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Plot. [edit] In the 1870s, several years after the end of the Civil War, veteran Jeb McAllister and his wife Hattie struggle to raise their adolescent son Will and infant daughter in the wilds of Montana.[6] Hattie is disillusioned with the drudgery of frontier life and wants to move back east to her parents' land, while Jeb wants to be self ...
The second season takes place on the west coast of the United States during World War II and centers on the Japanese folklore of bakemono, "an uncanny specter that menaces a Japanese American community from its home in Southern California to the internment camps to the war in the Pacific".
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If you’re not feeling quite brave enough to walk through the women’s old cell blocks (no judgment), you can hit up the Commisary bar for a little liquid courage, too. Through November 5, from ...
The story flashes back to when 23-year-old Teresa Walden was a waitress living with her mother, Wanda, in Hennessey, Oklahoma in November 1982. She applies for a job as a secretary for Stamper Oil Company, owned and operated by Paul Stamper. She gets the job and becomes attracted to Paul, her boss, and they eventually begin dating.
A review in Variety characterized it as "handicapped by a slow-moving story" and "routine filler" as the bottom half of a double bill. Like other feature films by Joseph H. Lewis, such as Gun Crazy (1950), it has over the years acquired a cult following for Lewis's stylistic flourishes, leading some to describe it as a Western film noir . [5]
I remain skeptical of including a review from a politics site such as "Media Matters for America" that doesn't even pass the low low bar of being considered good enough for Rotten Tomatoes, especially while at the same time excluding a review from actual film critics and a long established publisher like Film Threat. -- 109.76.136.61 22:12, 11 ...
The Prairie: A Tale (1827) is a novel by James Fenimore Cooper, the third novel written by him featuring Natty Bumppo. His fictitious frontier hero Bumppo is never called by his name, but is instead referred to as "the trapper" or "the old man". Chronologically The Prairie is the fifth and final installment of the Leatherstocking Tales, though ...