"Cheyenne" Trouble Street (TV Episode 1961) Poster

(TV Series)

(1961)

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7/10
Walker, Coburn, and Van Cleef—a bargain in 1961
pensman24 April 2017
Warning: Spoilers
We have seen this plot in several TV Westerns, even in an earlier episode of Cheyenne. Cheyenne rides into a crooked town where the sheriff has every stranger tossed into jail, then jail to the chain gang, then death. This time the two bad guys are played by James Coburn (Kell) and Lee Van Cleef (Branden). When the town had been shot up and its leading citizen, Sharon Colton, lost her father and brother, she forced the aging town Marshall Bailey to hire Kell and Branden as deputies. They have used their authority to make a lot of money with prisoner chain gangs; and through fear they are extorting money from all the businessmen. They play on the fear and hatred Colton has toward every stranger; and Kell is acquiring the money and power he needs to force her to marry him.

Cheyenne is fined for carrying a gun, and he is figured for the chain gang; but he has the bail money he needs tucked inside his pocket Bible. He tries to get Colton to see what's going on but Kell figures on running Bodie out of town as a vagrant. When Nolan, a local store owner, claims he offered Cheyenne a job, Kell kills him, and intends to frame Cheyenne before he can do any real damage to his plans.

Cheyenne keeps trying to get Colton to see what's going on. She goes to the jail to check on a prisoner who she has been told is sick, Randall. At first, Cheyenne is pleased but when he and Randall go to the General Store as told, they are being set up because the owner is dead inside. Cheyenne figures they've been set up but too late. He and Randall hide in the livery stable, while Kell tries to convince the Marshall and Colton that Bodie is a killer. One problem is that Kell lost his deputy's badge and if it is found, people might put two and two together. Kell tries to get some of the prisoners to throw in with him and take over the town, but first he wants Bodie killed.

The Marshall confronts Colton and proves to her that Kell and Branden are killers; and that he intends to arrest them. Unfortunately, before he can act, Kell kills him. Sharon Colton realizes she has turned her entire town over to murderers. She even tells Cheyenne to leave, but he can't because he knows Randall would be killed next. Cheyenne kills Kell; Colton kills Branden.

Cheyenne again rides off to his next adventure.
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9/10
"You've got quite a way with you, Mr. Bodie."
faunafan24 July 2022
Warning: Spoilers
The lady did not mean it as a compliment at the time.

Poor Dick Reeves. Except for a benign appearance here and there on "I Love Lucy," he played the same character in every tv show he was in. In this episode of "Cheyenne," we see his weathered, mugshot-worthy face in the first frame just before Cheyenne witnesses him shoot a hapless prisoner dead. He's just one of the town's gang of dastardly cutthroats led by a possibly psychotic deputy named Kell (James Coburn), who is determined to take over the town and then leave it bankrupt and in shambles. The town's bitter matriarch, Sharon Colton, is oblivious to Kell's decidedly unlawful methods. All she knows is that he's keeping 'her' town safe from drifters; how he does it doesn't matter to her. In her defense, losing your father and brother to a gang of itinerant bank robbers could tend to sour a person on strangers. Mala Powers is excellent as the still-traumatized Lady of the Town, and Coburn plays Kell with his usual reptilian smugness.

When a trail-weary Cheyenne stops into Miss Colton's hotel/restaurant for a meal and Kell goads him into a mild altercation then arrests him on a trumped-up charge of assaulting a law officer, the wheels of justice finally begin to roll. After the gunpowder settles, the impotent sheriff finally reclaims his office and Sharon Colton realizes that not all strangers are undesirable. There's also an amusing scene in which Cheyenne's second attempt at getting a meal is thwarted and he says to Sharon Colton in that wry Clint Walker way, "You're sure a problem to a hungry man." But she comes around, grudgingly acknowledging that he really does have "quite a way" with him, ends up actually saving his life and inviting him to stay on. Cheyenne Bodie hasn't met a lady yet on whom he didn't leave a mighty indelible impression.
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