''The Magnificent Seven'' (1960 film), an American Western directed by John Sturges, a remake of ''Seven Samurai'')
Other uses in media, sports, and more, detailed in the following sections.
Media
Film
The Magnificent Seven is a 1960 American Western film directed by John Sturges, serving as a remake of Akira Kurosawa's 1954 Japanese epic Seven Samurai.[1][2] The story follows a group of impoverished Mexican villagers who, facing repeated raids by bandits led by the ruthless Calvera (Eli Wallach), travel to a nearby border town to hire gunfighters for protection. They recruit seven American and Mexican outlaws—led by the stoic Chris Adams (Yul Brynner)—including sharp-shooter Vin Tanner (Steve McQueen), knife expert Britt (James Coburn), and young hotshot Chico (Horst Buchholz)—who agree to defend the village for pay, only to develop a deeper sense of purpose amid the ensuing battles. The film emphasizes themes of heroism, sacrifice, and cultural clash, with the gunfighters training the villagers in self-defense before confronting the bandits in a climactic showdown.[3]Produced by the Mirisch Company and distributed by United Artists, the film was released on October 12, 1960, with a production budget of approximately $2 million. It achieved significant commercial success, earning $9.75 million in worldwide box office rentals, making it one of the top-grossing Westerns of the era and establishing Sturges as a key figure in the genre.[4] The ensemble cast of seven gunfighters, featuring Yul Brynner as Chris Adams, Steve McQueen as Vin Tanner, Horst Buchholz as Chico, Charles Bronson as Bernardo O'Reilly, James Coburn as Britt, Robert Vaughn as Lee, and Brad Dexter as Harry, with Eli Wallach as the bandit leader Calvera, brought star power that helped propel its popularity, though production faced challenges like harsh filming conditions in Mexico.[5]The franchise continued with three sequels, each introducing new ensembles of gunfighters while loosely continuing the spirit of the original. Return of the Seven (1966), directed by Burt Kennedy, stars Yul Brynner reprising his role as Chris Adams, joined by Robert Fuller, Warren Oates, and Julián Mateos; the plot centers on the survivors reuniting with five new recruits to rescue kidnapped women and children from a mining tyrant.[6]Guns of the Magnificent Seven (1969), directed by Paul Wendkos, features George Kennedy as Chris, alongside James Whitmore and Monte Markham, as they escort a wagon of Mexican revolutionaries across the border while evading bounty hunters.[7] The series concluded with The Magnificent Seven Ride! (1972), directed by George McCowan and starring Lee Van Cleef as Chris, with Stefanie Powers and Michael Callan; here, Chris aids a town in protecting a schoolteacher from a vengeful gang, highlighting ongoing themes of reluctant heroism and community defense.[8] These films shifted casts and tones, incorporating more action-oriented plots but retaining the core idea of assembled outlaws facing overwhelming odds.[9]A modern remake, also titled The Magnificent Seven, was directed by Antoine Fuqua and released on September 23, 2016, by Columbia Pictures and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.[10] Starring Denzel Washington as Chisolm, a bounty hunter and the group's leader, alongside Chris Pratt as gambler Josh Faraday, the film relocates the story to 1870s Rose Creek, a miningtown in the American West terrorized by ruthless industrialist Bartholomew Bogue (Peter Sarsgaard). The townsfolk hire Chisolm, who assembles a diverse team—including a Comanche warrior (Martin Sensmeier), a Mexican outlaw (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo), and a Civil War sharpshooter (Ethan Hawke)—to liberate their home, blending classic Western elements with contemporary diversity. Produced on a $90 million budget, it grossed over $162 million worldwide, though it received mixed reviews for its fidelity to the original while updating social dynamics.)The 1960 film profoundly shaped the Western genre, popularizing tropes such as the ensemble of flawed anti-heroes banding together against a common foe and iconic standoff sequences that became staples in subsequent oaters.[11] Its narrative structure influenced later works like the spaghetti Westerns of Sergio Leone, emphasizing moral ambiguity and high-stakes gunplay over simplistic good-versus-evil tales. The Elmer Bernstein score, with its triumphant brass theme, further amplified these scenes' dramatic tension.
