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A unique and fun experience, the Drive-in movies this year offer something for everyone. The stars really were much bigger back then and in The Great Escape and The Magnificent Seven you have a chance to have a double helping of the charismatic Steve McQueen, James Coburn and Charles Bronson. You can whoop and holler as the good guys fight against incredible odds in both films. “I thought you’d be bigger,” is the memorable remark said of Patrick Swayze’s character Dalton in Road House. Well, now he is.
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The Great Escape
John Sturges | USA | 1963 | 172mins
Ripping boys-own style adventure with great characterization. A group of allied prisoners of war plan a mass break out from an ‘escape-proof’ camp. Featuring an all-star cast, this is guaranteed to have you whistling Elmer Bernstein’s memorable score as you leave the venue. |
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The Magnificent Seven
John Sturges | USA | 1960 | 128mins
They were seven - And they fought like seven hundred
Thanks to a star-studded cast and a rousing score The Magnificent Seven has established itself as one of the best-loved westerns. A gunslinger assembles a group of mercenaries to defend a peasant Mexican village against a horde of bandits. Yul Brynner, Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson, James Coburn, Robert Vaughn and Horst Buchholz are uniformly iconic. |
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Road House
Rowdy Herrington | USA | 1989 | 114mins
The dancing's over. Now it gets dirty.
When the town’s wickedly megalomaniac villain tussles with Patrick Swayze’s zen bouncer Dalton he messes with the wrong man. Dalton lives like a loner, fights like a
professional. And loves like there's no tomorrow. As glorious a piece of ridiculously macho fun as one could hope for.
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