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re: They went thataway, so let's go thisaway: the TV Western thread
Posted on 10/17/22 at 7:11 pm to Kafka
Posted on 10/17/22 at 7:11 pm to Kafka
LINK ]Tombstone Territory - "A Bullet for An Editor"
Directed by Walter Doniger
Written by Leo Gordon
S1 E5
Nov 13, 1957
A fancy dude gambler arrives from New Orleans and is accused of cheating. Soon he's scheduling duels against Editor Claibourne and even Sheriff Hollister himself.
An episode notable for the detail it gives on the Code Duello and the tactics of dueling. Written by tough guy character actor Leo Gordon.
FWIW actor Richard Eastham (The Editor Claibourne) was from Opelousas.

Posted on 11/10/22 at 12:25 am to Kafka
Richard Eastham played a rough customer on countless old westerns It's amazing how many different shows he was on to play essentially the same role. He was good at it.
Posted on 12/16/22 at 2:05 pm to windmill
LINK ]The Rebel - "The Bequest"
Directed by Irvin Kershner
Written by Albert Aley
S2 E2
Sep 25, 1960
Johnny Yuma returns to his home town and considers planting roots there. But when a down-on-his-luck miner asks him to help his desperate family, Johnny gets involved in a scheme that sets the whole town against him.
More sagebrush alienation -- the ending, with Johnny keeping the secret, is a majority-of-one classic.
Features guest stars Elisha Cook (Wilmer the Gunsel in The Maltese Falcon) and John Carradine

Posted on 12/16/22 at 10:03 pm to Kafka
quote:
The Second Hundred Years was what was called a "high-concept" show—one which was based on circumstances which were extremely unlikely to occur in real life. The concept here was that one Lucius "Luke" Carpenter (Monte Markham) had left for Alaska in 1900 as part of a gold rush, but soon after his arrival was buried in a glacial avalanche. His burial was evidently so complete and so rapid that he survived in a state of suspended animation for 67 years. He was then thawed out and soon brought to the home of his now-elderly son, Edwin (Arthur O'Connell), a land developer in Woodland Oaks, California.
In the pilot episode, a heavily bandaged Luke awakens in Edwin's house and thinks Edwin is a gold robber. After removing his bandages, a bearded Luke dons his prospector's outfit and grabs his rifle in an attempt to find the sheriff to report the robber, but accidentally turns on a TV, which is playing a western. Luke comments "There's a midget in a box challenging me to a duel" and attacks the TV set. Outdoors, Luke, thinking he is in turn-of-the-century Fairbanks, is confused and scared by automobiles, as well as people's strange fashions. Accidentally pointing a rifle at a woman gets the attention of the police, who return him to Edwin. Starting to grasp what has happened, Luke decides to assimilate to 1967 California by shaving off his beard and wearing more modern clothes, which makes him look very much like his grandson Ken (also played by Markham). After some confusion, Luke decides it is best not to burden his family and strikes out on his own by taking a train to San Francisco, but is stopped by Edwin, who convinces his father to live with him and they will take a flight to San Francisco in order to help show that Luke has been given a unique gift, a chance to see the fruits of his generation's sacrifices through the advances of the latter 20th Century. The Army officer who oversaw Luke's unfreezing holds Luke, Edwin and Ken to a state secrecy act, as the Army does not wish for this to be public until the medical corps can fully comprehend why Luke survived. When told the order came from the top, Luke responds "if President McKinley says so it is good enough for me!"
The humor centered around how Luke was younger, both in appearance and attitude, than both his son, who was 67 (referenced in the pilot), but also his grandson Ken, who at 33 was the exact age at which Luke had disappeared and been preserved, and who was a near double for his grandfather (not surprising, as both characters were portrayed by Markham). Difficulty adjusting to all of the technology of the modern era aside, Luke, who was an affable, light-hearted sort, was in some ways more at home in his new world than Edwin. Other times it would play on how both men had buttoned-down ways, but how Luke is treated differently than Edwin for it, such as when Luke considers remarrying and courts a young woman by taking her out on a date in a horse and buggy, to which he is treated as an old-fashioned romantic.
Posted on 3/25/23 at 2:04 pm to Jim Rockford
From the TV special ABC's 25th Anniversary in 1978
Can you name them all?

