring Kenny Rogers, Travis Tritt and Naomi Judd -- at 7 p.m. EDT tomorrow as well.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Andy Griffith: Hot property

Thanks to Waitress, critics and audiences are rediscovering Andy Griffith. So maybe he'll finally get that Oscar nomination he deserved for A Face in the Crowd? (Come to think of it, he should have received a nod for Hearts of the West as well.)

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Cowboys and Indians and E.T.'s, oh my!

Over 70 years after Gene Autry starred in a sci-fi Western cliffhanger, a movie titled Cowboys & Aliens has been announced as a joint project of Universal and DreamWorks. No kidding.

One more starring role for Gene Autry

From the L.A. Times: "If you think of Gene Autry as just that guy on a horse playing guitar and singing, an impressive new exhibition at the Autry National Center's Museum of the American West is determined to change your mind.

"Imposingly titled Gene Autry and the Twentieth-Century West: The Centennial Exhibition, 1907-2007, this show, which opens Friday in Griffith Park and runs through Jan. 13, reveals Autry as someone who accomplished so much in so many areas it practically makes your head spin. It's no wonder that close friend and co-star Smiley Burnette said, 'Whenever the wolf came to the door, Autry ended up with a fur coat.'"

But wait, there's more: The legacy of America's favorite singing cowboy survives and thrives on new and newly reissued CDs.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Early word on '3:10 to Yuma'

After viewing a preview screening, a correspondent for the Ain't It Cool News website has some things to say about 3:10 to Yuma. And they're all good.

R.I.P.: Antonio Aguilar (1919-2007)

The Associated Press reports: Mexican mariachi singer and actor Antonio Aguilar, who recorded more than 150 albums and began his acting career during Mexico's "Golden Era" of cinema, has died in Mexico City after a long fight with pneumonia. He was 88.

Born in the northern state of Zacatecas, Aguilar recorded with his traditional mariachi group for 50 years and sold more than 25 million records. His hit songs include "Triste Recuerdo," "Albur de Amor," "Gabino Barrera" and "Puno de Tierra." He appeared in 167 films, including The Undefeated starring John Wayne. In 2000, he got a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Adios!

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

A really, really big festival


Everything’s bigger in Texas – including country music festivals. And just in case you’re skeptical, consider Exhibit A: The Big State Festival set for Oct. 13-14 at Texas World Speedway in Bryan-College Station, TX, a star-studded extravaganza that will spotlight the likes of Tim McGraw, Willie Nelson, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Lyle Lovett and His Large Band, Trace Adkins, Miranda Lambert (recently named Best New Female Vocalist by the Academy of Country Music), Los Lonely Boys, The Wreckers, Robert Earl Keen and many, many others.

But wait, there’s more: During the two-day festivities, attendees also will be treated to stock-car races presented by the Richard Petty Racing Experience, and a barbecue cook-off showdown that boasts one of the biggest cash prizes offered at any U.S. event of its kind.

“Our goal is to deliver an experience that is loaded with music talents,” says Charlie Walker of C3 Presents, producer of the Big State Festival (and, not incidentally, the Austin City Limits Music Festival). “But we also want to give fans lots to do, see, hear, drink and eat – at a great price.”

Texas native Miranda Lambert fully expects the Big State Festival to be a big-time blast: “I don’t know what’s going to be more fun – performing for that many country music fans in my home state, or watching all the other great acts that I love.

“Not to mention,” she adds, “I have a big weakness for kickin’ Texas barbeque.”

Sounds tasty, doesn’t it? Tickets can be ordered here.

Monday, June 18, 2007

Riding high in the Highlands?

In northeast Scotland, a Wild West buff named Alistair Baranowski -- a.k.a. Johnny B -- wants to "re-create the days of Billy the Kid and Wild Bill Hickock" by building his very own frontier town called Tranquility.

"With his priorities clearly established, Johnny B built Tranquility's saloon first and now a sheriff's office (complete with cell) is almost complete. There is also a cemetery, a corral and a water well. The Wild West enthusiast has permission from Aberdeenshire Council for a further six buildings and he is looking for wannabe cowboys to help him with the construction."

Johnny B aims to build "a school, bank, undertaker's, general store and telegraph office in his field at Drumblair. The 54-year-old, who was a history and geography teacher for 22 years before running a post office, is a founder member of Open Range, a national association of Wild West enthusiasts. Tranquility also has its own gunfighters' group, the Northern Rough Riders.

"He added: 'We need to take time out to rehearse for the occasional Wild West show. The more people who help, the quicker the town will grow.'"

"The Wild West happened here"

Residents are trying to preserve Silver City -- Idaho's best-known ghost town -- even while they struggle to keep it from becoming "just another tourist trap huckstering frontier kitsch to ATV-riding hordes streaming into Idaho’s once gold-rich hills from the growing Boise suburbs."

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Sam Elliott: Riding high

Sam Elliott is back in the saddle again -- for a blockbuster fantasy due in theaters next December.

Friday, June 1, 2007

Viewer alert: 'Comanche Station'

The final collaboration of actor Randolph Scott and director Budd Boetticher is a rousingly two-fisted Western drama with an affectingly melancholy aftertaste. Jefferson Cody (Scott), obsessed with finding the wife who was kidnapped by Comanches more than a decade earlier, barters with Indians for the release of another white woman (Nancy Gates), the wife of a man who has posted a huge reward for her dead-or-alive return. Hearty outlaw Ben Lane (Claude Akins) tries to muscle in on the transition, but Cody won't be dissuaded from competing his chivalrous task. He remains true to himself, even though his noble gesture brings him no nearer a closure. Indeed, the ending suggests he will never stop searching. Which, of course, makes him the quintessential Budd Boetticher hero.

Comanche Station can be viewed at 5:05 and 11:30 p.m. EDT Sunday, June 3, on Encore Westerns.

'3:10' due 10/5

Director James Mangold (Walk the Line) tells USA Today that his upcoming remake of 3:10 to Yuma -- set open Oct. 5 at theaters and drive-ins everywhere -- will concentrate on characters, not cliches or conventions. And that, he claims, will set his effort apart from other recent attempts to revive the Western. "Too often," Mangold says, "they try to make every Western in one movie. It's all about the vistas. They don't lock into one person." Mangold's film actually will lock into two people: Christian Bale (above, left) as a reluctantly heroic rancher, and Russell Crowe (right) as a wily outlaw. They don't aim to please each other.