Music
The score for the 1960 film The Magnificent Seven was composed by Elmer Bernstein, who drew on influences including Aaron Copland's style, mariachi music, and the history of film scoring to create a brass-heavy orchestral theme that evokes heroism and tension.[12][13] The main theme features bold fanfares from trumpets and horns, supported by rhythmic percussion and strings, with subtler cues incorporating guitar and woodwinds to suggest Mexicanfolk elements amid the Western setting.[14] Bernstein's work, orchestrated by Jack Hayes and Leo Shuken, was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Score at the 33rd Academy Awards, though it did not win.[15]The theme's iconic status extended beyond the film, becoming a cultural staple through its release as a single and numerous covers. Guitarist Al Caiola's 1961 instrumental version, featuring his orchestra conducted by Don Costa, reached No. 35 on the Billboard Hot 100, highlighting its crossover appeal in popular music.[16] The melody has been sampled and adapted in modern media, including advertisements and hip-hop tracks, underscoring its enduring rhythmic drive and memorable brass motif.[14]In 1980, the British punk band The Clash released a song titled "The Magnificent Seven" on their triple album Sandinista!, blending reggae, funk, and rap elements in a 5:57 track that critiques the monotony of capitalist labor through lyrics depicting a worker's day, with subtle nods to the film's ensemble dynamic.[17] Produced by the band at Electric Lady Studios in New York, it marked one of the earliest instances of a rock group incorporating rap-style vocals by Joe Strummer and Mick Jones, influencing the post-punk genre's experimental edge.[18]Bernstein also composed scores for the film's sequels—Return of the Seven (1966), Guns of the Magnificent Seven (1969), and The Magnificent Seven Ride! (1972)—reprising and expanding the original theme with variations suited to each story's action sequences.[19] For the 2016 remake directed by Antoine Fuqua, James Horner initiated the score with sweeping orchestral arrangements before his death in 2015, after which Simon Franglen completed it, incorporating modern percussion and choral elements to evoke epic scale while honoring Bernstein's legacy.[20][21]
Television
The Magnificent Seven television series, which aired from 1998 to 2000 on CBS, is a Western action-drama loosely inspired by the 1960 film of the same name.[22] Starring Michael Biehn as Chris Larabee—a stoic gunslinger reminiscent of the film's leader—the series follows seven disparate gunfighters who band together to protect the frontier town of Four Corners from bandits, corrupt officials, and other threats.[22] The ensemble cast also includes Eric Close as sharpshooter Vin Tanner, Dale Midkiff as healer Nathan Jackson, Anthony Michael Hall as con artist Ezra Standish, Andrew Kavovit as young idealist J.D. Dunne, Ron Perlman as rogue Buck Wilmington, and Stephen Lang as preacher Josiah Sanchez.[23] Over two seasons comprising 22 episodes, the narrative emphasizes the gunslingers' ongoing vigil in the town, exploring their backstories and interpersonal dynamics amid weekly conflicts.[24]Developed by Pen Densham and John Watson, the series premiered on January 3, 1998, with a two-hour pilot episode titled "Ghosts of the Confederacy," which was edited and aired as a standalone made-for-TV movie introducing the characters' recruitment to defend a Seminole village from ex-Confederate marauders.[25] Subsequent episodes shifted focus to life in Four Corners, featuring self-contained stories that delved into moral dilemmas such as vigilante justice, racial tensions, and personal redemption, often through character-driven arcs like Vin's struggle with his bounty-hunting past or Ezra's schemes to aid the town.[26] Notable guest stars included Brad Dourif in "Witness," where he portrayed a key informant in a murder investigation, and John Cho in "Chinatown," highlighting cultural clashes in a mining camp episode.[27] Despite a dedicated fanbase that launched an early internet campaign to save the show after its initial season, CBS canceled the series in 2000 due to consistently low ratings, with the final episode airing on July 3.[28]Beyond the main series, other television adaptations of the Magnificent Seven concept include the 2004 Japanese anime series Samurai 7, a direct retelling of the original Seven Samurai story that influenced the Western genre, featuring robotic samurai defending a village from bandits in a post-apocalyptic setting.[29] In the U.S., no additional live-action miniseries materialized, though the 1998 pilot served as an entry point for potential expansions that never aired beyond the series proper.[25]The series contributed to the legacy of ensemble Westerns on television by prioritizing serialized character development and ethical quandaries over high-stakes gunfights, echoing influences seen in earlier shows like The Wild Wild West (1965–1969), which blended team-based adventures with genre tropes.[26] This approach helped sustain the "magnificent seven" archetype in episodic formats, fostering viewer investment in the protagonists' growth rather than isolated standoffs.[30]
