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The high chaparral was my favorite. It seemed more believable than most. Anybody remember the High Chaparral?
I started watching it in the late 80's and catch an episode once in a while around here. Hope to see more often.
Follow Ups:
the original half hour episodes of Gunsmoke.
Who could forget Chester gimping along the main street of Dodge City yelling,"Mr Dillon Mr.Dillon" when the shit hits the fan.Like it allways did.And Mr.Dillon allways gunning down the bad guy.
Have a crappy day
YECH
Have Gun Will Travel - (well conceived, executed and highly original; very adult for it's time)The Legend of Briscoe County Jr. - (very clever, totally over the top without seeming campy or silly)
Rawhide - (great plots in an hour long format which was rare in the 50's; Clint Eastwood's break-out role)
Maverick - (excellent hour long tongue 'n cheek western, with a great sense of irony; wonderful humor)
Second Tier:
Deadwood - (This one has my attention, but the obscenities seem less realistic than the rest of the language & settings)
Wanted Dead or Alive (plots are okay, but not as consistently good as Have gun; it does have Steve McQueen in his break-out role)
The Rifleman - (great show, but not one of my first choices; too much pull-at-the-heartstrings, family angst stuff; not enough action)
Cheyenne - (haven't seen these in years, but my recollection is that this series was very well scripted and acted)
Gunsmoke - (early B&W years w/Dennis Weaver as Chester; this series seems to have worked best as a 30 minute morality play, losing a lot when the drama was extended to an hour's length)
Most disliked Western [with apologies toKT88]:
The Wild, Wild, West - This started out as a clever albeit semi-serious western, but quickly turned to a campy caricature of itself mid-way through it's first season. Also, when it switched from B&W to color the production values got noticeably worse as did the scripting (budget cuts?). One sign of a 60's vintage series in trouble is the tendency toward bringing in noteable guest cameos to try bolstering sagging ratings; as I recall, this series along with the once great spy drama The Man from U.N.C.L.E suffered greatly from corny guest cameos near the end of it's run.
Some of these opinions is based on recollections dating back decades, especially for series like Wild, Wild West. No offense is intended; everyone's mileage varies.
I appreciate your post greatly! How nice to read.
Glad to have found a big piece of what I was looking for.
With all the interesting information I noticed that you did not rate the "High Chaparral"
wish I still had my gunsmoke lunchbox.Link to the "High Chaparral"
two that have already been mentioned:
"The Rifleman" & "Wanted Dead or Alive"
All westerns were pretty poorly done IMO and had low budgets. We are talking about a free TV program that ran during the daylight hours as I remember them. I would watch these shows as a kid when the weather was too nasty to go outside and play. Very tame by the standards of today, even for the wild west!
-Bill
There were quite a few Saturday morning westerns aimed at kids during the 1950's (Sky King, My Friend Flicka, Cisco Kid, Lone Ranger, etc.), but after the initial success of Gunsmoke most western series (Have Gun Will Travel, Wanted Dead or Alive, Bat Masterson, Rifleman, Cheyenne, Maverick, Yancy Derringer, The Virginian, Bonanza, etc., etc., etc.) targeted adults and were prime time fare.You're absolutely right about the low budgets, but it seems like most shows back then were cheaply made regardless of genre. As for when you saw them as a kid (as did I), well, some of the more sophisticated prime time westerns were probably shown earlier when rerun in local markets, unless of course they had been syndicated, as opposed to network produced, to begin with.
If your recollections are different, please correct mine.
I just remember watching these during the day like perhaps Saturday morning or weekday afternoons as an alternative to soap operas(gag). I was maybe six or seven and this was the early 70's. We probably got three channels via VHF and two via UHF. Slim Pickin's to watch back then (hey, he was on the "Grand ole Opry" or "Hee, Haw!" wasn't he?).
-Bill
"Hee Haw", of course! I have the note verifying that right here next to my heart...heart...heart...heart! (Slim's fans know EXACTLY where his heart is!)A shame about how he (and his wife?) died, murdered for money they didn't even have.
The shows you are talking about were originally produced for prime time. They shot something like 46 episodes of "The Rifleman" for that first season! But the combination of ratings success and low budgets made TV westerns irresistible for TV producers in the Fifties and Sixties and early Seventies.
Oh my God! I just realized I had confused beloved country comedian Stringbean with nuclear warhead rider Slim Pickens! They even looked completely different!
I could not remember which was which either. Slim Pickens has played in way more movies than I could have imagined. It was indeed "Stringbean" who I had in mind.
-Bill
Sort of like a James Bond in a stagecoach...
-Bill
hands down
I havnt seen it. Sounds interesting. Thank you!
NT
Music is Emotion
r
NT
They called him Bat, Bat Masterson.
Gene Barry
I can still remember seeing episodes of this...and finding out years later that Sam Peckinpah created the series and wrote and/or directed my favorite episodes. There was a weird tension there that was really scary for a black-and-white western series.I also enjoyed "Wanted Dead or Alive" with Steve McQueen and "Have Gun Will Travel" with Richard Boone...I love the so-called "gimmick" TV westerns of the late Fifties!
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