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- Dick McKnight, a deputy sheriff of Santa Cruz County, Ariz., receives a telephone message from Sheriff Wheeler, of the adjoining county, to the effect that Pedro Aquilla and his band of cattle rustlers and outlaws are in San Luis Canyon. His brother, Bill McKnight, the sheriff, being away, the young deputy determines to go out alone and corral some of the gang. He leaves a note to that effect for his brother and starts upon his mission. After getting into the mountains he runs across a note fastened to a tree, which reads: "Go Back or You Die With the Sun." Dick is not an impressionable young man, but the words make him think and he gives it more weight than is usually given to anonymous communications. He continues on his journey, but cannot get the note out of his mind. As he goes forward the words burn into his brain and every little noise in the mountains startles him until fear grabs him in its deadly grasp and drives him, a frightened thing, into an old abandoned adobe hut, where his nerve is worn to a raw edge by the fear which the words signified to him. He places his pistol to his head, the revolver explodes and we leave him in darkness. His brother Bill, the sheriff of Santa Cruz County, coming home after a hard ride finds the note that the youngster has left for him and knowing the difficult task that Dick has taken upon himself, he determines to follow his brother. He trails him to the cabin and entering same finds all that is left of a once brave, light-hearted boy. He takes the cursed note from his brother's clenched hand and receives the same fatal suggestion of fear that his brother had felt and when his innocent horse inadvertently rubs his head, against the door of the adobe, he is more startled than he has ever been before. He clutches his revolver, running from what seems to him to be a haunted place. He mounts his horse and rides from that which he had loved most, his brother. Continuing madly along divers trails not knowing just what to do, the insidious note causing that destroying thought, fear ever augmenting and increasing until from a brave man. Known throughout the territory for his loyalty and bravery, he becomes a cringing, incapable child trying to hide from that thing which is seizing him in its grasp. He attempts to hide in an old abandoned monastery, going back further into the depths of the broken walls until he eventually sinks into a deep crevice, almost an imbecile, firing his revolver at unseen things. The last cartridge of his revolver loosens the old clay and they tumble down upon him, burying him in the tomb. The sun breaks through as we see his hand twitching as he smothers, paying the penalty of the suggestion offered by the piece of paper clenched in his hand even unto the end in the agony of fear. -- Moving Picture World synopsis
- Pedro Mendez is a big, simple-minded Mexican farmer. He is strong, but slow and so dull mentally as to be a mere clod. With him on his farm are his wife and a crippled mother, all of the same stolid type. When Pedro is in town getting his supplies he learns of an intended revolution and is asked to join the recruits. He cannot understand what it is all about; they try to explain, but his simple mind cannot grasp the meaning. He sees the drilling, but goes on his way back to the farm saying nothing to his wife or mother. Later a troop of revolutionists coming by confiscate his horses. He would remonstrate, but the gold lace of the man in command and his authoritative manner cow the clod and he permits the theft. Later a band of guerrillas raid the farm and carry off his chickens and cattle. A retreating band of rebels use his house as a barricade. He sees his home begin to crumble. Their members become fewer and they try to make him fight, but he will not, so he and his mother are sent to the attic out of the way, and his wife commanded to bind the wounds of the injured. She is killed by a bullet. The house catches fire and the rebels exit to meet the other soldiers. Pedro staggers out with his crippled mother in his arms. Outside he lays her under a tree and goes back for his wife. When he brings his dead wife out he finds that his mother has died. He looks at the two figures, at his burning home and then at the battle that is swinging about him. His dormant passion and strength are at length aroused. He gives vent to the terrible cry, and wrenches a musket from a dead soldier near him. He turns upon the battling soldiers. There is no desire for heroic action, but simply a mad animal desire to kill and appease his passion. He rushes into the melee and lays about him with the clubbed musket. As the battle passes around him they turn and shoot him with a laugh. He staggers against a support and looks about him dully. Everything has gone, wife, mother, home and all. He understands less now what it is all about than before, and slowly sinks to his knees, falls forward and rolls over on his face.
- The story of a man's gratitude to a snake for saving his life: He takes the snake home to live with him and then conceives the idea of having the snake kill the man who stole his sweetheart. He places it in the other man's bed. But when the little daughter of the girl he had once loved creeps into the bed, he has a change of heart.
