Wild Rovers
0 sources
Wild Rovers
Summary
Wild Rovers is a film[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Wild Rovers's instance of is recorded as film[3].
- Wild Rovers was directed by Blake Edwards[4].
- Blake Edwards wrote the screenplay for Wild Rovers[5].
- Wild Rovers's composer is recorded as Jerry Goldsmith[6].
- Wild Rovers's genre is Western film[7].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was William Holden[8].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Ryan O'Neal[9].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Karl Malden[10].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Tom Skerritt[11].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Leora Dana[12].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Moses Gunn[13].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Rachel Roberts[14].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Lynn Carlin[15].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Joe Don Baker[16].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was James Olson[17].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Victor French[18].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Charles Gray[19].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was William Lucking[20].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Bruno VeSota[21].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Lee de Broux[22].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Dick Crockett[23].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Mary Jackson[24].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Sam Gilman[25].
- A cast member of Wild Rovers was Alan Carney[26].
- Wild Rovers was produced by Blake Edwards[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Wild Rovers was produced by Blake Edwards[27]. It was directed by Blake Edwards[4]. Blake Edwards wrote the screenplay for it[5]. Cast members include William Holden[8], Ryan O'Neal[9], Karl Malden[10], Tom Skerritt[11], Leora Dana[12], and Moses Gunn[13].
Publication
Wild Rovers was released on January 1, 1971[28]. The original language of it was English[29]. Its genre is Western film[7]. It was distributed by video on demand[30].
Reception
Reviews include 6/10[31] and 60%[32].
Why It Matters
Wild Rovers has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]