Sports
Gymnastics
The Magnificent Seven refers to the 1996 United States women's artistic gymnastics team that achieved a historic gold medal in the team all-around competition at the Atlanta Olympics, marking the first such victory for the U.S. in the event. The team consisted of Amanda Borden, Amy Chow, Dominique Dawes, Shannon Miller, Dominique Moceanu, Jaycie Phelps, and Kerri Strug, with an average age of approximately 18 years during the competition. Under the guidance of renowned coaches Béla Károlyi and his wife Márta, the athletes trained intensively at the Karolyi Ranch in Texas, which served as the USA Gymnastics national team training center, preparing them for the high-stakes Olympic environment.[31] However, the ranch later became the center of major controversies, including reports of abusive training practices and its association with the Larry Nassar sexual abuse scandal, where Nassar abused numerous athletes during medical treatments there; the facility was closed in 2018 amid lawsuits and reforms in USA Gymnastics.[31] Their performance captivated audiences, symbolizing American perseverance and teamwork amid intense international rivalry.On July 23, 1996, the team secured the gold medal in the team all-around final at the Georgia Dome, edging out Russia by a narrow margin of 0.088 points after a dramatic comeback from an early deficit.[32] The victory was clinched by Kerri Strug's iconic second vault on a severely injured ankle, performed despite visible pain and earning a score of 9.712, which propelled the U.S. to the top of the podium.[33] Individual successes further highlighted the team's talent: Shannon Miller won gold on the balance beam with a score of 9.862, becoming the first American woman to claim an individual Olympicgymnastics gold since 1984; Dominique Dawes earned bronze in the all-around and silver on floor exercise (9.837), while Amy Chow took silver on uneven bars (9.812).[34] These accomplishments contributed to a total of five medals for the U.S. women in Atlanta, elevating the sport's popularity in the country.[35]The team's story has endured as a cultural touchstone, embodying resilience and unity, with Strug's vault often cited as a defining moment of determination in Olympic history.[36] It inspired generations of gymnasts and was revisited in media reflections, including a 2016 USA Gymnastics feature marking the 20th anniversary of their triumph and a TODAY show segment reuniting the members to discuss their legacy.[37][38]Post-Olympics, team members pursued diverse paths while leveraging their experiences for broader impact. Shannon Miller, who amassed a record seven Olympic medals across 1992 and 1996—the most for any U.S. female gymnast at the time—transitioned to advocacy, surviving ovarian cancer in 2011 and becoming a motivational speaker on health and perseverance.[39]Kerri Strug, after earning a degree in sociology from Stanford University, worked in education and public policy, serving as a spokesperson for the Special Olympics and the Children's Miracle Network to promote youth fitness and support for children with disabilities.[40] The group was inducted into the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame in 2008, cementing their role in transforming U.S. women's gymnastics into a dominant force.[32]
Basketball
In college basketball, the term "Magnificent Seven" prominently refers to the seven most dominant programs, dubbed "blue bloods" for their unparalleled success in the NCAA Tournament since its inception in 1939. Coined in the 2025 book The Magnificent Seven: College Basketball's Blue Bloods by Mark Mehler and Jeff Tiberii, these programs—Kentucky, Kansas, UCLA, North Carolina, Duke, Indiana, and UConn—have collectively won 46 national championships, accounting for over half of all NCAA men's basketball titles as of November 2025.[41][42] The authors selected these teams based on criteria including championship counts, Final Four appearances, and sustained excellence, emphasizing their role in shaping the sport's competitive landscape through recruiting pipelines, coaching legacies, and cultural impact on American higher education.