Shoot Out at Big Sag is a 1962 American Western film. It starred Walter Brennan and was made for Brennan's production company.[1]
| Shoot Out at Big Sag | |
|---|---|
Lobby card | |
| Directed by | Roger Kay |
| Based on | story by Walter Coburn |
| Produced by | Andy Brennan |
| Starring | Walter Brennan Leif Erickson Luana Patten |
| Cinematography | Lothrop B. Worth |
| Edited by | Bud S. Isaacs |
| Music by | Jack Cookerly Bill Loose |
Production company | Brennan Productions |
| Distributed by | Parallel Film Distributors Inc. |
Release date | 1962 |
Running time | 64 minutes |
| Country | USA |
| Language | English |
The film was produced by Brennan's son Andy and based on a story by Walter Coburn. It was meant to be a television pilot called Barbed Wire, and would have also starred Leif Erickson and Constance Ford. Shot in 1960, the pilot was to be called "Rawhide Halo".[2]
The pilot was eventually released as a film. In Mexico the film was titled Los Magnificos McCoy as a tie-in to Walter Brennan's American television series The Real McCoys.
"Preacher" Hawker (Walter Brennan) is the pawn of his bossy wife Hannah (Luana Patten), who wants to start a range war with their neighbor Sam Barbee (Leif Erickson). It doesn’t help that "Preacher"s' daughter and Barbee’s son have fallen in love. "Preacher" hires Chan Bartholomew (Les Tremayne), a lowlife saloon owner, to ensure that the outcome is in the Hawker family's favor.
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