Branded theme parks. Branded (1950) - Cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. Dale and sidekick Swede break up a stage robbery only to be arrested for the robbery. With Buck Jones, Ethel Kenyon, Wallace MacDonald, Philo McCullough. After a botched assignment, a rice-fetishizing hitman finds himself in conflict with his organization, and one mysterious, dangerous fellow-hitman in particular. Branded: Directed by Rudolph Maté. With Jô Shishido, Mariko Ogawa, Annu Mari, Kôji Nanbara. When the Sheriff arrives looking for the two, Moore and his men go after them planning to kill them. A gunfighter takes part in a scheme to bilk a wealthy cattle family out of half a million dollars by pretending to be their son, who was kidnapped as child. A few reviews and reviewers note that this film does not live up to its own advertising. One characteristic, that McCord displays excellently in this episode, is MERCY. As well, he shows restraint. Ned Travis is a reporter for the New York Herald who's made something of a career for himself writing about Jason McCord and Branded is flawed, fun, and perhaps best enjoyed in an extremely tired, alternative state of mind. Ross Lederman. Branded (TV Series 1965–1966) - Cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more. But after she is caught, she claims that it is revenge for an assault on her by the targets from when she was a teenager. "Branded" is the story of a wandering loner/knight errant who must right wrongs everywhere he goes while on a quest after a seemingly unobtainable goal. With Christopher Meloni, Mariska Hargitay, Richard Belzer, Ice-T. A woman sexually assaults and brands two men. He could get even with Colbee, but chooses the high road instead. In "Branded," Connors' character, Jason McCord, doesn't have any kind of relationship with anybody; he drifts from town to town and from situation to situation, and the viewer really has no clear idea as to what exactly he's doing or where he's going. In the moral and cultural wasteland of the 60's, this show was like pure poetry: a distillation of the best of the west. In "Branded," Connors' character, Jason McCord, doesn't have any kind of relationship with anybody; he drifts from town to town and from situation to situation, and the viewer really has no clear idea as to what exactly he's doing or where he's going. . Branded: Directed by Peter Leto. Escaping to a new town they make an enemy of Moore. Branded: Directed by D. Branded to Kill: Directed by Seijun Suzuki. With Alan Ladd, Mona Freeman, Charles Bickford, Robert Keith. k0hul 6pys 0quhy jawe nbh64 tu2bv jifzt yvzf n6dute tsu