[43]These programs' historical dominance is exemplified by landmark achievements that underscore dynasty-building eras. UCLA secured seven consecutive national titles from 1967 to 1973 under legendary coach John Wooden, a feat unmatched in modern college sports and fueled by stars like Lew Alcindor (later Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) and Bill Walton, establishing the Bruins as a benchmark for program supremacy. North Carolina's 1982 championship provides another iconic moment, as the Tar Heels staged a dramatic 63–62 comeback victory over heavily favored Georgetown in the final, with James Worthy's game-winning shot sealing Dean Smith's first title and launching Michael Jordan's stardom.[44] Collectively, these dynasties highlight strategic innovations like zone defenses and fast-break offenses that influenced broader tactical evolution in the sport.Beyond elite college ranks, "Magnificent Seven" has been adopted as a nickname for various local basketball teams, particularly in high school and youth leagues, evoking themes of camaraderie and underdog spirit. In the late 1990s, a Stillwater, Minnesota, youth basketball group of seven standout players earned the moniker during AAU tournaments, later celebrated for their lasting friendships and regional impact two decades on.[45] Similarly, the Avinger High School boys' basketball team in Texas was dubbed the "Magnificent Seven" in 2016 for its tight-knit roster that advanced to the state semifinals, embodying resilience in rural Class 1A competition.[46]The term's application in basketball underscores a narrative of sustained excellence and institutional legacy in the collegiate game, distinct from more transient usages in professional leagues like the NBA, where it occasionally nods to star ensembles but lacks the historical depth of these programs' tournament pedigrees.[47] This framing in Mehler and Tiberii's analysis celebrates how these seven schools have perpetuated basketball's golden age through generational talent development and high-stakes rivalries.[42]
Other uses
Cemeteries
The "Magnificent Seven" refers to a group of seven large, private Victorian cemeteries in London, established between 1833 and 1841 to address severe overcrowding and unsanitary conditions in the city's parish churchyards, exacerbated by rapid urbanization and the 1832 cholera epidemic.[48] These garden-style cemeteries were inspired by continental models like Paris's Père Lachaise and designed as landscaped parks with architectural grandeur, promoting dignified burials away from urban centers.[49] The initiative was enabled by the 1832 Parliamentary Burial Act, which permitted joint-stock companies to develop such sites, and later formalized by the 1850 Burial Act to regulate interments and public health.[48] Architects like Stephen Geary, who founded the London Cemetery Company and contributed to several designs, emphasized Gothic and neoclassical elements to create serene, monumental landscapes.[50] Collectively, these cemeteries hold over 500,000 burials, serving as key sites for 19th-century London's social and architectural history.[51]Kensal Green Cemetery, the oldest of the seven, opened in 1833 on 72 acres in northwest London and was the first to be developed by a joint-stock company.[48] It features extensive catacombs, chapels, and pathways lined with tombs, including notable burials such as engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel, mathematician Charles Babbage, novelist Wilkie Collins, and Mary Hogarth, sister-in-law to Charles Dickens, whose death profoundly influenced his writing.[52] The site's Greek Revival entrance and diverse monuments reflect early Victorian burial aesthetics.[48]West Norwood Cemetery, established in 1837 across 40 acres in south London, is renowned for its eclectic monuments, including a Greeknecropolissection with Doric columns and pediments.[53] It houses over 200,000 burials, among them industrialist Henry Doulton of Royal Doulton pottery, scientist Charles W. Alcock (father of modern football), and surgeon William Marsden, founder of the Royal Marsden Hospital.[53] The cemetery's Grade I listed status highlights its architectural significance, blending Gothic and classical styles.Highgate Cemetery, opened in 1839 on 37 acres in north London, exemplifies Gothic Revival design with features like the Egyptian Avenue and Terrace Catacombs, planned by Stephen Geary.