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Julian Zimet Movies

Screenwriter Julian Zimet was one of thousands of Hollywood artists and studio employees whose career was interrupted by the late-'40s Red Scare and the ensuing era of the blacklist. This didn't stop him, however, from writing scripts for Gene Autry and Roy Rogers, or a pair of fascinating epic Westerns and science fiction films in the 1960s, or a minor horror classic of the 1970s. Born and raised in New York City, he attended City College of New York in the mid- to late '30s. There, with his friend and classmate, future screenwriter Bernard Gordon, he organized a film-appreciation society, very likely the first ever such organization on the campus of a public college in New York. After earning an honors degree in the arts for a film that he made with Gordon, Zimet headed to Hollywood in 1940 and was hired as a reader in the script department at Republic Pictures. The biggest of the Poverty Row studios, Republic made most of its money making low-budget Westerns and other genre films. Zimet moved up to screenwriting in 1941 with the script for the Gene Autry Western Sierra Sue. He was also the author of the original story as well as the screenplay of the spy thriller The Devil Pays Off, which was filmed that same year. Zimet spent the next four years in the army, and returned to find that he couldn't get his old job at Republic back again. Instead, he turned to screenwriting as a freelancer, on pictures like the Roy Rogers vehicle Helldorado (1946), though his successes were few and far between; those included the screenplay for the Alan Ladd-starring action-adventure thriller Saigon (1948) at Paramount, and the script for the Gene Autry oater The Strawberry Roan (1948) at Columbia's low-budget B-picture unit. By that time, the post-World War II Red Scare had started and reached Hollywood, where the studios became wary of employing anyone who had been a Communist Party member, or spent time with known members; subsequently, Zimet was blacklisted in that conservative environment. In 1949, he teamed up with Gordon to write screenplays, as a package deal, and saw some limited success at Columbia, but essentially Zimet was unemployed as a screenwriter for the first half of the 1950s. By 1955, he had moved to Mexico and was living a financially precarious existence, but he managed, working as Julian Halevy -- the name he would use into the mid-'60s -- to write a successful novel entitled The Young Lovers. The novel was favorably reviewed by the New York Times and even recommended by Book-of-the-Month Club, and was eventually sold as a film project that took nearly ten years to reach the screen, a result of convoluted business dealings that finally put it into the hands of Samuel Goldwyn Jr. as a director, in a rather flaccid screen effort starring Peter Fonda. In the meantime, Zimet collaborated with Gordon on the screenplay for the movie The Case Against Brooklyn (1958), and was eventually brought into the orbit of producers Samuel Bronston and Philip Yordan to collaborate on the screenplay of the John Wayne-starring Circus World (1964). Zimet's other major credits of the 1960s include the excellent science fiction film Crack in the World (1965), the drama Amanti (1968), directed by Vittorio De Sica and starring Faye Dunaway, and Custer of the West (1968), starring Robert Shaw. In the following decade, he contributed a significant entry to that era's horror film literature with the script for Psychomania (1971), as well as working with Gordon once again, on Pancho Villa (1972) and Horror Express (1972). Zimet retired in the 1980s, and went on to live in Rome. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi
1948  
 
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Gene Autry's equine sidekick Champion takes the center stage in western drama, based on a story by fellow sagebrush star Ken Maynard. Walt Bailey (Jack Holt) is teaching his young son Joe (Dickie Jones) how to break in a horse when a high-spirited steed (Champion) throws the boy, leaving him severely injured. Furious, Walt demands that the horse be killed, but instead it escapes and ranch foreman Gene (Gene Autry) decides to train the horse rather than destroy it. When Gene returns with the horse, Walt's range returns anew, but Gene senses that the newly tamed horse's spirit could help inspire Joe to overcome his handicap. This was Gene Autry's first picture in color, and (of course) featured him singing five songs of the West. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Gene AutryGloria Henry, (more)
 