- Long ago, Hiawanda came across a missionary in the hills of New Mexico. She sees a cross lying upon the Bible, the missionary having fallen asleep while reading. She notices the ribbon attached to the cross and takes it. Later, Gray Eagle, her Indian lover, notices the cross and recognizes the connection between the cross and the maid and suspects Hiawanda, his sweetheart. He swears vengeance. Hiawanda runs to the missionary and warns him. The maid starts for her companions and in returning, hears a rolling stone, which attracts her attention to her Indian lover on the trail of the white man. She turns to warn the white man, but too late. The Indian's arrow stands true and the missionary falls on his face in the water, shot in the back. Hiawanda gives him succor, removes the arrow from his back and nurses him back to life. The missionary, in return, teaches her the alphabet. Later a call from the east comes and the missionary determines to answer it as per his orders at once. Not suspecting that Hiawanda's love has grown to the extent it has, he is hurt and pained, but leaves her. But her heart goes to the east with him. She, in sorrow, with a broken heart, turns back to her people, who spurn her because of the cross she wears, which represents the white man. She is driven from her home, and taking the cross in her hands, she goes into a boat of boughs and drifts toward a great falls, and we leave her as we found her, in darkness.
- Henry Saxe, a half-witted young man of the village, nourishes in his poor clouded mind a secret fascination for pretty Gladys Wyncott, who rides to work in the city every morning on the car with her sweetheart, Steve Lusk, the motorman. From the village to the city is about eight miles, and Steve's car is known as the "workers'" car. Henry, the "Harmless," determines to give Gladys a ride and steel her from her sweetheart, knowing instinctively the only way to secure her company would be to do this, thereby putting her at his mercy. He steals a nickel from his mother and steals the car from Steve, whom he knocks off the platform, also the conductor. Steve recovers in time to catch an auto and give chase, just saving the street car from crashing into a passing freight. Steve saves his sweetheart and the "Harmless" one is placed in an asylum.
- Beth, a mountain maid, tastes of the fruits of the valley, and like Eve of old, promised he of the valley she would return. A month later her longing and desires become so great for another nibble of the forbidden fruit of clandestine meetings, that she, in her mountain home, makes her loving mother believe she is seriously ill and thereby secures permission to return to the valley, leaving the snow and the big, rough ones behind. The horse that was to carry her became sick and the mountain man (the big man), who loved quietly but no less fervently, determined to carry Beth through the drifts of the Rockies to the flowers of the valley, there leaving her with an uncle, who was a hospital surgeon. The mountain man returned to his home, leaving a friend to watch over the girl he loved. The valley man, learning of her arrival, dropped his other escapades, and bent on one purpose of securing Beth for his own, little reckoning with God, who watches over those who are of the storm and heights. The mountain man's instinct leads him straight and true and saves his God-given mate ere she enters the gate from whence there is no returning, and on the mesa the mountain and the valley met, and there a truth was told and an act was done that prohibited the flowers from overcoming the snow ever more.
- The leading character in the story has the power to absorb anything he wishes, through his tremendous will power. He goes blind, and takes away the sight of his nephew in order that he may see. He steals his sister's brain in order that he may write. He steals an inventor's mind that he may become famous. His love for his sweetheart prevents him from stealing her voice, and he commits suicide.
- There is no reliable documentation that any film bearing this title was either produced or distributed by Lubin at this time. It's not the same film as The Sheep Herder (1914), which is a Victor production. Most likely, either the film was announced but never made, begun but never completed, or else completed but released under another title, unidentifiable at this time.
- There is no reliable documentation that any film bearing this title was either produced or distributed by Lubin at this time. It's not the same as The Mountaineer (1914), which is a Nestor production. Most likely the film was either announced but never made, begun and never completed, or completed and eventually released under another title, unidentifiable at this time.
