BEST OF THE CHRISTMAS TV WEST!
Three of our favorite
networks – INSP, ME-TV and GET-TV – are celebrating Christmas by airing
Christmas-themed Western episodes.
Here’s the list, and all the times are Western, so adjust your viewing
accordingly.
Christmas Eve, December
24th, at
7 a.m. – INSP - EBENEZER – a 1997 TV-movie Western version of
Dicken’s A CHRISTMAS CAROL, starring Jack Palance as Scrooge, co-starring Ricky
Schroder
9:15 a.m. – GET-TV –
THE TALL MAN – BILLY’S BABY (1960), starring Clu Gulager as Billy the kid, and
Barry Sullivan as Pat Garrett
9:55 a.m. – GET-TV –
YANCY DERRINGER – OLD DIXIE (1958), starring Jock Mahoney and X Brands.
10:30 a.m. – GET-TV –
RESTLESS GUN – THE CHILD (1957), starring John Payne
11:10 a.m. – GET-TV –
RESTLESS GUN – A BELL FOR SANTO DOMINGO (1958) starring John Payne
11:45 a.m. – GET-TV –
CIMARRON CITY – CIMARRON HOLIDAY (1958) starring George Montgomery
12:00 noon – ME-TV –
THE BIG VALLEY – JUDGEMENT IN HEAVEN (1965)
1:00 p.m. – ME-TV –
GUNSMOKE – P.S. – MURRY CHRISTMAS (1971)
2:00 p.m. – ME-TV –
BONANZA – GABRIELLE (1961)
3:00 p.m. – ME-TV –
RAWHIDE – 25 SANTA CLAUSES (1961), guest-starring Ed Wynn
4:00 p.m. – ME-TV –
WANTED: DEAD OR ALIVE – 8 CENT REWARD (1958), guest-starring Jay North
4:00 p.m. – GET-TV –
MIRACLE IN THE WILDERNESS (1991), TV-movie starring Kris Kristofferson and Kim
Cattrall
4:30 p.m. – ME-TV – WANTED: DEAD OR ALIVE – NO TRAIL
BACK (1959)
6:00 p.m. – GET-TV –
THE CHRISTMAS STALLION (1992) contemporary Western TV-movie, set in Wales,
starring Daniel J. Travanti and Lynette Davies
10:20 p.m. – GET-TV –
MIRACLE IN THE WILDERNESS (1991), TV-movie starring Kris Kristofferson and Kim
Cattrall
December 25th
– Christmas Day
5:00 p.m. – INSP -
EBENEZER – a 1997 TV-movie Western version of Dicken’s A CHRISTMAS CAROL,
starring Jack Palance as Scrooge, co-starring Ricky Schroder
7:00 p.m. – INSP – 3
GODFATHERS (1948) – the John Ford Classic, starring John Wayne, Pedro
Amendariz, and Harry Carey Jr. (obviously not a TV episode, but a great
Christmas movie)
AMC will be showing
some great, non-Christmas John Wayne and Clint Eastwood Westerns all-day
Christmas Day.
STAGECOACH – THE TEXAS
JACK STORY -- A Film Review
After years of quietly
refining his acting skills laboring in cinema’s boondocks, taking small roles
in big shows, and big parts in films that go largely unseen, with STAGECOACH :
THE TEXAS JACK STORY, Trace Adkins emerges as something we haven’t seen in more
than twenty years: a genuine new B-Western star. Despite his Country Music stardom, Trace
would not have been a leading man in the days of the original crossover stars
like Gene Autry and Roy Rogers. His grim
countenance would have earned him the parts played by Glenn Strange. As scruffy as Willy Nelson, and as massively
menacing as Ron Perlman, Adkins seems to have stepped out of a Matthew Brady
photograph and onto the screen. But his
gruff, quiet, shoot-from-the-hip confidence and camera appeal is the stuff of
movie stardom.
In STAGECOACH he plays
genuine highwayman Nathaniel Reed, alias ‘Texas Jack’ Reed, whose gang robbed
many a stagecoach and train in the Indian Territory during the 1880s and ‘90s,
and who lived longer than any of his contemporaries, surviving halfway into the
20th century, dying an evangelist in 1950.
Making their getaway
The story begins with a
stage hold-up pulled by Reed and his partners, including Sid Dalton (Judd
Nelson, of ‘Brat Pack’ fame) and Frank Bell (Claude Duhamel, the demonic Anton
Stice in last year’s WESTERN RELIGION). All goes efficiently, and no one gets
hurt. That is, until shotgun guard
Calhoun (Kim Coates of SONS OF ANARCHY) takes shots at the fleeing bandits. Reed returns fire, and Calhoun goes down.
Abruptly six years have
passed. The gang members have parted
ways, and Reed, no longer an outlaw, is
now happily married to Laura Lee (Michelle Harrison), and facing more mundane
concerns like paying his mortgage when his livery business has slowed
down. Without warning or welcome, Frank
Bell appears to tip Reed that a deadly man is on their trail: Calhoun, the
shotgun guard who lost an eye in the earlier robbery, is now a U.S. Marshall,
with a personal vendetta against Reed and his gang: he’s already killed one of
their accomplices, and is on Reed’s trail.
Claude Duhamel
Moments later, Calhoun
arrives and all Hell breaks loose, in an exciting room-to-room gun battle that
leaves Reed alive, but with nothing to live for. Soon he’s back in business with Frank and
Sid, robbing stages and staying a step ahead of the dementedly driven Calhoun,
although a showdown is, of course, inevitable.