[54] Spanning East and West sections, it contains approximately 170,000 burials in 53,000 graves, including philosopher Karl Marx, novelist George Eliot, and author Douglas Adams.[55] Its dramatic landscaping and ornate vaults make it a prime example of the era's romantic burial grounds.[48]Brompton Cemetery, founded in 1840 on 17 acres near Fulham in west London, was designed as a landscaped garden with arcades, colonnades, and a central chapel by Benjamin B. Baud.[48] Influenced by Stephen Geary's early involvement, it includes military graves and burials of suffragetteEmmeline Pankhurst and engineer John Disraeli; the site also inspired Beatrix Potter's childhood drawings.[56] Its formal layout emphasizes symmetry and greenery.[48]Abney Park Cemetery, also opened in 1840 on 32 acres in Stoke Newington, north London, was uniquely dedicated to Nonconformists, rejecting Anglican rites and focusing on dissenters' memorials.[57] It holds over 200,000 burials, notably Salvation Army founders William and Catherine Booth, as well as abolitionist Betsi Cadwaladr and nonconformist preacher John Pye-Smith.[57] The cemetery's nondenominational chapel and diverse monuments underscore its progressive ethos.[48]Nunhead Cemetery, established in 1840 on 26 acres in southeast London by the London Cemetery Company under Stephen Geary's design, became known as a "Victorian wilderness" due to mid-20th-century neglect and overgrowth.[48] With around 150,000 burials, including artistWilliam Etty and engineer William Haywood, its wild ivy-covered tombs and chapels now contribute to its atmospheric appeal. The site's Gothic gatehouse and winding paths evoke a sense of untamed nature.[48]Tower Hamlets Cemetery, opened in 1841 on 27 acres in the East End (originally called the City of London and Tower Hamlets Cemetery), served working-class residents and contains over 80,000 burials, such as socialist William Morris and architect Richard Seifert.[58] Its varied terrain includes Egyptian-style tombs and war graves, reflecting the area's industrial heritage.[59]In the modern era, the Magnificent Seven face challenges from urban development but benefit from dedicated preservation efforts by charitable trusts and Friends groups, such as the Friends of Highgate Cemetery (founded 1975) and Friends of Nunhead Cemetery (1980s), which maintain structures and paths.[60] Several, including Abney Park, Nunhead, and Tower Hamlets, are designated Local Nature Reserves, supporting biodiversity with over 300 plant species, rare fungi, and birds like tawny owls, functioning as vital urban green spaces.[61] Guided tours are widely offered—for instance, Highgate's themed walks explore history and ecology—drawing visitors for educational and recreational purposes.[60] In 2024, these sites gained further recognition through academic studies on their ecological roles and exhibits at the London Museum highlighting their Victorian legacy.[55][48]Culturally, the cemeteries have influenced literature and media; Highgate's brooding atmosphere inspired Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897), with its nearby setting evoking vampiric lore, while their Gothic aesthetics appear in films like From Hell (2001) and The Awakening (2011), often as backdrops for Victorian horror.[54] They symbolize the era's fascination with death and commemoration, attracting artists and writers who viewed them as picturesque memorials.[49]
Finance
The term "Magnificent Seven" in finance refers to a group of seven leading technology companies whose stocks have significantly influenced market performance since late 2023: Alphabet (parent of Google), Amazon, Apple, Meta Platforms (parent of Facebook), Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla.[62] This moniker was coined in October 2023 by Michael Hartnett, a strategist at Bank of America Global Research, to highlight their outsized role in driving the S&P 500's gains amid a broader market rally.[63] The nickname draws briefly from the 1960 Western film The Magnificent Seven, evoking a sense of elite performers banding together.These companies have exerted substantial market impact, collectively representing approximately 37% of the S&P 500's total market capitalization as of October 2025, up from about 28% at the end of 2023.[64] Their combined market value surpassed $22 trillion by late October 2025, exceeding $15 trillion by mid-2025 and underscoring their dominance in the U.S. equity landscape.[64] Key events have amplified this influence, including Nvidia's explosive growth from the AI boom starting in 2023, where demand for its graphics processing units (GPUs) propelled revenue to $39.3 billion in its fiscal fourth quarter ending January 2025, a 78% year-over-year increase, and its stock price rose over 1,000% from January 2023 to July 2025.