The adventures of the inhabitants of a western town that straddles the Canadian-American border.The adventures of the inhabitants of a western town that straddles the Canadian-American border.The adventures of the inhabitants of a western town that straddles the Canadian-American border.
- Awards
- 9 nominations total
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Take into consideration the era in which this series was filmed (almost two decades after the 'demise' of the western). It was a solid series, good characters, nice plots. The scripts were the like of Gunsmoke and Bonanza with bits of The Virginian, Laramie and Cimmaron Strip. No sex, nudity and very little vulgarity -- family friendly entertainment. I have managed to put together 4-5 tapes full of these episodes.
There's not much I can add to all the great comments here. Bordertown and The Campbells are two of my favorite television memories from the 80's, and I enjoyed them a lot more than half the stuff that's on today. It's impossible to find information on either show on the net, and I'm so glad I stumbled onto this site. Keep your fingers crossed, everyone, and maybe we'll be watching the marshal and the mountie on DVD someday soon.
Richard Comar, Sophie Barjac, and John H. Brennan have all three gained significant places in my memory of THE absolute best western series
ever to grace the television screen. Too bad no network has scheduled the show for syndicated re-runs. It would definitely be a moneymaker. Bordertown not only had beautiful Canadian scenery, but intelligent content as well. It was warm, humorous, and habit-forming. I rarely missed a show and even wrote and submitted screenplay for an episode. Unfortunately, by the time my manuscript reached Stuart Gillard, the
series had already been cancelled. What a shame. Gunsmoke had the
distinction of being the longest-running series in television history. Bordertown deserves at least as much. It was clean, moral, and
uplifting. Movers and shakers probably will never see this review, but at least I've had my say.
ever to grace the television screen. Too bad no network has scheduled the show for syndicated re-runs. It would definitely be a moneymaker. Bordertown not only had beautiful Canadian scenery, but intelligent content as well. It was warm, humorous, and habit-forming. I rarely missed a show and even wrote and submitted screenplay for an episode. Unfortunately, by the time my manuscript reached Stuart Gillard, the
series had already been cancelled. What a shame. Gunsmoke had the
distinction of being the longest-running series in television history. Bordertown deserves at least as much. It was clean, moral, and
uplifting. Movers and shakers probably will never see this review, but at least I've had my say.
Spent several hours trying to find this today. Thought maybe I was losing my mind. I loved this show too! I watched it when I was 12-14 and watched it religiously. Just an amusing, more wholesome type show! Glad to have found the info again as I thought I might be crazy.
My name is Wyatt Orr. I played Bruno Danzinger on this series for 2 years. It is nice to hear such great comments! It was a fun show to work on and certainly one of the best times of my life. Looking forward to future comments.........Wyatt.
Did you know
- SoundtracksSymphony No. 3 in C. Op. 52
[adapted for series theme]
Written by Jean Sibelius
Published by Sodrac and Amra
- How many seasons does Bordertown have?Powered by Alexa
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