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  1. While certainly not the notorious tearjerker Old Yeller is known for, Savage Sam could be seen as the embodiment of the kinds of children's films made in the 1950s and early 1960s where dogs are gifted with both supernatural sensory abilities and remarkable understanding of human speech, where the lines between "good guys" and "bad guys" are clearly delineated, where archetypes and stereotypes ...

    • Brian Keith, Kevin Corcoran, Tommy Kirk
    • Norman Tokar
    • Walt Disney Pictures
  2. May 18, 2020 · Wait, no, the horse spooks and runs, leaving Travis unconscious in a creek. Sam finds him and knocks him back into the water with the force of his puppy kisses and waggly tail. He starts to race after Arliss and Lisbeth but Travis can’t keep up when he’s not injured, starving, exhausted, and overheated.

  3. Language. English. Box office. $3,000,000 (U.S./Canada) [1] Savage Sam is a 1963 American Western film sequel to Old Yeller based on the 1962 novel of the same name by Fred Gipson. Norman Tokar directed the live-action film, which was released by Walt Disney Productions on June 1, 1963. It did not enjoy the success of the original.

  4. Savage Sam is the 1963 film sequel to Old Yeller written by Fred Gipson. It was inspired by the story of former Apache captive Herman Lehmann, whom Gipson had seen give an exhibition when he was a child. Norman Tokar directed the live-action film, which was released by Walt Disney on June 1, 1963.

  5. Jun 15, 2023 · Savage Sam did terrible at the box office, and just as bad with critics. With most of them calling it clichéd and formulaic. The opinion was clear, people were tired of the adventure western genre. After Savage Sam, most of Disney’s movies would lean harder to the modern setting. Disney would dip into a western setting almost a decade later ...

  6. Nov 29, 2016 · Battles among Indians and settlers also occur in Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier (1955) and Pocahontas (1995). Overall. Savage Sam features plenty of action, but it lacks the heart of its predecessor. There are fewer somber moments, and Arliss’s unruly antics make the first part of the movie hard to watch.

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  8. I had no idea Savage Sam was even a movie until I ordered the Old Yeller (1957) DVD and it came with Savage Sam. I knew about the story because I read the novel when I was thirteen or fourteen years old. As a youngster, I was a voracious reader of comic books. I would buy comics and read them over and over.

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