1948  
 
One of the great onscreen romantic pairings, Alan Ladd and Veronica Lake, ended with this romantic adventure film, their fourth cinematic collaboration. In Shanghai after WWII, veteran pilots Larry Briggs (Ladd) and Pete Rocco (Wally Cassell) are dismayed when informed that friend Mike Perry (Douglas Dick) will soon die of a terminal illness. Larry and Pete decide to keep the tragic news from Mike and spend the next weeks showing him a high time. To finance the festivities, they accept an offer of $10,000 from unscrupulous war profiteer Zlex Maris (Morris Carnovsky) in exchange for a flight to Vietnam. When departure time arrives, Maris shows up with the police in hot pursuit, so the buddies take off with his secretary, Susan Neaves (Lake), whose briefcase contains Maris' earnings -- $500,000. En route to Saigon, however, the crew crash-lands in an Asian jungle. As they make their way back to civilization with a detective (Luther Adler) tailing them, Mike develops feelings for Susan, who plays along at Larry's urging. Susan, however, is actually falling for Larry and vice versa. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi

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Starring:
Alan LaddVeronica Lake, (more)
 
1946  
 
In the tradition of several of the Gene Autry vehicles of the 1930s, Roy Rogers' Helldorado is built around a real-life frontier celebration. In this instance, the story is set against the backdrop of Las Vegas' annual "Heldorado Week", at which time the Old West came to life in the form of costumed revellers, equine parades and pre-rehearsed stagecoach holdups and bank robberies. Arriving in Las Vegas to participate in the festivities, Roy Rogers ends up crossing six-guns with a gang of gamblers who've been delinquent in their income tax. Gee, if Roy had stuck around a bit longer, he could have shot it out with Bugsy Siegel (or Bugsy's Godfather counterpart Moe Green!) Rogers' perennial costar (and later wife) Dale Evans costars as a female sleuth who gets in over her head when she tries to capture the gamblers herself. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Roy RogersGeorge "Gabby" Hayes, (more)
 
1941  
 
In this Gene Autry Western, the valley is threatened by a weed capable of poisoning the cattle. When burning the range proves ineffectual, the local banker, Stacy Bromfield (Frank M. Thomas), sends for a government inspector in desperation. The inspector, played by Autry, quickly suggests spraying the area with a chemical. But the head of the cattlemen's organization, George Larrabee (Robert Homans), foolishly ignores the advice and almost suffers unimaginable consequences when his henchman Frenchy (Hugh Prosser) shoots down a crop duster. Autry, Smiley Burnette, and leading lady Fay McKenzie take time out from battling range weed to warble "Be Honest With Me," "I'll Be True While You're Gone," "Ridin' the Range," "Heebie Jeebie Blues," and the title tune. Sierra Sue was restored in 2001 by Gene Autry Entertainment. ~ Matthew Tobey, Rovi

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Starring:
Gene AutrySmiley Burnette, (more)
 
1941  
 
Republic Pictures borrowed William Wright from Paramount but then reduced him to third billing below ace villains J. Edward Bromberg and Osa Massen in this busy espionage melodrama, in which a former Navy lieutenant is assigned to investigate a shipping magnate whose vessels seem to mysteriously end up in the hands of certain foreign powers. The alcoholic lieutenant, Chris Waring (Wright), at first refuses to use his playboy techniques to trap the magnate's wife, Valerie (Massen), but a chance meeting with the handsome lady changes his mind and the race is on. Watch for horror movie icon Dwight Frye as a radio operator. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, Rovi

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1971  
PG  
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An annoying devil-worshipping British biker gang calling themselves "The Living Dead" decide to take their moniker to heart when their leader commits suicide and is brought back from the dead in an occult ritual, thanks to a Satanic pact. Realizing that becoming zombies could be even more fun than the usual day-to-day hell-raising, most of the gang follow suit -- throwing themselves off buildings, into traffic, walls, etc. Without the annoyance of death to contend with, the Living Dead become even more obnoxious than usual, leading to a pat solution from their leader's peeved mother (Beryl Reid). Outrageously dated and featuring loads of unintentional laughs, this is still the finest movie ever made about British zombie biker gangs and features the stately Reid turning into a giant frog. ~ Cavett Binion, Rovi

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