There's bound to be more than one.... the first one which comes to mind for me is For a Few Dollars More, in which Clint Eastwood's character ("the man with no name"), refers to Lee Van Cleef's character (Colonel Douglas Mortimer) as "Old Man", rather than calling him by name.
"Every son" is an old Western slang for "every man" or "everyone."
Not from a western. The music is from the end credits of the movie "Stripes" released in 1981. It was directed by Ivan Reitman, and starred Bill Murray among others. Music By Elmer Bernstein.
The author compares the thickness of the old man's fishing line to the hair of a woman.
The author compares the thickness of the old man's fishing line to the strands of a spider's web.
He is 24-years-old. It says so in the movie!
Showboat. And it's not black & white; it's a colour movie musical.
In "The Old Man and the Sea," the fish lurches because it is trying to break free from the fishing line attached to it. The fish is caught by the old man after a long and arduous battle, demonstrating the struggle between man and nature.
The old man you see in the beginning of the 2004 movie of The Phantom of the Opera is Raoul, decades after the phantom ordeal.
The old man was very slow to move to the starting line
The Great Train Robbery was the movie where an old man and a young boy steals an old steam train to give it to a rail museum. There is also a young girl in the movie who helps them.
According to some old western movies, the Indians called the white man 'pale face'.
Waking Ned