Walter Long
12 titles
Filmography
12 results

Man's Country
(1938)A law enforcement agent sets out to the mountain hideout of a gang to probe their suspected role in a series of violent assaults on his colleagues.

Martyrs of the Alamo
(1915)Tells the story of the defense of the mission-turned-fortress by 185 Texans against an overwhelming Mexican army in 1836.
Going Bye-Bye!
(1934)After testifying against a murderer who promises vengeance, two witnesses decide to leave town. The plot echoed DO DETECTIVES THINK? but was timely because the biggest story in America then was the John Dillinger manhunt. The initial working title was PUBLIC ENEMIES. Directed by Charley Rogers. With Walter Long and Mae Busch.

Six Shootin' Sheriff
(1938)When Trigger Morton gets out of prison, he seeks revenge against the man who framed him, and anyone else who betrayed him along the way.

The Painted Trail
(1938)Posing as a notorious outlaw to bust a gang of cattle smugglers at the Mexican border, a Texas Ranger gets into trouble when the real bandit shows up.

The Little American
(1917)After surviving a German torpedo attack, a young American reaches France and witnesses the horrors of war and the brutality of German forces.
Shadows
(1922)A dying Chinese man converts to Christianity in order to stop a friend from being blackmailed.

Flaming Lead
(1939)Cowhand Ken Clark is stranded in Chicago, and temporarily takes a job as a sharp-shooter entertainer in a night club, with the intention of getting enough money together to get back to his beloved Arizona.

Silver Stallion
(1941)The Kid reforms after promising to return a stolen horse he stole from Jan Walton. Facing outnumbered odds, he confronts a gang led by Benson.

Pardon Us
(1931)Developed as a two-reeler spoofing prison pictures, the project grew into Laurel & Hardy’s first feature film at Roach. For years, their popular shorts were billed above the feature attraction on theatre marquees, so, at last, they appeared in a full-length movie themselves. Imaginative individual set pieces are among the fellows’ funniest and most endearing, including a prison-school sequence meant to echo the shorts being made by Our Gang at the time. Listen carefully early in the picture when someone in the crew cannot help himself and laughs off-scene! This is an extended version, restored to reflect what the motion picture looked like during its final preview stage. Directed by James Parrott, who along with Hal Roach makes a gag appearance as a prisoner. With Wilfred Lucas, James Finlayson, June Marlowe (OUR GANG’S “Miss Crabtree”) and Walter Long as the “The Tiger. ”

Fighting Mad
(1939)A Mountie tangles with border-crossing robbers and struggles to save the reputation of a woman they exploited and who witnessed a murder.

The Glory Trail
(1936)Just after the Civil War, confederates attempt to establish a town near a Union fort but the peace is broken when an indigenous attack is staged.