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  1. The Glory Guys: Directed by Arnold Laven. With Tom Tryon, Harve Presnell, Senta Berger, James Caan. What could be worse for two cavalry officers than to battle with native tribes? To battle each other for the same woman.

    • (1K)
    • Drama, Romance, Western
    • Arnold Laven
    • 1965-07-07
  2. The Glory Guys is a 1965 American Western Panavision film directed by Arnold Laven and written by Sam Peckinpah based on the 1956 novel The Dice of God by Hoffman Birney. Produced by Levy-Gardner-Laven and released by United Artists, the film stars Tom Tryon, Harve Presnell, Senta Berger, James Caan and Michael Anderson Jr.

  3. The Glory Guys. Inspired by the Battle of the Little Bighorn, this Western follows a selfish military leader, Gen. Frederick McCabe (Andrew Duggan), who unfeelingly throws his soldiers into...

    • (5)
    • Tom Tryon
    • Arnold Laven
    • Levy-Gardner-Laven
  4. The Glory Guys (Brasil: Assim Morrem os Bravos) é um filme estadunidense de 1965, dos gêneros faroeste e romance, dirigido por Arnold Laven, com roteiro de Sam Peckinpah baseado no livro The Dice of God, de Hoffman Birney, e trilha sonora de Riz Ortolani.

  5. Overview. Though a fictionalized Western based on George Armstrong Custer's 7th Cavalry Regiment at the Battle of the Little Big Horn, the film is almost a generic war story covering the enlistment, training, and operational deployment of a group of recruits that could take place in any time period. Arnold Laven. Director. Hoffman Birney. Novel.

  6. A widescreen western shot by the great James Wong Howe (three years out from his Oscar® win for Martin Ritt's Hud, 1963) and based on the 1876 massacre of the 7th Cavalry under George Armstrong Custer, The Glory Guys began with a novel by pulp western writer Herman Hoffman Birney.

  7. The Glory Guys is a 1965 American film based on the novel The Dice of God by Hoffman Birney. Filmed by Levy-Gardner-Laven and released by United Artists, it stars Tom Tryon, Harve Presnell, Senta Berger, James Caan, and Michael Anderson, Jr. The film's screenplay was written by Sam Peckinpah long before the 1965 film was made.