About: Bullwhip Fury   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Through modern eyes, Bullwhip Fury can seem horribly misogynistic and racist, and it is, but it's ok to enjoy it because it's old. It received standing ovations when it was released in 1952, so should be enjoyed as it was intended: a classic, "pre-Civil Rights" romp through the Old West slaughtering the indigenous population and dragging girls to the bedroom by their hair. Cal Bradshaw, played by one of the best scowlers in Western history, Dutch London, is a Llama rancher who lives a simple, brooding life on the Frontier. When he awakens one morning to find all his cattle slaughtered, there's only one conclusion to jump to despite no evidence to support it: Indians or minorities. Cal straps his massive bullwhip to his belt, saddles up and sets off in search of revenge; leaving his new bri

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Bullwhip Fury
rdfs:comment
  • Through modern eyes, Bullwhip Fury can seem horribly misogynistic and racist, and it is, but it's ok to enjoy it because it's old. It received standing ovations when it was released in 1952, so should be enjoyed as it was intended: a classic, "pre-Civil Rights" romp through the Old West slaughtering the indigenous population and dragging girls to the bedroom by their hair. Cal Bradshaw, played by one of the best scowlers in Western history, Dutch London, is a Llama rancher who lives a simple, brooding life on the Frontier. When he awakens one morning to find all his cattle slaughtered, there's only one conclusion to jump to despite no evidence to support it: Indians or minorities. Cal straps his massive bullwhip to his belt, saddles up and sets off in search of revenge; leaving his new bri
dcterms:subject
abstract
  • Through modern eyes, Bullwhip Fury can seem horribly misogynistic and racist, and it is, but it's ok to enjoy it because it's old. It received standing ovations when it was released in 1952, so should be enjoyed as it was intended: a classic, "pre-Civil Rights" romp through the Old West slaughtering the indigenous population and dragging girls to the bedroom by their hair. Cal Bradshaw, played by one of the best scowlers in Western history, Dutch London, is a Llama rancher who lives a simple, brooding life on the Frontier. When he awakens one morning to find all his cattle slaughtered, there's only one conclusion to jump to despite no evidence to support it: Indians or minorities. Cal straps his massive bullwhip to his belt, saddles up and sets off in search of revenge; leaving his new bride behind to cook and clean like the good Lord intended. After getting into a drunken bar fight minutes later, he befriends the plucky prostitute Penny Lace - played by America's sweetheart Betsy O'Neil - who turns out to have an STD that has given her a murderous hatred of the Indian savages, after some past slight that never gets fully explained. Together they make love and fight their way across the dusty plains, transferring responsibility for their grievances to any ethnic minority dumb enough to cross their path and subjecting them to increasingly creative whip-and-gun combination death sequences. Note - London left his real wife at the time for O'Neil and his real wife later became transgender
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