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Directed by LEO PENN Guest Cast WALTER BURKE as Jake Taggert
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Joe's old friend Bright Star goes on trial for murder |
Mrs. Morton finds Bright Star bending over the dead body of Clara McDermott, who has been stabbed to death. Her screams attract the attention of Chad and Erik, returning from a patrol.
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Bright Star with Clara's body |
Mrs. Morton sounds the alarm |
Erik & Chad respond |
& ride in pursuit |
Chad takes down the fleeing Bright Star. With Erik's help he's arrested.
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Chad stops Bright Star |
with a little stunt |
But Erik's gun is the real stopper |
Bright Star is taken prisoner |
Despite urging from Captain Parmalee, Chad, Erik and his old friend Joe, Bright Star won't say more than that he didn't kill Mrs. McDermott, he loved her. They know that she had saved his life, nursed him back to health and that he loved her. But if he doesn't give them more information, they can't help him.
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The Captain questions |
Bright Star is proud |
Chad & Erik are puzzled |
Joe urges him to talk |
In the meantime, Mrs. Morton is stirring up a crowd, especially Jake Taggert who was Clara McDermott's rejected suitor. Frank Foster even urges Taggert to use a gun to dispose of Bright Star. When Cotton breaks up the crowd, he wins the admiration of Abby Heffernan, a widowed mule skinner whose looking for a fifth husband.
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Mrs. Morton inflames Taggert |
Foster urges violence |
Cotton intervenes |
to Abby's admiration |
Although the jury selection process is a little odd and appears to be stacked against the defendant, it does include Joe, Cotton and Abby. The others include Murdock, a burly fellow who is automatically foreman because his name was chosen first, an undertaker who tries to beg off because the price of ice is so high in the summer and he has bodies waiting, Frank Foster's daughter who he claims is too high-strung for jury duty, and a woman who has an eye for the undertaker. The costs of paying actors who have lines means we will find out nothing about the other five jurors.
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An impatient judge |
Murdock The foreman |
The undertaker & friend |
Abby cottons to Cotton |
After Erik and Mrs. Morton testify, the only witness left is Bright Star who refuses because he knows no white person will believe him. He doesn't want to beg for his life. However, the Captain persuades him that if he does not, Clara will be remembered as a stupid woman who got what was coming to her for taking in a savage. Bright Star testifies that to him Clara was a queen. He was out checking his rabbit traps when he was attacked by a mountain lion. He fights off the lion with his knife which accounts for the scratches on his face and the absence of his knife. When he goes to Clara for medical aid, he finds her dead. He runs when Mrs. Morton starts screaming.
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Adeline Foster |
Joe the lone holdout |
The jury listens to witnesses |
Bright Star testifies |
When the judge starts to clear the court so the jury can deliberate, the foreman gets up and declares it's an open and shut case with no need to deliberate. Only Joe holds out for at least talking about the evidence. Juror Foster, a friend of Clara's, tells the jury that she had packed her trunk three weeks earlier and was planning to leave without Bright Star.
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Joe demonstrates how the murderer used the knife |
A backstabbing wouldn't cause scratches on the stabber |
The Rangers eye the crowd |
During a recess, the juror Rangers discuss the case with the others |
While Joe tries to convince the other jurors that the murder was not committed in the fashion that an Indian brave would kill a woman, Chad becomes the first lawman to actually investigate Bright Star's story and visit the scene of the crime. Out by the rabbit traps he finds a piece of lion fur and evidence of a large carcass being dragged away. At Clara's he finds that she had sliced bread for company prior to her murder and packed her trunk with china wrapped in that day's newspaper. Back in town, during dinner recess, Erik and the Captain hold off another mob wanting to cut short the trial with a hanging.
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Chad has an idea |
Chad finds lion fur |
and a recent newspaper |
Foster & Taggert stir up the crowd |
Based on Chad's discoveries, the Captain persuades the judge to reconvene the trial at the scene of the crime. It doesn't take long for juror Adeline Foster to to wither under the Captain's questions and confess that she killed Clara because she herself was in love with Bright Star. She was distraught that Clara was leaving Laredo with Bright Star. In fact, it was her father who beat Bright Star before Clara found him and nursed him. It was also Frank Foster who dragged away the lion carcass and tried to end any inquiry by getting Taggert to kill Bright Star.
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Gathering at the crime scene |
The Captain raises questions |
While Chad & Cotton watch |
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The Captain grills |
A dummy wearing the dress of the murder victim |
Adeline's tearful confession |
Her father unrepentant |
Murderer or not, Chad gets the girl in the end, if only to escort her to jail. Cotton takes off in the last scene when he finds Abby is looking for the judge to conduct a marriage ceremony. He is long gone before she lets the others know that the intended couple is the undertaker and the female juror who found him appealing.
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Chad escorts the lady to jail |
Abby talking wedding |
NiteOwl Review: We have to give the producers a little credit for presenting one story which recognizes that all the prejudice against Indians was not warranted. This story reminds us that Joe was a white orphan raised by Indians, a fact which never seemed to soften the harshness of the Rangers toward the Indians who were always convenient villains and comic relief. This was not a terrible story although everything was much too coincidental and convenient. And any modern day lawyer would be horrified by the ease with which a supposed close friend of the victim and a friend of the defendant could end up on a jury with the judge's blessing. And having juror Joe talk about the deliberations with the other Rangers is mistrial material. But having the killer on a jury was not an uncommon plot device. Our Favorite Scene: We liked the fact that in the modern age of video playbacks we could now see where Chad traded in his regular horse with the white sock and the blaze for the stunt horse with no socks and a star. It looked like Peter, an excellent horseman, stayed on board for the chase until the actual jump onto the fleeing Indian. With Slow-Mo we could even see the stuntman take the tumble sans spurs while Peter jumps up from the fall with spurs intact..Cast Notes: This was Claude Akins' fourth of five appearances as Cotton Buckmeister. To a man (and woman) our group really warms to this ubiquitous actor. Although he doesn't spark the more intense fan feelings we have for William Smith and Peter Brown, it's impossible not to like this guy. Akins was in one of our group's top ten classic Westerns, Rio Bravo and made appearances in all our favorite Western series from Maverick to Laramie to Bonanza to Rifleman to Rawhide and most everything in between. He was also in one of our top ten Twilight Zone episodes which is recognizable by it's title: "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street".
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Contact us at: laredofans@williamsmith.org