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Gunsmoke
S8.E26
All episodesAll
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IMDbPro

Anybody Can Kill a Marshal

  • Episode aired Mar 9, 1963
  • TV-PG
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
8.1/10
270
YOUR RATING
James Arness in Gunsmoke (1955)
Western

Two men want to rob the bank in Dodge, but are unwilling to try it while Matt lives. A man agrees to accept the job of killing the marshal, attaching some rather peculiar conditions to his a... Read allTwo men want to rob the bank in Dodge, but are unwilling to try it while Matt lives. A man agrees to accept the job of killing the marshal, attaching some rather peculiar conditions to his acceptance.Two men want to rob the bank in Dodge, but are unwilling to try it while Matt lives. A man agrees to accept the job of killing the marshal, attaching some rather peculiar conditions to his acceptance.

  • Director
    • Harry Harris
  • Writers
    • Kathleen Hite
    • Norman MacDonnell
    • John Meston
  • Stars
    • James Arness
    • Milburn Stone
    • Amanda Blake
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.1/10
    270
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Harry Harris
    • Writers
      • Kathleen Hite
      • Norman MacDonnell
      • John Meston
    • Stars
      • James Arness
      • Milburn Stone
      • Amanda Blake
    • 7User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos

    Top Cast32

    Edit
    James Arness
    James Arness
    • Matt Dillon
    Milburn Stone
    Milburn Stone
    • Doc
    Amanda Blake
    Amanda Blake
    • Kitty
    Burt Reynolds
    Burt Reynolds
    • Quint
    Milton Selzer
    Milton Selzer
    • Painter
    Joyce Van Patten
    Joyce Van Patten
    • Molly
    James Westerfield
    James Westerfield
    • Cleed
    Warren Stevens
    Warren Stevens
    • Lucas
    James Nusser
    James Nusser
    • Louie Pheeters
    Howard McNear
    Howard McNear
    • Howard
    Brenda Scott
    Brenda Scott
    • Betsy
    George Selk
    George Selk
    • Moss Grimmick
    Tom Lutz
    • Cowboy
    Danny Borzage
    • Townsman
    • (uncredited)
    Rudy Bowman
    Rudy Bowman
    • Townsman
    • (uncredited)
    Lane Bryant
    • Fighting Cowboy
    • (uncredited)
    Stephen Ellsworth
    • Bartender
    • (uncredited)
    Joe Ferrante
    • Townsman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Harry Harris
    • Writers
      • Kathleen Hite
      • Norman MacDonnell
      • John Meston
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews7

    8.1270
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    Featured reviews

    7AlsExGal

    What makes it good are the small scenes and touches

    Marshal Dillon is doing his rounds late one windy night, shaking door knobs in various alleys. Such a thing COULD get you shot by whoever is on the other side of that doorknob, but I digress. Then a figure comes out of the darkness and fires four shots at Dillon. He falls into some boxes but is OK and unwounded. Who was this shadowy figure? We find out it is Cleed, one of two drifters planning a bank robbery who figure said robbery will be easier if Dillon is dead. Cleed and Lucas go into town the next day to rob the bank, believing that Dillon is dead. Before they get to the bank, they see Dillon walking around alive and well. They go into a nearby bar that is more like a dive and try to replan their heist. A man who has seen better days (Milton Selzer as Painter) overhears them and offers to kill Dillon for them for 200 dollars upfront. They pay him, and he agrees to do the job the next day. But Painter appears to be a drunk not a gunfighter. Our two criminal masterminds are not Rhodes scholars, but still, this is pretty desperate on their part. In the meantime Painter does some things that make you realize that he believes that this is his last night on earth.

    What was good in this episode to me was a revealing scene between Kitty and Matt. The day after Matt is shot at she marches angrily toward Matt's office and tells him "You make me sick!". What transpires is a conversation in which Matt admits something that has only been on the tip of his tongue. That they have a relationship- "this thing" he calls it - and mentions that she has always known the danger of his profession.
    10birdgoog

    Read someone else's review

    So i've seen this episode before but this time i think i reeeally paid attention. LOVED the entire story, LOVED the ending. lol sadly i'm not as refined and cultured as my fellow commenters so dunno who did the music, dunno why it was so special. Well, because i simply don't care. But don't get me wrong, if someone else wants to take the time researching these things i'm happy to read all about it. i'm just lazy, not so much stupid. For information like that and much more, i suggest yinz check out the user review from @drmality-1. After perusing all of the other reviews, this was the most informative yet still enjoyable input on this episode. Just a suggestion.
    8grizzledgeezer

    Is that guy following me?

    Just saw this for the first time. It's surprising it doesn't show up on "best episodes" lists. But the same could be said for a lot of other episodes. It's off-kilter (the bad guys wondering out loud whether Marshal Dillon is actually killable), with an "uneasy" ending. I won't spoil it.