- Mary, the daughter of Sheriff Butts, is the telegrapher at Loneville Station. Her sweetheart, Tom Gaynor, and she have had a quarrel because he has gone across the desert on a mission, the reason of which he will not explain. What he did go for is an engagement ring. Mary gets a telegram for her father, advising him to apprehend Tom Gaynor, as evidence in a recent train hold-up points to him. Mary, torn between love and duty, hides the telegram in her dress and wanders off in a sort of daze. She runs across the real fugitives dividing the loot and hastens home for her father. She finds he has gone to town, and, finding an old pair of bracelets and a revolver, goes herself to capture the outlaws. She gets the drop on the bandits and handcuffs one to the other. They trick her, and wrenching the gun from her, leave her unconscious and get away with the loot, still handcuffed to each other. Later the sheriff finds his daughter delirious, and takes her home. Then he finds the telegram in her bodice and is on the lookout for Tom. The fugitives get lost in the desert and are unable to free themselves. They fight and one kills the other, then drags him along until he finds a stone and breaks the handcuffs. A sandstorm comes up, and in the midst of it the bandit struggles on, led by a vision of his dead companion linked to his wrist. Exhausted and dying, he at last finds himself back beside the body of the dead man, and finds himself strongly bound to him. He dies trying to place the loot back in the other's hands. Tom, returning, finds them there, and taking the loot, goes to see Mary. There the sheriff apprehends him with the evidence upon him. Tom cannot explain other than that he found it in the desert, which is not believed. Tom's voice brings Mary back to consciousness, and everything is explained, even to the ring. That is slipped upon her finger with a lover's kiss.
- Although an advertisement for this film appears in Moving Picture World on 17 January 1914, no film bearing this title was ever distributed at this time. The film was condemned by the National Board of Censorship as "inflammable" because of the battle scenes and the subversive tone of Capitol versus Labor. In June 1914 the negative and all release prints were destroyed in a catastrophic explosion and fire in the film vaults at the Lubin plant in Philadelphia.
- John Temple, owner of the Eagle Mining Company, decides to close down the mine and posts a notification to that effect. Pedro Alvarez, foreman of the mine, kicks a tramp named Burns out of the saloon. He has noticed the notification posted by Temple and incites the miners to riot. Temple refuses to negotiate with them. Burnes, the tramp, weak from hunger, falls exhausted in front of Temple's home, and is cared for by Mrs. Temple. Alvarez and his gang overpower Temple in his office and leave to blow up the mine. Burnes finds Temple bound and frees him. Temple's little girl has wandered away in search of her dog. Alvarez encounters the child and decides to kidnap her, but the dog saves the child. Temple telephones for the sheriff, who arrives just in time to capture the outlaws. The tramp is given a good position in the mines by Temple.
- Tom promises his sweetheart, Vicky, that he will stop drinking. He falls in with boon companions, however, and in a saloon brawl, he accidentally shoots Ned, his pal. The sheriff and Vicky's brother find that Ned was only stunned by the bullet. At a rodeo, Tom meets the sheriff, who arrests Tom for the shooting of Ned. The sheriff wires Vicky, explaining the ruse he is playing on Tom. When Tom and the sheriff arrive at the town jail, they encounter Vicky, accompanied by Ned. After Tom is joyfully surprised at seeing Ned alive and well, he solemnly promises never to drink again, and with this assurance Vicky rushes into Tom's arms.
- Miss Satterly, the new schoolteacher, is loved by all the cowboys of the "Flying U" ranch. Weary is shy and only makes the acquaintance of the pretty schoolteacher by main force on the part of his cowboy companions. Jack and Emmett write an invitation to Weary to go to a dance, and sign Miss Satterly's name thereto. Miss Satterly finds a rough draft of this note. Weary's run-away horse brings him to Miss Satterly's home. They compare notes and the night of the dance, the cowboys are astounded to see Miss Satterly and Weary together at the dance where Weary is fed ice cream by the schoolteacher, while he tells her how much he loves her.
- Tom is given the position of Cowboy on Sid Jordan's ranch. Vicky, Sid's daughter, is annoyed by Buck, the ranch foreman, who is discharged and Tom is given the position. Buck decides to get even with Jordan, and with other cowboys, starts to rustle Jordan's cattle. Vicky sees Buck and the others change the brand on a calf. The outlaws shoot at her and her horse drops, pinning her to the ground. They take the girl a prisoner. Tom, in search of the rustlers follows Vicky's trail. He overcomes the cattle rustlers in an exciting revolver duel, and rescues Vicky, who can no longer withstand Tom's offer of marriage.
- Bill Herrick, owner of "Run Down" ranch, finds the land is worthless and arranges to sell it at public auction. Tom Hickey, the foreman, and Vicky, the rancher's daughter, who is Tom's sweetheart, assist. Isaac Goldplate prospects on the land for oil. A demijohn of oil has been broken, and Isaac Goldplate, arriving on the day of the ranch sale, spies the oil scattered on the ground and is convinced that oil is oozing from the earth. He offers $5,000 for the property. His offer is accepted, but Goldplate soon discovers that he has been duped out of $5,000. He starts for town to stop payment on the check, but is stopped by Tom Hickey, who gets the check cashed and returns with the money. Herrick gives Tom and Vicky a thousand dollars each with which to start housekeeping.
