He was challenging Johnnie Ringo in a condescending way by offering his services. One of many explanations for the idiom is "A man; specifically, the exact kind of man needed for a particular purpose."
Doc Holliday.
It was "lunger," which was a derogatory slang term for a person with tuberculosis.
Doc Holliday was some what of an outlaw and had a reputation for being hot tempered. He didn't want to die of tuberculosis. When he looked at his feet in the movie Tombstone He said "Well I'll be damned" "Isn't this funny", because he always thought that he would die like a cowboy with his boots on.
Doc Holiday. " I'll be your Huckleberry".
Yes. Copyright protection would start from the date of creation.
Doc Holliday is a famous man from the historical Wild West, and dozens of films and books have included him as a major character. Some of the movies Holliday appears in include The Outlaw, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, and Tombstone.
The line "I'll be your Huckleberry" was famously said by the character Doc Holliday, played by Val Kilmer, in the movie "Tombstone" (1993). It has since become a popular phrase associated with loyalty and being up for a challenge.
DR. JOHN HENRY Holliday.
No. The 1993 Western -- starring Kurt Russell as Wyatt Earp and Val Kilmer as Doc Holliday -- wasn't nominated for any Academy Awards.
Doc Holliday was born on August 14, 1851.
Of course...it was made in Hollywood. This is called "continuity".AnswerAgreed, especially with the portrayal of Doc Holliday, who was in real life very quick-tempered and more likely to start a fight than to stop one, in contrast to the smooth and fatalistic Doc in the movie. Also, the movie has Doc is in Tombstone after winning big at poker, and he ridicules the game of faro. I read that in real life Doc had lost big on Faro and he went to Tombstone in an attempt to recoup his losings. Before being diagnosed with Tuberculosis, Holliday was studying to be a dentist, and he became a gambler when he realized that he was dying. Nothing is mentioned of it in the movie, as being a dentist would not have been "cool" enough for such a deadly gunsinger. BTW, I think it's called "artistic license" in Hollywood, and "continuity" is something else. Borrowing an idea that worked before is called "inspiration."
Doc Holliday's Revenge was released on 12/31/2014.