    Besides the somewhat unusual story, several other things stand out. One is a rarity among the hundreds of thousands of motion pictures and TV shows made in the entire history of the world -- a lightning flash //is not// accompanied by thunder, which occurs several seconds later.

    Another is Howard McNear's quirky turn as Wilbur Jonas' assistant. McNear (Doc Adams in the radio version) played this role several times, presumably because Dabbs Greer wasn't available.

    The last is the music editor's selection of Bernard Herrmann's music from an early Twilight Zone episode. It's out of place in a Western (not just the music itself, but the vibraphone), which is probably why it's so effective.
    7lrrap

    A Script that Never Finds it's Groove.

    Lots of interesting things in this episode, but alas, it's further proof that Gunsmoke's stellar team of writer Hite and director Harris was only human (just like Matt Dillon).

    The entire "Dillon must be Invulnerable" thing is pretty contrived, with too much time spent on the wearisome, repetitive dialogue between Warren Stevens and his chunky, booze-chuggin' pal James Westerfield. After a while, this business just seemed to go nowhere-- ESPECIALLY at the end, when one of them inexplicably escapes justice (they had, after all, conspired to kill a U.S. Marshall).

    In the middle of it all is Milton Selzer ("Painter"), whose story is definitely more interesting; however, the two conspiratorial thugs, with their incessant "there's GOTTA be a way to kill that Marshall" routine keep intruding, resulting in a 50-minute drama that seems unbalanced....AND unfulfilling.

    And even though the show's plot would have been much more predictable, it would have been MUCH MORE EFFECTIVE if Matt's ride out to meet the lame young lady had been the FINAL SCENE, thereby making the oddball character of Painter and his "mission"-- to use the money for a noble cause at the inevitable cost of his own life---the main focus; this would have assigned the two screwball characters to secondary importance. But Painter's altruistic motif with the money is essentially tossed aside in the plot.

    It just doesn't feel right...as if we're watching the first/rough draft of Ms. Hite's script.

    A few more observations:

    1.) The highly-praised "Woman's Perspective" of writer Kathleen Hite comes on with a vengeance in the early scene with Matt and Kitty; JEEEESH, ladies; back off a bit! Talk about frustration...

    2.) In a dark, moody show like this, one must question the decision to cast Howard McNear when he was currently EMBLAZONED in the consciousness of TV America as Mayberry's resident tonsorial nut-case (ie: The Andy Griffith Show).

    3.) Yes, lots of Bernard Herrmann's brooding musical cues from Twilight Zone's "Where Is Everybody".

    4.) Nice change of pace at the end, as Matt doesn't exactly ride off into the sunset---but instead slogs off on foot in a soaking rainstorm (with no musical underscore). -- Hey, Matt--why not at least walk on the sidewalk platform, under the wooden awnings? Next thing you know, you'll catch a nasty cold, and Miss Kitty will be CHEWIN' YER A____ OFF AGAIN.

    LR
    10stilichobias

    Is Matt Dillon Human?

    This is a fascinating episode of Gunsmoke and also one of the very best. And Kathleen Hite's plot is what makes it a cut above. Simply put, she introduces the idea that Matt Dillon may not actually be a human being. In this episode he inexplicably survives two point-blank assassination attempts, the first without a scratch. And his first would-be assassin, an outlaw named Clede, becomes convinced that Dillon is an immortal supernatural presence.

    This is not as kooky as it may seem. Although Dillon is frequently wounded in the series and is sometimes ill, he does not die and at times really does appear to be some sort of Greek god in a cowboy hat. I do not know but suspect that Clint Eastwood's supernatural Western figures, the High Plains Drifter and the Pale Rider, may have been inspired, at least subconsciously, by this episode. At any rate, hats off to Hite, who was getting better and better as a writer, and to Milton Selzer, who is marvelous as a transmundane hitman.

    Related interests

    John Wayne and Harry Carey Jr. in The Searchers (1956)
    Western

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Pretty Prairie, Kansas is about 125 miles from Dodge
    • Goofs
      Around the 15-minute mark - when Howard Rudd becomes apprehensive concerning Painter's "needs" - Painter takes a 50 dollar bill out of his top left pocket, places it on the table, and says, "Can we get started?" Only the reverse of the bill is seen, with the U.S. Capitol clearly displayed. This image was placed on the small size note series beginning in 1929. Since the words "In God We Trust" are not displayed, this specific tender would have been issued before 1956.
    • Soundtracks
      The Old Trail
      by Rex Koury and Glenn Spencer

      Aspen Fair Music, Incorporated (ASCAP)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 9, 1963 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Arness Production Company
      • Arness Production Company
      • CBS Television Network
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1
      • 4:3

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