Jack Elam
36 titles
Filmography
36 results

Gun Belt
(1953)A former gunslinger trying to get his life back on track by buying a ranch is framed by his outlaw brother in order to blackmail him into committing one last robbery.

Grayeagle
(1977)When Grayeagle (Alex Cord), a Cheyenne brave, kidnaps a rich man’s daughter (Lana Wood), it sparks a fierce manhunt. But when a shocking detail about her past is revealed – as is their love for each other – they know there can be no turning back!

Dirty Dingus Magee
(1970)The ways of the West are outrageously unsaddled in this rowdy comedy. Sinatra – always in red-flannel longjohns when it’s time for boudoir activity – plays ring-a-ding Dingus.

Kansas City Confidential
(1952)Framed by a crooked cop for a million-dollar heist, a delivery driver pursues the real culprits to Mexico to unmask their scheme and win his freedom.

The Gun Runners
(1958)When skipper Sam Martin (Audie Murphy) rents his boat to a man (Eddie Albert) who’s selling arms to Cuban revolutionaries, he finds himself in deep water when things take an alarming turn. Based on the Ernest Hemingway novel To Have and Have Not.

The Apple Dumpling Gang Rides Again
(1979)There's more mayhem afoot as The Apple Dumpling Gang (Don Knotts and Tim Conway) can't stop causing trouble—and laughs—even when they give up their life of crime. First, the ditsy duo is accused of bank robbery as they try to deposit a check. Then, they join the U.S. Cavalry and wind up in the stockade for inadvertently blowing up their fort. Although they escape this mess, the witless team who could never shoot straight still can't seem to succeed in going straight.

Cattle Queen of Montana
(1954)Feisty woman attempts to stake her claim in the cattle business despite threats from land grabbers and their hired killers.

The Sundowners
(1950)Dos hermanos se enfrentan en una guerra de tierras en Texas, donde la venganza, el robo de ganado y el asesinato se justifican con ira justiciera.

Pardners
(1956)An incompetent idiot goes west and accidentally cleans up the town.

The Rare Breed
(1966)The widow of an English cattle breeder and her daughter go on a perilous journey with a cowboy to deliver a Hereford bull to a ranch in Texas, facing killers and cattle stampedes along the way. But when they reach the ranch, even greater obstacles force them to summon up extraordinary courage if they, and the prize bull, are to survive.
Never a Dull Moment
(1968)Mistaken for a hit man, a TV actor (Dick Van Dyke) plays the part to foil a gangster's (Edward G. Robinson) pop-art plot.
My Man and I
(1952)A Mexican-American laborer (Ricardo Montalban) loves an alcoholic woman (Shelley Winters) and works for a farmer (Wendell Corey) who cheats him.

The Giant of Thunder Mountain
(1990)A giant living on Thunder Mountain is falsely accused and pursued by people of a small western frontier town for kidnapping three of their children.

The Moonlighter
(1953)Cattle rustler Wes Anderson has just delivered the eulogy at a funeral - his own. He was supposed to be hanged, dead and gone. But a mob put the noose around the wrong man's neck. Anderson escaped. And now he aims to settle the score with the vigilantes who arranged his necktie party. Almost a decade after their landmark Double Indemnity, Fred MacMurray and Barbara Stanwyck doubled up again for the cowboy saga The Moonlighter (seen in 3-D in some theaters). MacMurray portrays hardened outlaw Anderson. Stanwyck is the woman once romantically linked to him, but soon wearing a deputy's badge and sworn to bring Anderson back dead or alive. She always gets her man.

High Lonesome
(1950)In Big Bend Country in Texas, a recent spate of unsolved murders get pinned on a mysterious young drifter in town who gets caught up with bad actors.

Suburban Commando
(1991)Forced to take a vacation in a quiet American suburb, an intergalactic warrior must protect his new human friends when bounty hunters track him down.