Ep. 110 – Man of the Frontier part 1
Gene Autry stars as a singing cowboy who risks his life to find out who is sabotaging the construction of a dam project in the Red River Valley. 1936.
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Different file sizes/formats from Internet Archive
Associated links
Original movie from Internet Archive
Movie info from IMDB
Gene Autry Official Website
Smiley Burnette @Wikipedia
February 11th, 2010 at 3:18 pm
I love your weekly Movies for the “movies for the blind podcast!” As a visually impaired individual, I’m a huge supporter and listener of Descriptive Videos! Please continue doing what you’re doing, because you’re making these old films more enjoyable for everyone.
I found a film on archive which I would really like to see described eventually if you get a chance.
Edgar G. UlmerDetour (1945)
“Man is involved in two freakish accidents that make him look like a murderer. Poverty row masterwork that is the most precise elucidation of the noir theme of explicit fatalism.” – noir expert Spencer Selby |
Cast: Tom Neal, Ann Savage, Claudia Drake, Edmund MacDonald. |
A B-movie, it was shot in six days. The film, budgeted for $89,000 and ended up costing $117,000 to make.
This movie is part of the collection: Film Noir
Director: Edgar G. Ulmer
Production Company: PRC Pictures Inc.
Sponsor: k-otic.com
Audio/Visual: sound, black & white
I’m also a huge fan of romance, horror, science fiction, and fantacy books movies and radio productions, so your selection is great!
I make radio dramas myself, so descriptive videos are naturally up my alley. Please check out my site if you’re interested in hearing some of my shows.
http://www.lightningbolttheaterofthemind.mypodcast.com
I love how you have blurbs about some of the actors and actresses in the movies. The background puts a clear time frame and context on the film itself!
Keep up the excelent work!
I’ll be faithfully listening!
Tanja
February 11th, 2010 at 5:57 pm
Thanks, Tanja! Detour is another movie my previous employer, AudioVision Canada, described and sold as a home video. I’ve tried to avoid films they’ve done, but since they aren’t selling them anymore, I might give it a shot, because Detour’s a really good one. Thanks again, and keep up your own good work!