The Ruthless Four


10:25 am - 12:25 pm, Monday, November 17 on WNYW Movies! (5.2)

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About this Broadcast
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Rugged tale of prospectors fighting the elements and each other to strike gold. Van Heflin, Gilbert Roland, Klaus Kinski, George Hilton. Giorgio Capitani directed.

1968 English
Western

Cast & Crew
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Van Heflin (Actor) .. Sam Cooper
Gilbert Roland (Actor) .. Mason
Klaus Kinski (Actor) .. Brent il Biondo
George Hilton (Actor) .. Manolo Sanchez
Sarah Ross (Actor) .. Anna
Rick Boyd (Actor)
Sergio Doria (Actor) .. Hal Brady
Giorgio Gruden (Actor) .. Drugstore owner
Doro Carra (Actor)

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Van Heflin (Actor) .. Sam Cooper
Born: December 13, 1910
Died: July 23, 1971
Trivia: The son of an Oklahoma dentist, Van Heflin moved to California after his parents separated. Drawn to a life on the sea, Heflin shipped out on a tramp steamer upon graduating from high school, returning after a year to attend the University of Oklahoma in pursuit of a law degree. Two years into his studies, Heflin was back on the ocean. Having entertained thoughts of a theatrical career since childhood, Heflin made his Broadway bow in Channing Pollock's Mister Moneypenny; when the play folded after 61 performances, Heflin once more retreated to the sea, sailing up and down the Pacific for nearly three years. He revitalized his acting career in 1931, appearing in one short-lived production after another until landing a long-running assignment in S. N. Behrmann's 1936 Broadway offering End of Summer. This led to his film bow in Katharine Hepburn's A Woman Rebels (1936), as well as a brief contract with RKO Radio. Katharine Hepburn requested Heflin's services once more for her Broadway play The Philadelphia Story, and while the 1940 MGM film version of that play cast James Stewart in Heflin's role, the studio thought enough of Heflin to sign him to a contract. One of his MGM roles, that of the alcoholic, Shakespeare-spouting best friend of Robert Taylor in Johnny Eager (1942), won Heflin a "Best Supporting Actor" Oscar. After serving in various Army film units in World War II, Heflin resumed his film career, and also for a short while was heard on radio as Raymond Chandler's philosophical private eye Philip Marlowe. He worked in both Hollywood and Europe throughout the 1950s. In 1963, he was engaged to narrate the prestigious TV anthology The Great Adventure. He was forced to pull out of this assignment when cast as the Louis Nizer character in the Broadway play A Case of Libel. Heflin's final film appearance was in the made-for-TV speculative drama The Last Child; he died of a heart attack at the age of 61. Van Heflin was married twice, first to silent film star Esther Ralston, then to RKO contract player Frances Neal (who should not be confused with Heflin's actress sister Frances Heflin).
Gilbert Roland (Actor) .. Mason
Born: December 11, 1905
Trivia: Born Luis Antonio Damaso De Alonso, this Mexican-born Latin lover appeared in silent and sound films. He trained to be a bullfighter (his father's profession) but gave it up for acting after his family moved to the U.S. At age 13 he debuted onscreen as an extra; he made his screen acting debut seven years later in The Plastic Age (1925). In the mid '20s he frequently played dashing romantic leading men, notably in Camille (1927) opposite Norma Talmadge. In the sound era he played leads and then later character and supporting roles in many films; he continued working until the late '70s. He was married to actress Constance Bennett.
Klaus Kinski (Actor) .. Brent il Biondo
Born: October 18, 1926
Died: November 23, 1991
Birthplace: Sopot, Poland
Trivia: Though he invariably looked sickly and tubercular, Polish/German actor Klaus Kinski rose to fame in roles calling for near-manic aggressiveness. His war career consisted primarily of a year and a half in a British POW camp. After this experience, Kinski took to the theater, where he rapidly built a reputation for on-stage brilliance and off-stage emotional instability. He made his first German film, Morituri, in 1948; three years later, he made his English-language movie debut with a fleeting bit in Decision Before Dawn (1951). Villainy was Kinski's film stock in trade during the 1950s and '60s, with several appearances in Germany's Edgar Wallace second-feature series and in such Italian spaghetti Westerns as For a Few Dollars More (1965). International stardom came Kinski's way via his off-the-beam appearances in the films of director Werner Herzog, notably Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1973), Woyzeck (1978), Nosferatu (1979), and Fitzcarraldo (1982). With 1989's Paganini, Kinski proved to be as colorful and chaotic a director as he was an actor. Kinski was the father of actress Nastassja Kinski, though the two seldom saw each other and were never close. He died in 1991.
George Hilton (Actor) .. Manolo Sanchez
Born: July 16, 1934
Birthplace: Montevideo
Trivia: Lead actor, onscreen from the late '60s.
Sarah Ross (Actor) .. Anna
Rick Boyd (Actor)
Sergio Doria (Actor) .. Hal Brady
Ivan Scratuglia (Actor)
Giorgio Gruden (Actor) .. Drugstore owner
Hardy Reichelt (Actor)
Doro Carra (Actor)

Before / After
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Blue Thunder
08:05 am