James Garner spinning a gun on Maverick

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Great post and scene. I recognized one of the actors standing next to him as well-(white shirt) Gregory Walcott.

One of my favorites caused this to happen to Duke:
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Unrelated but cool anyway:
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And the rest is history:
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Wonder how Mark woulda liked that "circus act" if, when going in the barn that night, he found his horse dead. That trick shot with the knife on the barn wall. Bullet'd go through several inches of pine boards. Easily go through the board and across the barn, to hit the horse in his stall.
 
Wonder how Mark woulda liked that "circus act" if, when going in the barn that night, he found his horse dead. That trick shot with the knife on the barn wall. Bullet'd go through several inches of pine boards. Easily go through the board and across the barn, to hit the horse in his stall.
Every time I see that great scene with Sammy Davis Jr. in the Rifleman I think the same thing. There must have been dozens of colatoral damage in town considering all the gunfights McCain had.
The reason James Garner stands out to me is, he has many spins that keep the gun airborn then catches it, unlike the other guys mentioned here. Robert Culp is pretty good here in "The Rifleman", but of course (SPOILER ALERT!!) Lucas McCain kills 'im twenty minutes later.


[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=im7Snp3Eg4Y[/ame]
 
Great post and scene. I recognized one of the actors standing next to him as well-(white shirt) Gregory Walcott.

One of my favorites caused this to happen to Duke:
retro60-3.gif

The_Man_Who_Shot_Liberty_Valance_John_Wayne_as_Tom_Doniphon_tricks.jpg

tumblr_m3zyp5Bo321qdtlw7o1_500.gif

giphy.gif

65dsjt.gif

Unrelated but cool anyway:
El+Dorado.gif

john-wayne-gun-twirl-gif.gif

57KGVRT.jpg

740full-stagecoach-screenshot.jpg

stagecoach4-11616.gif

And the rest is history:
KexjkcAPsmSLm.gif

red-river-gif-100.gif

John Wayne was quite good at twirling his six guns, he does it in just about every western he ever made. Notice the revolver falls right into his holster when he's through, The Duke never looks to see where the holster is, the mark of someone knowing how to do it.

Dobe Carey said that between scenes of the movie, Big Jake, he found a bored Wayne twirling his Colt to pass the time. Surprised at Wayne's proficiency in twirling the gun, Dobe said, "Duke, I never knew you could handle a Colt like that," to which Wayne replied, "That's the stupidest thing I've ever heard!"
 
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From what little gun twirling I ever tried on my own the long barrel revolver twirling is most impressive. A good balanced short barrel, almost twirls itself.

Of course the throwing them in air, catching them, reverse spins and all the other tricks speaks to a lot of practice in front of a mirror over a soft surface, or they didn't care about the iron if it hit the ground.

In regards to Val Kilmer, the man is very dexterously gifted. He seems to be spinning something in almost all of the films I have seen him in, from a pen in Top Gun to the sword in Willow.
 


Which network were these guys on? I used to watch all of their shows. I think John Russell as The Lawman, was probably the most credible. I liked him on, Soldier of Fortune, too.


Who's the man between Garner and Jack Kelly?


Note that only the actor who played Chris Colt used either a nickeled gun or a 7.5 inch barrel. I don't like nickel, but do like the longer barrel for added range and power. My favorite SAA bbl. length is 4.75 inches. For some reason I can't define, I've never especially liked the 5.5 inch barrel on the SAA, but prefer it on the later DA New Service.


I liked these Westerns and the PI shows better than most now shown. Even then, they often conveyed a liberal message, and it's just gotten worse as Hollywood tries to generate sympathy for certain agendas.


I initially liked Garner as Maverick, but he later generated an anti hero attitude that I disliked. I think the actor was strongly anti-gun, too.
 
Photo of all the Warner Brothers Studio television western stars who had programs on ABC. From left: Will Hutchins ("Sugarfoot" Brewster-Sugarfoot), Peter Brown (Johnny McKay-Lawman), Jack Kelly (Bart Maverick-Maverick), Ty Hardin (Bronco Laine-Bronco), James Garner (Bret Maverick-Maverick), Wayde Preston (Christopher Colt-Colt .45), John Russell (Dan Troop-Lawman).
 
John Wayne was quite good at twirling his six guns, he does it in just about every western he ever made. Notice the revolver falls right into his holster when he's through, The Duke never looks to see where the holster is, the mark of someone knowing how to do it.

Dobe Carey said that between scenes of the movie, Big Jake, he found a bored Wayne twirling his Colt to pass the time. Surprised at Wayne's proficiency in twirling the gun, Dobe said, "Duke, I never knew you could handle a Colt like that," to which Wayne replied, "That's the stupidest thing I've ever heard!"

The above is 100% true too. Duke also was proficient at twirling a rifle and hitting the bullseye of a target one-handed.
 
Which network were these guys on? I used to watch all of their shows. I think John Russell as The Lawman, was probably the most credible. I liked him on, Soldier of Fortune, too.


Who's the man between Garner and Jack Kelly?


Note that only the actor who played Chris Colt used either a nickeled gun or a 7.5 inch barrel. I don't like nickel, but do like the longer barrel for added range and power. My favorite SAA bbl. length is 4.75 inches. For some reason I can't define, I've never especially liked the 5.5 inch barrel on the SAA, but prefer it on the later DA New Service.


I liked these Westerns and the PI shows better than most now shown. Even then, they often conveyed a liberal message, and it's just gotten worse as Hollywood tries to generate sympathy for certain agendas.


I initially liked Garner as Maverick, but he later generated an anti hero attitude that I disliked. I think the actor was strongly anti-gun, too.

All of them are on dvd now in one format or another.
 
Watch how good James Garner spins a gun here while doing a whole monologue at the same time. This is my favorite gun twirling by an actor because there's some very complicated spins going on here.

Maverick gun spinning - YouTube

See that short guy standing to the far right? I believe that is Thell Reed Jr., who was and is renowned for his single action handling skills. He used to shoot with Jeff Cooper at the old Leatherslap competitions with Jack Weaver and others at Big Bear Lake in California. I suspect he's the one who coached Jim Garner.

Here's a shot of the old Leatherslap bunch: Ray Chapman, Elden Carl, Thell Reed, Jeff Cooper and Jack Weaver.

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Here, he's appearing on the Ed Sullivan show in 1966.

John

GunFighter Gulch Video Gallery - Gunfighter Gulch
 
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well, they look good, and they had a fast draw, but in anything other than a competition, they'd all be crawlin' around in the dark, trying to find the guns that fell out of those competition holsters while chasing thugs down alleys.
 

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