|
Mustache twirling villains steal the show in the western action film Code of the Cactus. Tim McCoy gets the lead role as "Lightning" Bill Carson, a government agent from the department of defense sent to infiltrate a cattle rustling operation. But while McCoy provides some laughs and plays the Hero adroitly, it's the fiendish villains Forrest Taylor, Ben Corbett, and usually-a-good-guy Dave "Tex" O'Brien that provide insidious mischief and some unintentional hilarity. Code of the Cactus succeeds based on its sturdy, professional cast and tried and true Wild West flair.
|
| $9.99 |
|
 (4.0 / 5.0)
|
| $0.79 |
|
 (5.0 / 5.0)
A Professor has an invention that will bring down planes causing them to crash and Dawson is forcing him to use it on those carrying money. When Tim arrives to investigate he is mistaken for a noted outlaw. So he assumes that identity to force Dawson to make him a partner. But just as a plane bringing Tim help is arriving, his true identity is revealed and while he is a prisoner, Dawson forces the Professor to start his machine. Written by Maurice VanAuken {mvanauken@a1access.net} A professor invents a radium tube that makes internal combustion engines stop running. He and his invention are captured by a gang of robbers. A federal agent is sent to rescue him. Written by frankfob2@yahoo.com Remade as "Sky Racket", a non-western with Herman Brix/Bruce Bennett and than as a Renfrew of the Royal Mounted northwestern as "Sky Bandits" with Jim Newill.Lots of other versions of this wherein the heroine's kidnapped father is an engraver or diamond cutter or something forced to ply his trade in the interests of the gangsters. In this one, G-Man Tim Coverly (Tim McCoy) is sent to the desert country to investigate mysterious crashes of airplanes carrying money, bonds and other valuables. He discovers that a mob led by Dawson (Walter Miller) and Kincaid (Wheeler Oakman) are holding captive the father of Natalie Brent (Claudia Dell).Seems that the good professor (Lloyd Ingraham) has invented a powerful radium tube, which controls electrical impulses,and D&K Inc. are using his invention to cause plane crashes so they can plunder the wreckage.This one looks good until Tim parks his Stetson and dons an Amelia Earheart leather flying helmet and takes to the air. Written by Les Adams {longhorn3708@windstream.net}
|
| $14.90 |
|
 (4.5 / 5.0)
Two whirlwind western adventure movies starring the legendary Tim McCoy.
|
| $4.98 |
|
 (4.0 / 5.0)
In an engagingly strange hybridization of science fiction and western films, Ghost Patrol plants cowboy hero Tim McCoy in the middle of a bizarre mess: airplanes keep disappearing over an unremarkable stretch of land. Simultaneously Claudia Dell, the daughter of a missing scientist, figures out that her father's latest invention could be used to bring down the airplanes. Both McCoy and Dell will have to contend with sinister gangsters who are using Dell's father's ray gun to shoot down any aircraft! McCoy is a treat, as always, and Ghost Patrol is a camp sensation with all its whizzing and whirring gadgets intermixed with spurs and cowboy hats. Actually, the contraptions in the film were made by Kenneth Strickfaden, who worked on movie electronics for his career, including the freaky scientific equipment in the original Frankenstein.
|
| $8.99 |
|
|
| $25.17 |
|
Cowboy Tim McCoy is fasely accused of being the mastermind in a series of stagecoach robberies.
|
| $3.54 |
|
 (5.0 / 5.0)
|
| $4.98 |
|
 (5.0 / 5.0)
|
| $4.98 |
|
Back Cover: May all of your secret wishes be fulfilled, and may the enchantment of Christmas be yours. ...... Note: This movie was formatted from the original format at AFA Entertainment to fit your 16x9 wide-screen television.
|
| $12.95 |