- Bill, a cowpuncher, who wants to get married, answers an ad in a matrimonial journal. Alter seeing the picture of the girl, he decides to call it off, but receives a letter from the old maid's lawyer to the effect that Bill can be held to the marriage. Jack, a friend of Bill's, wires back that Bill has gone crazy, but receives a reply that Muriel is on her way to nurse her future husband. Bill, at his wits' end, allows his cowboy pals to rig him up as a wild man and he goes into the hills in this condition. Muriel arrives. In the meantime, a naturalist professor, who has been collecting bugs in the hills, comes out of the tent in his sleeping suit to find that his clothes have been burned up from the rays of a strong magnifying glass. He starts off in his sleeping suit, is seen by the old maid, who gives chase. Bill, who has been wandering around the hills, sees the fleeing professor and starts back for home. Muriel overtakes the professor and starts for town with him. When she tells him that she has $50,000 in her grip, he falls upon her and they embrace. They are married by a justice of the peace just as Bill's cowboy friends come upon the scene. They encounter Bill and tell him not to worry, that the old maid is already married. Bill does a joy dance until they come to the part where Muriel has $50,000 in her grip. This is too much for Bill; he tears off his wild man's costume and raves at losing a small fortune.
- Jessie Baird, the postmaster's daughter, handles the registered mail. Hankey, a gambler, seeing the men sending money away from the mining town, decides to rob the stagecoach of the mail bag. He orders Pete, a pal, to board the stage and throw the mail bag off at Deer Creek. Jessie becomes suspicious and starts for Deer Creek. Pete pushes the mail bag off the stage seat. Jessie takes a short cut and beats Hanky to the Creek. She finds the mail bag abstracts the money and puts rocks in its place. Tom Chester, owner of the stage, misses the mail bag. Going back to look for it, Tom is shot and wounded by Pete. Pete and Hankey accuse each other of treachery. Jessie, from her hiding place, gets the drop on both outlaws and brings them to justice.
- Tom Hickson leaves for the Diamond S ranch to become foreman. Vicky, stepdaughter of Bull Dexter, an escaped convict, tears up a notice offering a reward for Dexter's arrest, just before Tom rides up. Tom meets Bull Dexter and unsuspectingly trades horses with him. Vicky falls over a cliff and Tom, putting a loop around his foot, hangs face downward, grasps Vicky, and this saves her life. Tom returns to the ranch on Dexter's horse and the ranch owner, seeing the stolen animal, becomes suspicious. Tom and Vicky meet again near Dexter's home. While the two are talking to Mrs. Dexter, the sheriff and the ranch owner approach. Tom induces the sheriff to allow him to hunt down Bull Dexter. In a running fight, Tom shoots Dexter's horse from under him, wounds Dexter and makes him a prisoner. Vicky rides up and pleads with Tom to let Dexter go as he is her stepfather, and Tom, realizing that he loves Vicky, allows Dexter to go and takes the girl in his arms.
- Tom Martin and Leo Binnis arrive in a small mining town. Andy Johnson, his wife and daughter, Vicky, are also seeking a western home. Jim Brown, a cattleman, poisons the water holes to kill off the wild horses that are eating the range bare, and Johnson and his wife drink from the water hole and die. Vicky, upon returning from a hunt, finds her parents dead. Tom and Leo, wandering in the hills, become lost. They are almost exhausted when Tom sees Johnson's wagon in the distance. He also sees the poisonous water hole. He fills a tin cup with the water, raises it to his lips, but Vicky, who has seen Tom and realizes his danger, grabs a rifle and shoots the cup from Tom's hand just as he is about to drink. Later Tom, Leo and Vicky arrive at the small mining town. Tom and Leo assist Vicky to engage in the restaurant business. The boys pan out a snug sum from the creek. Vicky by this time discovers that she loves both the boys, and after much thought, decides to try them out to see which one likes her best. Vicky sees a physician and tells him to explain to the boys that she has been injured in a stagecoach wreck; that she was thrown out and is disfigured for life. The doctor tells Tom and Leo the story. Both are horror-stricken. Tom sorry and starts off to see Vicky, while Leo shows that he could not live her now. Vicky, from a window, sees Tom approaching, and when he walks into the room Vicky greets him in good health. She then tells him the method she employed to find out which of the boys loved her best. Leo in the meantime, leaves the town to seek his fortune elsewhere, while Tom is happy planning with Vicky for their future.