There’s plenty of action when called for, but it’s the real kind, not
the CGI’d nonsense – the gunshots frequently sound like actual gunshots. Director Terry Miles, who previously helmed
the Westerns THE DAWN RIDER (2012) and LONESOME DOVE CHURCH (2014), brings a
genuineness from his actors, and a sense of brooding, panic and sometimes despair,
which one doesn’t usually get in a Western, but is highly appropriate to the
story.
The dialogue in the
script by Dan Benamor and Matt Williams has a naturalness that helps us buy the
characters, and unusually, allows what would normally be throw-away characters
to shine. When was the last time you saw
a likable young banker in a Western?
The one sour note in the film is the character of psychopathic female
bounty hunter Bonnie Mudd (Helena Marie), who works for the U.S. Marshall (!),
and despite Ms. Marie’s best efforts, seems to have stepped into the wrong
movie.
Judd Nelson
Produced by Jack, Jacob
and Joseph Nasser, STAGECOACH, like their DAWN RIDER and LONESOME DOVE CHURCH,
and their surprisingly effective version of THE VIRGINIAN (2014), in which
Adkins also had the title role, is filmed in Canada, and takes full advantage
of the lush greenery and other visual values.
Their films are low-budget, but rather than being threadbare, they are
self-contained and intimate, avoiding busy towns and containing few extraneous
characters. The art direction and
costuming is not self-consciously elaborate, but is correct and attractively
photographed.
The strong performances
by the criminal triad of Adkins, Nelson, and Duhamel, and their nemesis,
Coates, are the core of this action-packed but thoughtful Western. STAGECOACH – THE TEXAS JACK STORY is from Cinedigm, who brought you TRADED,
starring Michael Pere, Kris Kristofferson and Trace Adkins earlier this
year. STAGECOACH – THE TEXAS JACK STORY
is available on Amazon, iTunes, and other streaming services, as well as DVD.
NOMINATIONS ARE IN FOR 'WESTWORLD' AND 'HELL OR HIGH WATER'
It's the start of the dreaded 'Award Season' in 'The Industry', and the good news is, WESTWORLD and HELL OR HIGH WATER are getting the attention they deserve. The Critics Choice Awards were already announced, honoring WESTWORLD's Evan Rachel Wood as Best Actress in a Drama Series, and Thandie Newton as Best Supporting Actress. The Writers Guild announced their TV nominations, and WESTWORLD was nominated for Best Drama and Best New Series.
The Foreign Press Association announced their Golden Globe nominations, HELL OR HIGH WATER is nominated for Best Motion Picture - Drama. Jeff Bridges is nominated for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, and Taylor Sheridan is nominated for Best Screenplay. Bridges has been Oscar and Globe nominated six times each, and won both in 2009 for CRAZY AT HEART. WESTWORLD is nominated for Best Television Seris - Drama. Evan Rachel Wood is nominated for Best Actress, and Thandie Newton for Best Supporting.
The SCREEN ACTORS GUILD
has nominated Thandie
Newton not for supporting, but for Outstanding
Performance by a Female Actor for WESTWORLD. Jeff
Bridges is nominated for his HELL OR HIGH WATER supporting. Additionally, WESTWORLD
is nominated for a S.A.G. Award for Outstanding Performance by a Stunt
Ensemble. And WESTWORLD’s entire
featured cast is nominated for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a
Drama Series. In case you’re wondering
who some of them are, here are the names:
BEN BARNES / Logan
INGRID BOLSØ BERDAL / Armistice
ED HARRIS / Man in Black
LUKE HEMSWORTH / Ashley Stubbs
ANTHONY HOPKINS / Dr. Robert Ford
SIDSE BABETT KNUDSEN / Theresa Cullen
JAMES MARSDEN / Teddy Flood
LEONARDO NAM / Felix Lutz
THANDIE NEWTON / Maeve Millay
TALULAH RILEY / Angela
RODRIGO SANTORO / Hector Escaton
ANGELA SARAFYAN / Clementine Pennyfeather
JIMMI SIMPSON / William
PTOLEMY SLOCUM / Sylvester
EVAN RACHEL WOOD / Dolores Abernathy
SHANNON WOODWARD / Elsie Hughes
JEFFREY WRIGHT / Bernard Lowe
INGRID BOLSØ BERDAL / Armistice
ED HARRIS / Man in Black
LUKE HEMSWORTH / Ashley Stubbs
ANTHONY HOPKINS / Dr. Robert Ford
SIDSE BABETT KNUDSEN / Theresa Cullen
JAMES MARSDEN / Teddy Flood
LEONARDO NAM / Felix Lutz
THANDIE NEWTON / Maeve Millay
TALULAH RILEY / Angela
RODRIGO SANTORO / Hector Escaton
ANGELA SARAFYAN / Clementine Pennyfeather
JIMMI SIMPSON / William
PTOLEMY SLOCUM / Sylvester
EVAN RACHEL WOOD / Dolores Abernathy
SHANNON WOODWARD / Elsie Hughes
JEFFREY WRIGHT / Bernard Lowe
AND THAT'S A WRAP!
It's been officially Christmas Eve and the first day of Chanukah Eve for an hour and a half, and I'm setting the DVR, then hitting the hay. I hope you find what you want in your stocking, and I hope 2017 is an improvement on your 2016. And I thank you for your continued support of my writing in The Round-up and True West,
Happy Trails,
Henry
Happy Trails,
Henry
All Original Contents Copyright December 2016 by Henry C. Parke -- All Rights Reserved