"The Virginian" It Tolls for Thee (TV Episode 1962) Poster

(TV Series)

(1962)

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8/10
The Judge gets kidnapped
bkoganbing8 August 2019
This Virginian story rates as one of the high points of the series. It's supposed to be a happy occasion in Medicine Bow as Pippa Scott is returning from a trip east. But Lee Marvin and a gang of toughs have different ideas. They mean to kidnap the judge and hold him for ransom. Also part of the plan when they get the money and The Virginian delivers it, they keep the judge to make sure no posse follows.

No legal posse follows. But there's a bounty hunter on the trail who doesn't care about Lee J. Cobb's safety. Warren Kemmerling is from the US Marines and these guys followed Marvin in a stockade break where a Marine was killed.

James Drury, Doug McClure, and Gary Clarke have to worry about them as well as Judge Garth's safety.

Lee Marvin is truly a sadistic and loathsome figure. A total amoral animal bent on proving the judge can be just like him if sufficiently provoked. He does a lot of provoking as does his chief sidekick Albert Salmi. Some great scenes with Cobb, Marvin, and Salmi.

Sam Fuller directed this Virginian episode and he could always get the best out of Lee Marvin and does here.

A must for fans of the series and of Lee Marvin.
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Sam Fuller writes and directs a TV western with Lee Marvin
BrianDanaCamp19 January 2012
"It Tolls for Thee" was aired in November 1962 as the ninth episode of "The Virginian," a series based—loosely—on Owen Wister's 1901 western novel of that title. Movie director Sam Fuller (THE STEEL HELMET, PICKUP ON SOUTH STREET) wrote and directed the episode and asserts, in his autobiography, "A Third Face: My Tale of Writing, Fighting, and Filmmaking," that it was the pilot for the series. Fuller made this in between his films, MERRILL'S MARAUDERS (1962), a box office hit for Warner Bros., and SHOCK CORRIDOR (1963). The episode involves a gang of criminals who kidnap rancher Garth (Lee J. Cobb), an ex-judge, and hold him for ransom, forcing the Virginian (James Drury), who works for Garth, to withdraw money from the judge's account, deliver it to the criminals and then, joined by two of his cowboys, pursue them until they get the chance to free the judge. The man who directs the kidnapping, Martin Kalig (Lee Marvin), is a prison escapee and ex-soldier who holds a grudge against the judge for sentencing him for robbery and murder. Complicating matters is the fact that Kalig's gang used to work for another man, Sharkey (Warren Kemmerling), whom Kalig had shot in the back and left for dead. Sharkey survives the shooting and has recruited another gang to pursue Kalig & company.

Despite Fuller's participation, it's still just a routine TV western which never delivers the suspense promised by the basic situation. The idea that Kalig's kidnapping of Judge Garth is meant to be a carefully planned military-style operation (echoing Fuller's 1955 film, HOUSE OF BAMBOO) is undercut by the abundant use of stock footage of cattle driving in the kidnap sequence. It never quite matches. There's potential for action in the threat posed by Sharkey's survival and pursuit of Kalig, but this is diminished by the frequent cuts to the Virginian and his crew. If this had been designed as a theatrical film with the regular series characters omitted and Sharkey's character placed as the protagonist and played by a more charismatic actor, this might have been a tough, gritty, violent western, almost Italian-style in its intensity. But we never get that film.

Fuller manages to invest the action with some of his trademark touches, but it never has the power of his theatrical films, particularly the westerns he's done (I SHOT JESSE JAMES, FORTY GUNS, RUN OF THE ARROW). Kalig and the judge have conversations where they debate the fine points of the law, war, and punishment. Kalig calls the judge a hypocrite, but I couldn't understand why. Kalig's a bad guy who admits to acts of killing without any remorse. The judge is a good guy who puts men like Kalig away, exactly what he's supposed to do. In Fuller's account, "The judge turned out to be a thief too, exploiting the law for his own benefit," although nothing bears this out in the finished result.

Given Fuller's background as a newspaper reporter, he shows special interest in the town's newspaper editor, Molly Wood (Pippa Scott), who, as we see in an early scene, has just returned from New York where she met the great editor of The New York World, Joseph Pulitzer (after whom the Pulitzer Prize was named), who was fascinated by her account of judge-turned-rancher Garth and gives her an inscribed pocket watch to give to the judge. It turns out that Pulitzer had always wanted to be a cowboy. (One of the first things Kalig does after kidnapping the judge is to steal the watch.)

Fuller wrote that he "was disappointed with TV production people from Day One," and turned down additional offers of TV work, returning only for "The Iron Horse," a few years later, after movie work dried up. Fuller and star Lee Marvin would work together again on THE BIG RED ONE (1980), Fuller's last great movie, which was based on his experiences as an infantryman in World War II. (Marvin had served with the Marines in WWII, getting wounded at the Battle of Saipan.)

"It Tolls for Thee" was intercut with another "Virginian" episode, "The Reckoning" (Season 6/#1, 1967), which guest starred Charles Bronson, to create a hodge-podge movie entitled "The Meanest Men in the West," which was released as a Lee Marvin/Charles Bronson western overseas in 1978 and came out on home video sometime later. I rented it in the mid-1980s, curious to see Sam Fuller's TV work, and was appalled at the way they butchered his episode. I don't recall what they did to tie the two separate narratives together, but it didn't work at all.
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