[65] Similarly, Tesla's expansion in electric vehicles (EVs) contributed, with global deliveries reaching 1.808 million units in 2023 and maintaining leadership despite a slight dip to 1.789 million in 2024, amid overall EV market growth projected at 25% for 2025.[66][67] This concentration has heightened their sway over major indices, with the group accounting for approximately 35% of the S&P 500's value and a disproportionate share of the Nasdaq Composite's movements as of November 2025.[68][69]From 2023 to 2025, the Magnificent Seven delivered collective returns exceeding 200% cumulatively, far outpacing the S&P 500's approximately 83% gain over the same period, with individual performances driven by sector-specific innovations.[70]Nvidia led with over 1,200% growth since early 2023, fueled by AI hardware demand, while Microsoft and Amazon benefited from cloud computing expansions, and Meta from advertising recovery in social media.[71] Overall, the group achieved strong annual returns exceeding 75% in 2023 and 50% in 2024, propelled by advancements in artificial intelligence (AI), cloud services, e-commerce, and consumer electronics, contrasting with more modest broader market growth.[72] This performance has been selective, with AI-related catalysts like Nvidia's chip sales surging 56% year-over-year in Q2 2025 providing key momentum.[73]The Magnificent Seven builds on the earlier FAANG acronym (Facebook/Meta, Apple, Amazon, Netflix, Google/Alphabet), which emphasized internet and media giants from the 2010s, but expands to include Microsoft, Nvidia, and Tesla while excluding Netflix, shifting focus toward AI and electrification leaders.[62] This evolution reflects a broader tech landscape where AI integration, rather than just digital advertising and streaming, drives valuation, with the group contributing over 75% of the S&P 500's earnings growth in 2023-2024.[74]Criticisms center on potential overvaluation and market concentration risks, with debates intensifying in 2025 over an emerging AI bubble that could mirror the dot-com crash.[75] Analysts have raised concerns about unsustainable valuations, as the group's price-to-earnings ratios averaged above 40 by mid-2025, prompting warnings of diversification vulnerabilities if AI hype falters.[76] Their heavy weighting in indices like the Nasdaq amplifies systemic risks, where a downturn in these stocks could drag down broader portfolios, though proponents argue their earnings power—projected at 18% growth for 2025—supports long-term resilience.[77]
Rating 89% (47) A fun Western remake of Seven Samurai. The Magnificent Seven is entertaining and enduring as a classic western. It brings the desert small town setting life ...
Rating 5.5/10 (5,352) Return of the Seven: Directed by Burt Kennedy. With Yul Brynner, Robert Fuller, Julián Mateos, Warren Oates. Two survivors of the original Magnificent Seven ...Full cast & crew · Filming & production · User reviews · Plot
Rating 5.8/10 (3,636) Guns of the Magnificent Seven: Directed by Paul Wendkos. With George Kennedy, James Whitmore, Monte Markham, Reni Santoni. Gunslinger Chris Adams is hired ...
The Mirisch Company produced and UA distributed three sequels to the film: 1966's Return of the Seven (see below) starring Yul Brynner and Robert Fuller and ...
Rating 64% (315) Looking to mine for gold, greedy industrialist Bartholomew Bogue seizes control of the Old West town of Rose Creek.The Magnificent Seven · 315 Reviews · Cast and Crew · Video
The Magnificent Seven featured a legendary cast of up-and-coming actors, each of whom imbued his character with memorable traits. A patchwork production, the ...
By the time Bernstein composed the score for The Magnificent Seven in 1960, he had ... The only academy award nomination for the film went to Bernstein. As ...
THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN has a definite Mexican flavor. Did you do any research? Since very early in my career I've always been interested in folk music of my ...
Aug 21, 2017 · Music composed and conducted by by Elmer Bernstein. Orchestrations by Jack Hayes and Leo Shuken. Score produced by Elmer Bernstein. Album ...
In The Magnificent Seven the purpose of the music was primarily to increase excitement, but is also served in a quite specific way to provide pacing to a film.
Nov 24, 2016 · His rendition of the now-classic heroic theme, composed by Elmer Bernstein, from “The Magnificent Seven,” a 1960 film with Yul Brynner and Steve ...
