THE WESTERNER "Hand on the Gun"1960
This is the 12th episode of the short run western series, THE WESTERNER. The series starred Brian Keith as a wandering cow-hand travelling the southwest United States. Of note here is the creator and producer, Sam Peckinpah. Peckinpah is of course known as the writer and director of, THE WILD BUNCH. This series only ran for 13 episodes in the fall of 1960.
This one starts with Keith running a of bunch of wild horse wranglers out in the scrubs. There is a bit of tension in the air as Keith and his crew are doing far better than the crew led by, John Pickard. The men are camped down for the night and Pickard is hitting the bottle. He is a mean drunk and is trying to bait Keith into a fight. Keith will have none of it.
Out of the dark rides a young fellow, Ben Cooper. The men all get a good laugh after they take a gander at Cooper. He is dressed like an Eastern dandy fresh off the train. And that is exactly what Cooper is. He has read all the "cowboy stories" and wishes to become one. He is even packing a fancy pistol. He asks if he could join up and learn how to become a wrangler.
Keith takes the young man on in exchange for lessons on how to read. Cooper is always busy playing with his pistol doing fancy tricks etc. Keith tells him to stop. Tricks mean nothing when it comes to using a gun when it counts. Matters come to a head between Keith and the other crew boss, Pickard. Pickard collects a round in his shoulder when he goes to back shoot Keith. A member of Keith's crew, Michael Ansara warned Keith as Pickard went for his iron.
Kieth's crew decide they have caught enough wild ponies and head back to town. Cooper joins in as they run the critters back for sale. Cooper though just can't stop playing with his fancy revolver. Keith finally belts the kid to get his point across. "Out west, if you draw a gun, you better be meaning to use it. Someone is bound to shoot you if you keep twirling that thing around" Keith tells him.
The thumping just makes the young man upset. He now starts in on Michael Ansara, calling him an old Mexican and the like. The men hit town and sell off the horses before hitting the local saloon for a bottle.
Needless to say Cooper keeps yapping at Ansara till he finally goads him into a fight. Cooper waits in the street outside the saloon. Keith and Ansara sit and finish their whiskey. Keith exits first, mounts his horse and waits. Then Ansara steps into the street where Cooper is waiting. Cooper goes for a quick draw and fires wildly at Ansara. Ansara calmly takes aim and fires, knocking Cooper to the dirt. He then mounts up and both Keith and Ansara slowly ride out of town. They do not even give Cooper a glance, as the man lays there dying as a slow offbeat version of "Streets of Laredo" plays in the background.
This is a pretty good episode which has series creator, Sam Peckinpah back in the director's chair.
This is the 12th episode of the short run western series, THE WESTERNER. The series starred Brian Keith as a wandering cow-hand travelling the southwest United States. Of note here is the creator and producer, Sam Peckinpah. Peckinpah is of course known as the writer and director of, THE WILD BUNCH. This series only ran for 13 episodes in the fall of 1960.
This one starts with Keith running a of bunch of wild horse wranglers out in the scrubs. There is a bit of tension in the air as Keith and his crew are doing far better than the crew led by, John Pickard. The men are camped down for the night and Pickard is hitting the bottle. He is a mean drunk and is trying to bait Keith into a fight. Keith will have none of it.
Out of the dark rides a young fellow, Ben Cooper. The men all get a good laugh after they take a gander at Cooper. He is dressed like an Eastern dandy fresh off the train. And that is exactly what Cooper is. He has read all the "cowboy stories" and wishes to become one. He is even packing a fancy pistol. He asks if he could join up and learn how to become a wrangler.
Keith takes the young man on in exchange for lessons on how to read. Cooper is always busy playing with his pistol doing fancy tricks etc. Keith tells him to stop. Tricks mean nothing when it comes to using a gun when it counts. Matters come to a head between Keith and the other crew boss, Pickard. Pickard collects a round in his shoulder when he goes to back shoot Keith. A member of Keith's crew, Michael Ansara warned Keith as Pickard went for his iron.
Kieth's crew decide they have caught enough wild ponies and head back to town. Cooper joins in as they run the critters back for sale. Cooper though just can't stop playing with his fancy revolver. Keith finally belts the kid to get his point across. "Out west, if you draw a gun, you better be meaning to use it. Someone is bound to shoot you if you keep twirling that thing around" Keith tells him.
The thumping just makes the young man upset. He now starts in on Michael Ansara, calling him an old Mexican and the like. The men hit town and sell off the horses before hitting the local saloon for a bottle.
Needless to say Cooper keeps yapping at Ansara till he finally goads him into a fight. Cooper waits in the street outside the saloon. Keith and Ansara sit and finish their whiskey. Keith exits first, mounts his horse and waits. Then Ansara steps into the street where Cooper is waiting. Cooper goes for a quick draw and fires wildly at Ansara. Ansara calmly takes aim and fires, knocking Cooper to the dirt. He then mounts up and both Keith and Ansara slowly ride out of town. They do not even give Cooper a glance, as the man lays there dying as a slow offbeat version of "Streets of Laredo" plays in the background.
This is a pretty good episode which has series creator, Sam Peckinpah back in the director's chair.