Paladin reads a newspaper article describing a brutal killing. After capturing the fugitive he goes to a small Texas town to catch a train north with his prisoner. Paladin has his hands full... Read allPaladin reads a newspaper article describing a brutal killing. After capturing the fugitive he goes to a small Texas town to catch a train north with his prisoner. Paladin has his hands full as the townspeople are out to liven up what would have been just another quiet night.Paladin reads a newspaper article describing a brutal killing. After capturing the fugitive he goes to a small Texas town to catch a train north with his prisoner. Paladin has his hands full as the townspeople are out to liven up what would have been just another quiet night.
Photos
- Barfly
- (uncredited)
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
- Barfly
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
This first part starts out with Paladin and his prisoner Kincaid (played as a very nasty guy by Robert Carricart) arriving in a small town to catch the next train to Wyoming. Along comes Joe Culp (future director Sidney Pollack), and his pals, played by veteran actors Kevin Hagen, James Best, and another guy who is not in the credits.
Sidney Pollack has a face for a Western villain. He looks like many of the bad guys from Sergio Leone's spaghetti westerns. Kevin Hagen and James Best are always pretty good as villains. The fourth guy that is not in the credits does a good job as the sidekick to the villains.
The bottom line is that Carricart /Kincaid is a pretty nasty guy, and when the four thugs show up to challenge Paladin for his prisoner, Carricart does everything he can to pour gasoline on the fire, and create a confrontation. Paladin is viciously beaten up, and gets his hand crushed, and gets to watch Culp shoot Carricart to death.
Nobody liked Carricart / Kincaid, including Paladin. I have only seen Robert Carricart in a few roles, but he seemed to specialize in playing incredibly nasty and unlikeable creeps. In spite of that, Paladin thinks he deserved a trial, and he is also angry about getting beaten into a pulp. Paladin has occasionally gotten beaten up in other episodes, but this was the worst beating I can remember.
Town Sheriff is played by Robert Emhardt, who is supposed to be the voice of reason, but he comes across as just a lazy sheriff who is trying to psyche out Paladin so he will leave town. I can think of other character actors from this era that would have been more convincing in this role.
William Challee is an old character actor who has a couple of scenes, and he does a good job setting the mood of the town, and informing the Sheriff as to what the bad guys are doing.
Eventually, Paladin gets up from the dirt where the villains left him, bloody, dazed, confused, and he finds the dead body of Carricart / Kincaid. Sheriff Remy keeps telling him to forget about it and go away. But Paladin is not going away. Paladin and all hell are about to break loose in crummy little Jody Town.
When Paladin recovers, he goes after the men. Culp draws on Paladin and the result baffles Remy. How? Paladin tells Remy guns are his tools. But now there are still three others to capture. Paladin will offer them a choice: put cuffs on and be brought to trial or die.
This is a rare two-episode Paladin which means there is more time to develop character and plot. The production set is bleaker than usual setting up a shadowy backdrop for this morality play: the struggle to determine is it justice or revenge we see before us.
Well done episode(s) featuring a young Sydney Pollack who was an actor before becoming an Oscar winning director. Pollack makes a good bad man indicating he might have matured into a fine actor.
Did you know
- TriviaThe end credits sequence is unique for this series. The background is the master shot of the climax. The music heard is neither Bernard Herrmann's opening theme (also used during the closing titles for the first season), nor Johnny Western's "Ballad of Paladin" (heard in all subsequent seasons and credited here regardless). It is from Fred Steiner's score composed for this installment.
- Quotes
Joe Culp: You know, Paladin, I guess everyone's gotta have someone to hate. Now, the Gringo, he hates the Mexican, the Mexican hates the Apache, the Apache hates both of them. And this fellow here, he reminds me of a man I used to know down South Texas. A quarter blood Apache, not enough to make him an Indian. But just enough to make him afraid other people might think he was.
Details
- Runtime
- 30m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1