Sandinista! December 12, 1980. Controversially released as a 'triple' on three ... The Clash to write the first ever UK rap record, The Magnificent Seven.
As sessions for Sandinista! started, The Clash needed a bassist to fill in while Simonon was away filming. Watt-Roy was present, and ended up writing the ...
Sep 23, 2016 · The score for director Antoine Fuqua's remake of the great western The Magnificent Seven, starring Denzel Washington, Chris Pratt, and Ethan Hawke.
Sep 22, 2016 · A team of friends a collaborators came together to create a score for "The Magnificent Seven" from late composer James Horner's treatment.
Rating 7.4/10 (2,147) When an Indian village is threatened by former Confederate soldiers, the villagers go in search of help. They recruit seven men, each with unique skills.
Rating 6/10 (14) The Magnificent Seven is an American western television series based on the 1960 movie, which is a remake of the Japanese film Seven Samurai.
Apr 28, 2024 · The Magnificent Seven premiered on CBS with an explosive two-part pilot that aired as a single made-for-TV film and ran for two seasons as a midseason ...
Rating 33% (6) Seven men - leader Chris, Vin, Nathan, Ezra, J.D., Buck and Josiah - protect a Western town from villains and outlaws while each deals with past mistakes ...
Aug 21, 2020 · This ep is especially notable for two of its guest stars: John Cho (who went on to play Sulu in the new Star Trek movies) and Brad Dourif (who ...
The Magnificent Seven was canceled by CBS after the 1997-1998 season, but was later renewed thanks to a large internet campaign to save the show. The ...<|control11|><|separator|>
Rating 7.6/10 (4,685) A small village gets raided by bandits every harvest season. The villagers can't take it anymore, and decide to recruit samurais to defend them in exchange ...
Rating 48% (22) This is the story of seven men, each with his own dark secret, who band together to become known as the Magnificent Seven. They learn from each other as ...
Dubbed the “Magnificent 7,” the women's team which competed at the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games lived up to the sobriquet by claiming the team gold medal.
Jul 15, 2021 · At the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, seven young women did what no Americans had done before: they won the gold medal in the gymnastics team ...
Jul 14, 2020 · By 1996, the Karolyis had become U.S. citizens and were preparing for the Atlanta Games with their own club athletes. But instead of training 18 ...
May 9, 2025 · Nicknamed “the Magnificent Seven”, the 1996 U.S. Olympic Women's Gymnastics Team was the first women's gymnastics team to win the gold medal ...
Led by Kerri Strug and Shannon Miller, the Magnificent Seven became the first U.S. Women's Gymnastics Team to win the team all-around gold medal in the ...
Jul 7, 2016 · “We were so young.” The images depict the gymnasts as time remembers them: a collective of pint-sized teenagers at the 1996 Games in Atlanta, ...
Jul 23, 2016 · Twenty years later, the Magnificent Seven reflects on their historic accomplishment at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta that forever brought them together.
Jul 12, 2016 · With 24 days to go until the Rio Olympics, TODAY's Natalie Morales sits down with Team USA's “Magnificent Seven” of the 1996 Olympics in ...
Shannon Miller had the top record of any American female gymnast, winning seven Olympic medals, and was the leader of the US team that won the team gold medal ...<|control11|><|separator|>
In The Magnificent Seven: College Basketball's Blue Bloods, Mark Mehler and Jeff Tiberii take a close look at those magnificent seven—Kentucky, Kansas, UCLA ...
Jun 18, 2025 · A book that highlights the history, tradition, and success of college basketball's "blue bloods": Duke, Kansas, UConn, North Carolina, Indiana, UCLA, and ...
May 19, 2020 · The 1982 NCAA tournament finished with North Carolina defeating Georgetown for the title, 63-62, for the Tar Heels' second championship ...
Nov 3, 2017 · A group of kids that came to be collectively known as The Magnificent Seven: Greg Wikelius, Luke Watson, Sean Graham, Pete Prince, Joe ...
