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7/10
Which woman for the road trip
bkoganbing8 December 2016
This episode of Laredo with its usual roughhouse humor has two of the Rangers involved in a hostage situation. But interestingly enough the story put me in mind of a couple of screen classics involving as a hostage taker Humphrey Bogart in The Petrified Forest and as a hostage in Key Largo.

Jeanette Nolan and her niece Sheilah Wells run a stagecoach station and there's an outlaw gang waiting there for a friend to deliver money to effect an escape across the border. The outlaws consist of Warren Kemmerling, Jack Weston, and Fernando Lamas. A husband and wife a city councilman from El Paso Tol Avery and his wife Marian McCargo arrive there as well.

Brand gets recognized almost immediately and the outlaws reveal themselves and gets taken prisoner along with the civilians. Later on William Smith bungles a rescue attempt and he's taken prisoner.

There might be a need for hostages and that would be the women. Here's where Lamas turns on the old Latin charm.

Jack Weston has one of his best roles. He's a dumb ox with a quick temper. And it is really funny how Brand and Smith play him like a piccolo over the success Lamas is having with all three women. That's when it starts unraveling for the bad guys.

Needless to say the Rangers win and are back for the next episode. But how they do it, especially Brand who is not the sharpest knife in the drawer is something to see.
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7/10
Not a bad one, but.....
YoungHorse451 August 2023
Warning: Spoilers
By far my favorite episodes are the ones that take place outdoors, on the trail chasing after crooks and the like. In this one, the whole episode takes place in one room, which is a negative as far as I'm concerned. It does center on my two favorite Rangers, Reese and Joe. It was a plus that neither Chad nor Eric were in this episode. But of course Eric doesn't show up until next year anyway. A few strange things though. One of them being all the big deal made of the "beauty" of the politicians wife. I just don't see it. The other two really strange things come at the end. When Joe finally gets free of the ropes, he doesn't turn Reese loose, which makes no sense at all. Now the Mexican sidekick gets killed, so he is dealt with. But the gang leader just gets somewhat beat up and knocked out and left by the door as Joe takes off and says he'll be back, still leaving Reese in the chair tied up. The episode ends with the three women about to attack Reese for insulting them, with Reese yelling for Joe to come back and help. This looks like it should be time for a commercial break after which the story actually gets wrapped up as it should be. But the show just ends right here with Reese yelling for help. Stupid ending.
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1/10
Blondes Have More Fun when Held Hostage
wes-connors27 December 2008
On his way to El Paso, Reese (Neville Brand) stops by a bar "in the middle of nowhere", and is taken hostage. He is held at gunpoint (and later tied up) by three outlaws: gang leader Warren Kemmerling (as Jack Hanks), Mexican right hand man Fernando Lamas (as Paco Romero), and slightly psycho Jack Weston (as John Holden). The bar's proprietor is saucy Jeanette Nolan (as Martha Tuforth). She and young blonde "niece" Sheilah Wells (as Maryanne) are also hostages. Later, city councilman Tol Avery (as Millburn Willburn) and his older blonde wife Marian Moses (as Letty) become additional hostages.

The episode's bizarre storyline involves outlaw Lamas romancing the experienced "old blonde" (Ms. Moses) and the pliable "young blonde" (Ms. Wells). The hostage victims are so taken by their abductor's charms, they begin to fight over him - desiring to continue serving him as hostage, in Mexico. Halfway into the story, Joe (William Smith) arrives, posing as a traveling salesman (the "Stanley" character referred to in the episode title). Perhaps wisely, Peter Brown and Philip Carey do not appear during the hour.

It ends strangely.

Moses later appeared on "Falcon Crest"; both she and Lamas had sons (Lorenzo and William) who were regulars on the show.

* It's the End of the Road, Stanley (3/10/66) Leon Benson ~ Fernando Lamas, Neville Brand, William Smith
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