In the Texas panhandle, wealthy and influential rancher Homer Bannon is a widower who tends to ignore the townspeople, in particular, the farmhand, and housekeeper, Alma. Along with his sons, Hud and Lon, Homer decides to sell the cattle in order to prevent the spread of foot-and-mouth disease. While Hud has a few drinks at the local bar, his younger brother discovers that their father has too much integrity and refuses to go along with the fraudulent cattle-selling scheme.
Flaming Star is a 1960 drama-western movie about a half-breed man named Pacer Burton, who is torn between his Native American heritage and his loyalty to the white settlers in his town. After the Civil War, tensions rise as conflicts between Native Americans and white settlers escalate, leading to tragic consequences for Pacer and his family. The movie explores themes of identity, racism, and the struggle to belong.
In 1884, a cattleman brings a rare breed of cow, a Hereford bull, to Texas. The man faces challenges from a swindler, as well as romantic rivalry and family conflicts. As he tries to establish his cattle ranch and breed Herefords, he must overcome obstacles such as a snowfall, a cattle stampede, and frontier justice. Along the way, he builds relationships with a widow and her daughter, and also confronts his estranged father and deals with the grief of losing his wife. Ultimately, he showcases his Hereford cattle at an auction and proves his success as a cattleman.
Conagher, a gunfighter and ranch-hand, protects a homestead from outlaws and helps a widow on the Arizona frontier.
In the fight for Texas independence, a small group of men defend the Alamo against a Mexican army. Their heroic last stand becomes a symbol of bravery and sacrifice.
Remake of the 1948 John Wayne feature about a man who rebels against his tyrannical guardian during a crucial cattle drive.
As maid of honor, Olivia plans her best friend’s bridal shower at a ranch where handsome rancher Travis shows her that life, and love, could be great on a ranch.
Diana McQueen notorious con-woman has had enough. She leaves town and her boss, Tom Rourke, behind. She takes the place of her dying friend, who was to become some man's mail-order bride. Can she pull off this last con?
A romantic triangle during WW I provides the basis of this drama. The trouble begins when a young wife gets involved with a coffee baron while her husband is off fighting WW I. Her shell-shocked husband finally returns. He is terribly jealous. To help him, the wife takes him to a Western dude ranch. Her lover also goes, and the two men soon become friends. The coffee magnate helps to cure him, but then breaks his heart by telling him that he and the wife are planning to run away.
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