Can you name them all?

Posted on 3/26/23 at 6:44 am to Kafka
They aged. All but the 2 on the right.
Posted on 3/26/23 at 4:17 pm to mauser
quote:
All but two on the right.
Michael Ansara and Jack Kelly (Bart Maverick).
Posted on 3/26/23 at 4:59 pm to beachdude
Variety predicts an early demise for a new western TV series (1959)


Posted on 9/7/23 at 6:53 pm to Kafka
LINK ]Wagon Train - "The Weight Of Command"
With Indians on the warpath Major Adams must make some tough decisions: will he sacrifice two men to save the rest of the train?
Directed by Herschel Daugherty
Written by
Harold Swanton
Jan 25, 1961
One of the very best WT episodes. The big Adams-Bill Hawks confrontation scene is one of the high spots of the entire series.
This was one of Ward Bond's last episodes. He died about 2 1/2 months before it aired.
With Indians on the warpath Major Adams must make some tough decisions: will he sacrifice two men to save the rest of the train?
Directed by Herschel Daugherty
Written by
Harold Swanton
Jan 25, 1961
One of the very best WT episodes. The big Adams-Bill Hawks confrontation scene is one of the high spots of the entire series.
This was one of Ward Bond's last episodes. He died about 2 1/2 months before it aired.
Posted on 3/10/24 at 7:43 pm to Kafka
Memo sent by Gunsmoke producer John Mantley concerning use of firearms


Posted on 3/10/24 at 8:38 pm to Kafka
Gunsmoke is my all time favorite. Have been through all the episodes many times.
In one of the earliest episodes, during a shootout,an electrical outlet is clearly seen on the front wall of a building. But that’s okay.
In one of the earliest episodes, during a shootout,an electrical outlet is clearly seen on the front wall of a building. But that’s okay.
Posted on 3/10/24 at 10:17 pm to 9rocket
quote:Tire tracks, plane trails can often be seen in these shows. In the famous pull back shot of High Noon (showing how alone Gary Cooper is in the deserted street) you see telephone poles at the top of the screen
In one of the earliest episodes, during a shootout,an electrical outlet is clearly seen on the front wall of a building.
I recently watched an episode of Daniel Boone (set in the late 1700s) where someone said "OK"
And the Hondo TV series once showed a yo-yo, which did not cone to America until the US occupied the Philippines after the Spanish American War.
Posted on 9/22/24 at 7:00 pm to Kafka
On this day in 1957, a stranger moseyed into town...


Posted on 10/6/24 at 7:39 pm to Kafka
"WAKE 'EM UP... MOVE 'EM OUT!"

Posted on 10/7/24 at 7:39 pm to Kafka
Trade ad taken by Warner Bros to sell its westerns in syndication (1963)


Posted on 10/7/24 at 10:21 pm to Kafka
The Virginian is worth watching just for the opening scene and music alone.
Then the 90 minute drama is equally good. Multiple story lines well told.
Then the 90 minute drama is equally good. Multiple story lines well told.
Posted on 10/8/24 at 7:50 pm to Kafka
Have Gun-Will Travel has recently become one of my favorite shows.
Posted on 12/19/24 at 6:06 pm to charlesmartinmike
Bret Maverick at a temporary disadvantage with a lady

Posted on 12/20/24 at 2:05 pm to Kafka
quote:
I'm not the world's biggest Bonanza fan -- it had too much soap opera, and Michael Landon gets on my nerves. This is probably my favorite episode (supposedly Pernell Roberts' favorite as well), with an intriguing premise and the great Lee Marvin at his Lee Marvinest.
Home in bed sick and randomly watched this one yesterday. The old man drove him nuts. That was an incredibly well done episode.
The wife isn't fond of me watching old westerns because it reminds her of her dad staying with us while on hospice. For me it reminds me of shelling peas with my grandmother.
I was tasked one time with watching papaw and he had messed up a 6 hour youtube western. It took me 30 minutes to find the exact moment he had left off from lol
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