- When the stagecoach is about to pull out on its daily trip, Jack, the driver, finally locates Tom, the coach guard, in a saloon where a fight is in progress and Jack helps Tom whip several of the cowboys. One of the cowboys vows revenge and plots to hold up the stagecoach. Four passengers are in the coach on its return, including a good-looking young lady named Vicky, with whom Tom immediately falls in love. When halfway on their journey, Tom spies the outlaw cowboys in the distance. The stage gets by the outlaws, but one of the wheel horses is killed. The stage goes on with the three horses. After a desperate fight Tom shoots and kills two of the outlaws while the rest disperse. Tom and Jack, the coach driver, meet Vicky and her aunt, and the four take a stroll. While Jack and the aunt are engaged in conversation, Tom makes love to Vicky. Despite the objections of the aunt, Vicky shows that she admires the dashing coach guard, who had saved her from the outlaws.
- Vicky pays a visit to her uncle's ranch in the west, and tells the cowboys that she could not love a man who is not an athlete. Tom and Sid, two of the cowboys, thereupon practice physical culture. Tom, while practicing, throws a sheep hide over his shoulders. A party of picnickers see him, think he is a wild man, give chase and are joined by the cowboys. Vicky sees Tom running, notices his wonderful speed and decides he is the man for her.
- Rose Blake, daughter of the ranch foreman, is in love with Tom, the cook, and her father disapproves of the match. Blake finally discharges Tom, and the boys become disgusted when they try to prepare their own meals. Disguised as a young lady, Tom arrives at the ranch, where he is engaged by Blake as a cook. Tom discloses his identity to Rose, who is overjoyed. Squinty, who has a habit of holding up the stagecoach in the mountains, discovers Tom with his wig off, making love to Rose. Tom discovers Squinty and ties him to a fence in the corral. The sheriff finds one of Squinty's spurs on the scene of a holdup. He finds Squinty tied in the corral. Tom explains he has captured the hold-up man. They find one of Squinty's spurs missing, and the spur which the sheriff found matches the one Squinty wears, and so he is discovered as the crook. Blake, through admiration of Tom's cooking and bravery, finally consents to Tom marrying Rose.
- When Tommy, an Eastern young man, arrives in a Western town, the cowboys see that he is a tenderfoot and make him dance to the tune of a gun. Beecher, a ranchman, Hazel, his daughter, and Sid, the foreman, who is in love with Hazel, rescue Tommy. Tommy and Hazel start out to look for Pete Boak, an outlaw. They chase a negro, mistaking him for Boak. The Ethiopian jumps from the top of a cliff and falls on Boak in camp below, knocking Boak unconscious. Tommy and Hazel find the unconscious Boak, make him a prisoner and win a $500 reward.
- Martin, a ranch owner, writes Graves, a broker, to send Tom Graves west to marry Martin's daughter, Daisy. Tom has a sweetheart, but obeys his father's orders. Meanwhile, Daisy has a sweetheart unknown to her father, and when Martin tells Daisy that Tom Graves is coming to marry her Daisy tells her sweetheart, Ned, all about it. Ned meets Tom; they become friends and Tom visits Ned's claim. Tom shows Ned Daisy's picture and they agree to a plan. Ned agrees to impersonate Tom and marry Daisy while Tom is to send for Hazel. Tom writes for Hazel. Graves leaves for his friend's ranch to attend his son's wedding. Hazel also arrives at the same time. Tom and Hazel beat Tom's father to the ranch, where they arrive just after Ned and Daisy are married. When Graves arrives he finds that the boys have put one over on him, and he agrees to let true love run its course.
- Bobbs, a meek citizen, spends a miserable life with his militant wife, Henrietta, and so he disappears. Arriving in a small western town, he sees Bloody Bill, a "bad" man, shoot up a saloon and gather up the gold and silver. He believes that Bloody Bill's game is easy, and resolves to do likewise. Henrietta receives a telegram stating that her uncle in the west, had bequeathed her his ranch, and she sets forth to take possession. When she arrives at the ranch, she puts the cowboys to wont, and they appeal to Bobbs, now known as a "bad man," who tells the boys that he can lick any woman. At the ranch Bobbs is confronted by no less a person than his. Henrietta, who, after taking his artillery from him, makes him foreman of the ranch.
