GUNSMOKE

Snarky Oracle!

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Despite the occasional stand-out episode like "The Jailer" (with Bette Davis) and "The Well" (about a drought on Dodge City), it's no wonder that GUNSMOKE was cancelled in 1967 for the second of three times after a ratings drop at the end of Season 12 (it plummeted to 35th place, the lowest-rated year of the entire series). Despite the switch to color, most of Season 12 is a blur of the same-looking villains in a blur of the same-looking plots, all set to a barrage of generic western music scores, and a heaviness that's tiring to sit through.

With the surprise renewal for Season 13, executive producer Philip Leacock is out (he goes off to produce a 90-minute western for Stuart Whitman called CIMARRON STRIP) and John Mantley ascends to the top producer position and soon hires Joseph Dackow as line producer. The result is that Leacock's style of drably mythical bigness is dampened slightly and replaced with something that feels less sluggishly repetitive.

But with Dackow's death just before the end of Season 16 in 1971, DALLAS' Leonard Katzman takes over line producer duties, and the program improves even further. People who think GUNSMOKE ran too long and believe it shouldn't have gotten into the 1970s are either nuts or they never saw the last half-decade of the show. Under the auspices of Katzman, the series becomes warmer, cleaner and more clearly-defined, the music more interesting. It's all just more engaging.

I just saw a Season 18 episode entitled "Tatum" with Gene Evans as a crusty hired gun, mauled in the first scene by a bear threatening his native American wife, his injuries terminal. Taken to Dodge City to receive his negative prognosis by Doc Adams, surly Tatum finds his three daughters have arrived in town in anticipation of his inevitable demise -- one is clinically depressed, another a plain and dour spinster, and the third appears to have transformed herself into a saloon-based hooker (whom he encourages to not fear letting a man put his hands on her -- something it would appear wasn't a problem for her). But these three women have one thing in common: they all hate Daddy for how his career affected their family and, in the end, killed their mother... He wants to be buried in Spearville, Kansas, a few miles to the east of Dodge, beside the remains of his first wife, but the townfolk won't make it easy, as he's hated by them, too. And his daughters scoff at his interment choices and the idea of accompanying him on the trip (a chore complicated by the fact his youngest, mousy offspring is betrothed to the sheriff there).

Tatum's Indian wife gives a noble speech, and everyone is properly humbled.

Set to an elegiacal score that only Richard Shores could compose, the episode is so crisp in its high-resolution, it looks like it was filmed yesterday (one benefit of the advent of streaming, where GUNSMOKE is doing shockingly well, especially for a 50- to 70-year-old show). Absurdly, however, "Spearville" is ensconced by mountains, Saguaro cacti, and the Coronado National Forest (i.e., gorgeous Tucson, Arizona) when, in real life, Spearville is surrounded by a flat-as-a-pancake terrain for several hundred miles in every direction. (Why not change the script to some hamlet to the southwest?). But this is a manifestation of Dodge City's Any-Western-Town persona on GUNSMOKE where Kansas is Any-Western-State: the landscape just out of the city generally looks nothing like that of western-and-central Kansas whatsoever.

Isn't this the same role Gene Evans played on DALLAS?

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Next up: THE BROTHERS, as homicidal Steve Forrest (in one of several guest appearances) goes gunning for whomever killed his sibling, a wanted felon, at a nearby waystation -- one of whom is none other than Miss Kitty. (Original Music by John Parker -- remember him??)

Parmalee porn:
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Snarky Oracle!

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Season 18's "Hostage!" (the second GUNSMOKE episode to feature that title) offers us scary brute Jude Bonner (William Smith) who kidnaps Miss Kitty in order to force Marshal Dillon to obtain a stay of execution for his brother, sentenced to hang by the noose for murder. Manhandled as she never has been before, Kitty is beaten, "abused," and then shot in the street of Dodge City and left for dead once Matt fails to convince the election-sensitive Kansas governor to free Bonner's kinfolk.

Well, she did slap the hell out of him.

With Miss Kitty near death, Marshal Dillon turns in his badge and rides out with vengeful blood in his eye, Matt has a fab fistfight with Jude Bonner and almost smashes Bonner's brain with a giant rock. (Next season, in a rare moment of continuity, Punk Anderson is father to Abby Cunningham and is compelled to avenge his own wife's murder. When Matt tells Punk not to do it, Punk points out that "last year" Matt himself went gunning for the man who'd mistreated his woman. Matt concedes, "Yes, I did that and I was wrong!," to which Punk responds, as only Morgan Woodward can, "And I wouldn't o' spit in your eye if you hadn't!")