Mar 8, 2016 · In the city of Avinger there is a group of athletes known as the "Magnificent Seven". "I really don't know who coined it but it's a great ...
The city's Magnificent Seven are private cemeteries built in the 19th century to help alleviate overcrowding in the capital's burial grounds.Missing: history descriptions preservation
Apr 20, 2016 · Built over a period of 10 years in the mid-19th century, the Magnificent Seven cemeteries are a group of seven large private cemeteries in London, England.Victorian Garden Cemeteries · Kensal Green Cemetery · Highgate Cemetery
Oct 27, 2020 · Graveyards and burials were a grim affair in Victorian London, they were so bad that women of the family never accompanied the coffin to its grave.2. West Norwood Cemetery... · 3. Highgate Cemetery (1839) · 4. Abney Park Cemetery...Missing: descriptions | Show results with:descriptions
Nov 21, 2023 · London's Magnificent Seven cemeteries were created across the UK capital between 1833-1841 to cope with overwhelmed smaller graveyards in ...Digging The Graves Of... · Seven Cemeteries · From The Natural To The...Missing: preservation | Show results with:preservation<|control11|><|separator|>
... Charles Dickens, who became a close friend and mentor. Some of Collins's works appeared first in Dickens's journals All the Year Round and Household Words ...
History · Vagliano's mausoleum in the Greek necropolis within West Norwood Cemetery · The tomb of James Gilbart, a Grade II listed structure in the cemetery.Site · History · Interments and memorials · Gallery
The history of Highgate Cemetery, one of London's Magnificent Seven and the site of the graves of Karl Marx, George Eliot, George Michael and Douglas Adams.The Famous Graveyard, And... · A Cemetery With A View · Design And Architecture
Dec 13, 2024 · This study focuses on London's Magnificent Seven cemeteries, which vary in habitat and usage, from semi-wild nature reserves to active burial sites.Cemeteries As Spaces For... · Methods · Discussion
Brompton Cemetery was opened in 1840 as the West of London and Westminster Cemetery. Its founder was the architect, inventor and entrepreneur Stephen Geary.Missing: total | Show results with:total
There are over 200,000 people laid to rest in Abney Park Cemetery, from world-famous names such as William Booth to relatively unsung heroes, such as Betsi ...
Many areas of the cemetery are fairly overgrown with vines, as visible in newer tourist photos. ... Investors in Death: the story of Nunhead Cemetery and the ...
Jul 11, 2024 · The City of London and Tower Hamlets Cemetery opened in 1841, set up for the purpose of profit-making as well as the sanitation and health of the City.
The City of London and Tower Hamlets Cemetery, known locally as Bow Cemetery, was built in 1841 as a garden cemetery. This meant it had a variety of landscapes, ...
The cemeteries are now recognised as havens for flora and fauna, and all the cemeteries are managed in accordance with conservation schemes. Species. Birds.Missing: preservation | Show results with:preservation
The Magnificent Seven stocks are a group of high-performing and influential companies in the U.S. stock market: Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Tesla, Meta Platforms, ...
In 2023, Bank of America analyst Michael Hartnett began using the phrase "Magnificent ... Oct. 31 closing price of $517.81. Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN). Amazon ...
Jan 4, 2025 · The automaker delivered 1.789 million vehicles in 2024, a 1.1 percent dip compared to the 1.808 million delivered in 2023. Tesla share prices sank 8 percent on ...
For the full year 2025, electric car sales are expected to increase by 25% globally, which is similar to the growth rate from the 2024. As a result, electric ...
Feb 2, 2024 · As the FAANG fervor subsided, a new group of tech giants emerged, known as the Magnificent 7 or Mag7. This coalition featured Tesla Inc (NASDAQ ...
Sep 7, 2025 · These firms, collectively known as the Magnificent Seven, are seen as especially well positioned to prosper from the AI revolution. That ...
Aug 29, 2025 · The “Magnificent Seven,” is composed of Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, Alphabet and Tesla. Combined they make up more than a third of ...
Jan 27, 2025 · For 2025, the Magnificent Seven are expected to post 18.0% growth versus 10.8% for the S&P 493. 2026 estimates paint a similar story— the ...