Hans Gudegast Movies

1969  
PG  
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Lyedecker (Jim Brown) is the Arizona lawman who travels to Mexico in search of Yaqui Joe (Burt Reynolds). Joe has made an illegal withdrawal of $6,000 from the band in Phoenix to help finance his tribes's uprising against the Mexican government. Sarita (Raquel Welch) is the local woman who is friendly towards the Indian leaders. Both men are tracked by General Verdugo (Fernando Lamas), the career-minded military man who realizes a victory could boost his station in high-society and politics. Also on hand is the American railroad agent Grimes (Dan O'Herlihy). The battle ensues between the Indians and the government troops as Lyedecker and Joe form a temporary alliance to survive. They are captured by the troops, but the Indians instead of the calvary come to the rescue in this routine western taken from a novel by Robert MacLeod. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi

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Starring:
Jim BrownRaquel Welch, (more)
 
1968  
 
Frank Dayton (Leslie Nielsen) leads a group of crooks in a caper to steal one and a half million dollars from an Air Force base. Dayton is the tough-guy military leader who recruits Mike (Rory Calhoun), ex-Nazi Max (Hans Gudegast), sadistic killer Barney Barry (Barry Sadler), and failed French artist Claude (Pat Renella) in the scheme. Singer Laine Kazan plays the romantic interest for Dayton as the nightclub songbird Leda. Sadler, who's "Ballad Of The Green Berets" was a pro-war, right-wing anthem, would later serve time for murder in real life in an ironic twist on his cinematic character in the film. Nielsen, always the consummate professional, would gain a large following as a comedic actor in such films as Airplane and The Naked Gun. Ironically, his character name in the latter series of films was Frank Drayton. ~ Dan Pavlides, Rovi

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Starring:
Rory CalhounLeslie Nielsen, (more)
 
1967  
 
Powerful but gullible German industrialist Otto Kelmann (Wilfred Hyde-White) is on the verge of handing over his munitions empire to a "new Hitler" named Colonel Marcus Von Frank (Hans Gudegast), aka Eric Braeden). It is up to the IMF to smash Marcus' movement by forcing Kelmann to realign his thinking. This is the episode in which IMF agent Rollin Hand convincingly poses as the real Adolf Hitler. Written by Mann Rubin, the man responsible for the thematically similar first-season Mission: Impossible episode "The Legend", "Echo of Yesterday" first aired on December 10, 1967. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Peter GravesBarbara Bain, (more)
 
1966  
 
The IMF is faced with an assignment that virtually requires them to be in two places at once. First, they must prevent the murder of Professor Napolsky (Edward Colmans), who has defected to the West. Simulatenously, they must discredit the more dangerous of the two enemy spy groups who are determined to kill the professor. Hans Gudegast, who later billed himself as Eric Braeden, appears as one of the chief assassins. First telecast December 17, 1966, "The Short Tail Spy" was written by Julian Barry. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Steven HillBarbara Bain, (more)
 
1964  
 
While in American-held territory, Saunders (Vic Morrow) and Caje (Pierre Jalbert) and taken prisoner by a pair of SS officers (one of whom is played by future daytime-drama leading man Eric Braden, here billed under his real name Hans Gudegast). The Germans will return their hostages only if Doc (Conlan Carter) agrees to secure them a vehicle that will allow them to escape back to their own lines. Ken Berry, still one year removed from F Troop, appears as an ebullient motor sergeant. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1963  
 
Saunders (Vic Morrow) and the men of King Company are greeted as heroes when they march into a recently liberated French village. But the festivities abruptly cease with the sound of gunfire from a hidden sniper, who proceeds to pick off Saunders' squadron, one by one. While conducting a desperate search for the sniper, Saunders concludes that the town's least popular citizen (Gail Kobe) may know more about the elusive killer's whereabouts than she is saying. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1963  
 
Eddie Albert guest stars in this episode, playing--of all things--a middle-aged American farmer with a foreign-accented wife. But this is Combat, not Green Acres: Albert's character, a WW1 veteran named Phil, has been living in France with his French-born wife Marie (played by Alida Valli of The Third Man fame) ever since the Armistice. Unhinged by the ceaseless gunfire of WW2, Phil begins to imagine that he is still fighting The Great War--and so he dons his old uniform, marches into the countryside, and captures Sgt. Saunders (Vince Morrow), whom he believes to be a "Heinie" spy! ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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