Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFor the third consecutive episode "Starring George Maharis" appears on screen in the opening credits despite George Maharis having permanently left the series. This would be the last time he would be listed in the credits. "Buz" is not even mentioned in the episode.
- Quotes
Hank Saxon: [Talking to Diane after he has shot his accomplice] Around here everybody... even you think I'm one third Apache. Well, in the war they dropped me behind the lines up in North Korea. Believe it or not, they thought I was a third Korean. Yea, I'm a third of wherever I am; a third of whomever I'm with. I'm like a lizard in the sun - I blend, blend with the landscape. Not because I want to. All my life I've been trying to find a way of becoming three thirds of something.
[He looks directly at her]
Hank Saxon: Diane, you could make me three thirds of myself.
[She doesn't answer, but turns away to mount her horse]
Featured review
Tod joins a modern day posse that's tracking down two escaped killers. Trouble is the posse's full of people with conflicting aims.
Oh my, there must be a good reason why this episode is such a mess. The main fault is with the screenplay that has more holes than grandma's sieve. My guess is the producers had to scramble now that Maharis had firmly left the series. (IMDB observes this was the last entry to give Maharis billing.) So I'm thinking they scrambled with a couple of re-writes that may have plugged Buzz's hole but added all kinds of crippling plot lapses. At the same time, I'm mindful that R66 was generally one of the best- written shows of the time.
Looks like the entry wants to say something existential about posses in general— catch Tod's histrionic denunciation that ends the hour, at least I think that's his point. Anyway, for a series that usually managed to avoid the unsubtle, this is like a car horn at a concert. Then too, for a series that tried to present real-type people,The General (Anderson) comes across more like a caricature than a real person. No need to go on. After all, every lengthy series has its missteps, and this is sure one of them.
(In passing—the credits list Apache Jct., AZ as the location, so those are the Superstition Mountains in the background. Too bad the story couldn't work in something about the Superstition's Lost Dutchman Mine, one of the West's more fascinating legends.)
Oh my, there must be a good reason why this episode is such a mess. The main fault is with the screenplay that has more holes than grandma's sieve. My guess is the producers had to scramble now that Maharis had firmly left the series. (IMDB observes this was the last entry to give Maharis billing.) So I'm thinking they scrambled with a couple of re-writes that may have plugged Buzz's hole but added all kinds of crippling plot lapses. At the same time, I'm mindful that R66 was generally one of the best- written shows of the time.
Looks like the entry wants to say something existential about posses in general— catch Tod's histrionic denunciation that ends the hour, at least I think that's his point. Anyway, for a series that usually managed to avoid the unsubtle, this is like a car horn at a concert. Then too, for a series that tried to present real-type people,The General (Anderson) comes across more like a caricature than a real person. No need to go on. After all, every lengthy series has its missteps, and this is sure one of them.
(In passing—the credits list Apache Jct., AZ as the location, so those are the Superstition Mountains in the background. Too bad the story couldn't work in something about the Superstition's Lost Dutchman Mine, one of the West's more fascinating legends.)
- dougdoepke
- Feb 17, 2016
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Filming locations
- Apache Greyhound Park, 220 S Delaware Dr, Apache Junction, AZ, United States(Desert Greyhound Park)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime50 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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