Chester is getting home-cooked meals from, and giving guitar lessons to, a spirited young woman who hopes thereby to make her estranged sweetheart jealous.Chester is getting home-cooked meals from, and giving guitar lessons to, a spirited young woman who hopes thereby to make her estranged sweetheart jealous.Chester is getting home-cooked meals from, and giving guitar lessons to, a spirited young woman who hopes thereby to make her estranged sweetheart jealous.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Photos
Bob Gravage
- Wit
- (as Robert Gravage)
John Breen
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
Rudy Doucette
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Jaye Durkus
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Someone turn the TV off when this one is over
With many great scripts in this 7th season I knew it was about time for a clunker. And in this offering we hit the bottom of the barrel with full force.
In order to sum up this episode little has to be told since there was little material that even sparked an interest in watching. A spoiled brat of a young woman named Kate is upset at her boyfriend, Bud Bones, for what she feels is not being treated correctly. So with intentions of making him jealous, she starts asking other boys to come courting.
Bud don't take kindly to having his woman courted by other men so he tend to harass them. In an almost childish way, he either dumps them in the horse trough or ties them up to an old cow and parades them down main street. None of which is humorous or of any interest to the viewer.
Bud then gets so mad that he joins the army. And like a fairy tale being written, Private Bud saves his men from a near slaughter by the Indians.
What is left of the cavalry rides back to Fort Dodge. During the trip they happen up on Kate Tassel while going through Dodge City. And without giving the endings away- just think of the most silliest way for this show to end and you will be correct.
A poor script with poor results.
In order to sum up this episode little has to be told since there was little material that even sparked an interest in watching. A spoiled brat of a young woman named Kate is upset at her boyfriend, Bud Bones, for what she feels is not being treated correctly. So with intentions of making him jealous, she starts asking other boys to come courting.
Bud don't take kindly to having his woman courted by other men so he tend to harass them. In an almost childish way, he either dumps them in the horse trough or ties them up to an old cow and parades them down main street. None of which is humorous or of any interest to the viewer.
Bud then gets so mad that he joins the army. And like a fairy tale being written, Private Bud saves his men from a near slaughter by the Indians.
What is left of the cavalry rides back to Fort Dodge. During the trip they happen up on Kate Tassel while going through Dodge City. And without giving the endings away- just think of the most silliest way for this show to end and you will be correct.
A poor script with poor results.
Fave episodes in order this ranks 635
This was goofy for Gunsmoke.
No fan of Dick Sergent on any program ever, so this made a very goofy episode unwatchable.
If you don't value your time then this one is fine for you.
No fan of Dick Sergent on any program ever, so this made a very goofy episode unwatchable.
If you don't value your time then this one is fine for you.
Stupid
Since when did "Gunsmoke" become a so-called comedy? This episode is dreadful, even worse than "Bonanza" supposed comedies. Terrible acting and story. Hard to believe this is from the "Gunsmoke" series. I suggest you don't waste your time on this.
"Legend of Sleepy Hollow" meets "Taming of the Shrew" -- sort of.
"Catawomper" might not be //the worst// "Gunsmoke" episode, but it's down there at the bottom of the barrel. (There's at least one "worst of" list, but "Catawomper" doesn't appear on it.)
I assume most viewers know enough about literature to be aware that the principal characters -- Kate Tassel and Bud Bones -- are named after the principals of "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" -- Katrina van Tassel and Brom Bones. (Chester apparently represents Ichabod Crane.) Their relationship is reversed, however, with Bud trying to capture the heart of Kate, and her refusing to warm up to him. ("Taming of the Shrew" comes to mind when he spanks her in public.)
The script is absolutely wretched, the sort Robert McKee could use as a prime example of //how not// to tell a story. Indeed, there's very little story. Kate's motivations aren't at all clear, so we have no idea why she does what she does. Things simply "happen", mechanically and meaninglessly, without growing out of a plausible central conflict. The "deus ex cavalry" ending is particularly strange, with Kate suddenly deciding she likes Bud after all, and will "do anything he asks".
If this is supposed to be a "Women -- ya can't live with 'em and ya can't live without 'em" tale, it works. But as engaging entertainment -- fergit it.
"The other reviewer" and I don't often agree, but here we're in concurrence. I've given three stars to his two, for the one agreeable moment, Dennis Weaver singing an amusing song.
I assume most viewers know enough about literature to be aware that the principal characters -- Kate Tassel and Bud Bones -- are named after the principals of "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" -- Katrina van Tassel and Brom Bones. (Chester apparently represents Ichabod Crane.) Their relationship is reversed, however, with Bud trying to capture the heart of Kate, and her refusing to warm up to him. ("Taming of the Shrew" comes to mind when he spanks her in public.)
The script is absolutely wretched, the sort Robert McKee could use as a prime example of //how not// to tell a story. Indeed, there's very little story. Kate's motivations aren't at all clear, so we have no idea why she does what she does. Things simply "happen", mechanically and meaninglessly, without growing out of a plausible central conflict. The "deus ex cavalry" ending is particularly strange, with Kate suddenly deciding she likes Bud after all, and will "do anything he asks".
If this is supposed to be a "Women -- ya can't live with 'em and ya can't live without 'em" tale, it works. But as engaging entertainment -- fergit it.
"The other reviewer" and I don't often agree, but here we're in concurrence. I've given three stars to his two, for the one agreeable moment, Dennis Weaver singing an amusing song.
Did you know
- TriviaAs the names of the characters suggest this is something of a parody of Washington Irving's The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Filming locations
- Stage 5 & Stage 6, Paramount Sunset Lot, 5800 Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles, California, USA(Dodge City Western Street)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
- 4:3
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