Partially original score by Elmer Bernstein (supplemented by stock cues, for those keeping score).

It's all very harrowing. But this episode had a negatively fortuitous impact on GUNSMOKE long-term: two years later, Kitty was set to be similarly mistreated in the Season 20 two-parter, THE GUNS OF CIBOLA BLANCA. And Amanda Blake refused. Kitty has been roughed-up many times during the course of the series, but the actress felt that this same extreme level of desecration so soon after the previous episode was exploitative.

This led to an, "I-quit!"/"No-you-can't-quit-you're-fired!" scenario that saw Blake exit GUNSMOKE before Season 20 commenced. (She admitted she'd gotten fussy during Season 19, and executive producer John Mantley reportedly didn't like her -- well, two Scorpio Risings -- even though everybody else on the set did).

It wasn't to the program's benefit. The first half of Season 20 was pretty gosh-darned good, but with Blake's absence and Leonard Katzman leaving midway through the year to go produce PETROCELLI, the last half of that season dragged, became too dark and too ponderous too consistently, and ratings drooped... The numbers were still good enough to keep most shows on the air, but the series' aging demographics (Jim Arness called that "horsefeathers!") had CBS hot to chop GUNSMOKE on the block.

And the western was cancelled for a third and final time in 1975.

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Snarky Oracle!

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Just watched a 1958 GUNSMOKE with Strother Martin where he plays a hapless goofball pawn convinced he's committed murder. He comes off like young Truman Capote.

16 years later, he does a terrific two-parter, "Island in the Desert," where he plays a crazed desert hermit. And he comes off as an old Truman Capote. (Martin says the "Island in the Desert" role was his favorite of his career). Original music score by Jerrold Immel. Filmed in Glen Canyon, Utah.

Hutch McKinney is trying to kill him. Or Festus. I forget.

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Chris2

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Snarky, where are you watching that the picture is so crisp and clear? My experience with the color Gunsmokes in syndication is that they always look faded and drab.
 

Snarky Oracle!

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Snarky, where are you watching that the picture is so crisp and clear? My experience with the color Gunsmokes in syndication is that they always look faded and drab.

Not so much now. They've been remastered (presumably for streaming, where the show is doing amazingly well).
 

Snarky Oracle!

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This W.E.S.T. channel runs GUNSMOKE for 8 hours -- eight episodes -- every Sunday. Missed some of them today (unlike last week, when I was left bleary-eyed after watching the thing all damned day long).

Season 18's "A Quiet Day in Dodge" is one of the rare comic episodes of the series (and a lot better than all those crap "funny" installments that BONANZA dished out over the years as pointless filler). It focuses on Matt's return home from being on the road, bringing in a prisoner, and no sleep for 48 hours. Naturally, no one will give Marshal Dillon any chance to rest, a series of banal interruptions preventing his nappy-nap time, driving Matt to exasperation... (By reputation Arness was a terribly witty man, something one never gets to see on the show itself, but he plays the humor in an understated way which works well). Meanwhile, Miss Kitty is trying to get laid and invites the marshal to a homemade dinner in her Long Branch boudoir -- when he falls asleep, fully clothed, on her bed, she drops a tureen of soup or gravy or bouillabaisse or somethin' onto the floor of her room, but Matt's snoring is too deep to be disrupted. So Kitty goes downstairs, and before she can wander out into the streets after dark, bartender Sam warns his employer that she might "get molested." To which she responds contemptuously, "Really...?," and strolls out into the night.

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Then there's Season 18's "Whelan's Men" which highlights a strategic card game in the saloon between Miss Kitty and a gang of thugs, her intention being to save Matt, out of town and headed home, from the man determined to face the marshal down and kill him... The episode is tailor made for Amanda Blake style of dry sarcasm... And a nubile Harrison Ford pops up!.. It's not the first episode where Kitty cleverly tries to psych-out a villain who lays in wait for Dillon due back in Dodge any hour now ("Mannon," with Steve Forrest, comes to mind in Season 14 in 1968).

And the prints are so vivid, I'd think they were filmed this morning. Except everybody's dead, so it's impossible.

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Snarky Oracle!

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During his 400 "you-kilt-mah-woomahn!" episodes Morgan Woodward did for GUNSMOKE, he played daddy to Joan van Ark in "Stryker" (in Season 15) and daddy to Donna Mills in "A Game of Death... An Act of Love" Parts 1 & 2 (Season 19). Both scores by John Parker.

What would Mavis say if she learned Punk had fathered both Abby and Valene??

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