The Peacemaker | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ted Post |
Screenplay by | Hal Richards Jay Ingram |
Based on | The Peacemaker by Richard Poole |
Produced by | Hal R. Makelim |
Starring | James Mitchell Rosemarie Bowe Jan Merlin Jess Barker Hugh Sanders Taylor Holmes Philip Tonge Dorothy Patrick |
Cinematography | Les Shorr |
Edited by | William Shea |
Music by | George Greeley |
Color process | Black and white |
Production company | Hal R. Makelim Productions |
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date |
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Running time | 82 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Peacemaker is a 1956 American Western film directed by Ted Post and starring James Mitchell and Rosemarie Bowe. Hal Richards based the script on the novel of the same name by Richard Poole.
Producer Hal R. Makelim intended The Peacemaker to be the first of a series of low-budget productions. According to Merlin, who played the villain, shooting took only "seven or ten days." [1]
Although the film featured some successful character actors like Hugh Sanders in supporting roles, none of the performers qualified as marquee names; in fact, at this point in his career, star James Mitchell was known only as a dancer (despite some dramatic roles at MGM). While Makelim tried to compensate for these problems by marketing the film to a religious audience—the local clergymen were invited to the film's premiere in Wichita [2] --The Peacemaker enjoyed only sporadic distribution and was not widely reviewed. Makelim managed to produce only one more film, Valerie (1957), and Mitchell would not make another film appearance until The Turning Point (1977).
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