- Vicky Hoskins, an eastern girl with story writing ambitions, goes west to get local color for a story. Tom, foreman of John Hicks' ranch, plans to joke the eastern girl. With cowboys, Tom rigs up a dummy, proceeds to hang it to a tree and tells Vicky that they were merely hanging a story writer who happened to come to the ranch, and Vicky nearly collapses with fright. Vicky decides to make love to Tom just to see how he acts, and so that she can tell what to do with her hero in her western story. John Hicks, the ranch owner, discovers Vicky's plot and tells Tom. Then Hicks and the boys accuse Vicky of trifling with Tom's affections. A stranger, who looks exceedingly seedy, approaches and he is asked to perform a supposed marriage ceremony between Tom and Vicky. Too late the boys discover that the stranger is a real clergyman, and that the matrimonial ties are binding. Later, however, Tom finds a means to cause Vicky to become content with her lot.
- Jim Redigo is foreman for the enormous Garrett Ranch owned by matriarch Lucia with her children Tal and Constance. Redigo had his hands full managing people, machines, and animals, with a specific interest in attractive Connie.
- Two bikers head from L.A. to New Orleans through the open country and desert lands, and along the way they meet a man who bridges a counter-culture gap of which they had been unaware.
- A doctor buys a Civil War era dilapidated mansion, and hires a few friends to fix it up, but the mansion hides a deadly secret.
- Truckers form a mile-long "convoy" in support of a trucker's vendetta with an abusive sheriff - Based on the country song of the same title by C.W. McCall.
- A man escapes from a Louisiana prison to be at the California hospital bedside of his ailing son.
- 1980–19941h 45mPG7.0 (1K)TV EpisodeThe retelling of an incident in Gonzales, Texas in 1901 revolving around a stolen horse, mistaken identity and a killing. An unusual story of the all too usual exploitation of the powerless in Texas History.
- It is the dawn of World War III. In the west mountains of America, a group of teenagers band together to defend their town, and their country, from invading Soviet forces.
- Desperate for a better life, a failed dancer turned stripper teams up with a hunky aimless bartender to find her late father's buried treasure.
- May is waiting for her boyfriend in a run-down American motel, when an old flame turns up and threatens to undermine her efforts and drag her back into the life that she was running away from. The situation soon turns complicated.
- On board an old Cadillac, a young woman goes looking for her father with a friend and a hitchhiker.
- Lucky Luke becomes the Sheriff of Daisy Town and runs out all the criminals. Then the Dalton brothers arrive and try to get the Indians to break the peace treaty and attack the town.
- Jericho and Dora Adams, along with their infant son, are captured by American Indians seeking revenge for Jericho killing the chief's son. The chief intends raising the Adams' son as his own, but when Dora tells them the story of Jesus, tensions between the them are reduced.
- After a freak accident, a company executive turns completely invisible, goes on the run and becomes hunted by a treacherous CIA official, whilst trying to cope with his new reality.
- A retired asassin tries to make himself at home in New Mexico.
- Iowa City Bob is hearing voices from God telling him to sell truth about the used cars he's selling in the middle of nowhere. Is he having another breakdown? Like the one he had when he sold a record number of used cars in a year - he was awarded salesman of the year 9 years running. He lost his daughter - wife and stole and car - they found him buried naked on the side of the road ranting. Bob is trying for a comeback when a Snakegirl and Guitar Monte, street corner preachers, show up on the lot wanting to trade a boat for a Pontiac Trans AM - as any zealot car salesman will tell you - they don't take boats on trade. In the meantime his estranged daughter Turner shows up wanting to re-establish their relationship. Bob is hellbent on telling the truth about all the cars on his lot. And no one is prepared for the truth. Sell Truth becomes his sales pitch. And no one is ever going to be the same again.
- A vegetarian (Jake Webber) takes a detour from a cross-country trip to promote his father's (David Huddleston) burger chain.
- From Wichita to Dodge City, to the O.K. Corral in Tombstone, a man becomes a myth in this thrilling journey of romance, adventure, and desperate heroic action.
- Two victims of traumatized childhoods become lovers and psychopathic serial murderers irresponsibly glorified by the mass media.
- Two political speechwriters fall in love before they find out they are working for candidates on opposite sides.