"Cheyenne" The Travelers (TV Episode 1956) Poster

(TV Series)

(1956)

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10/10
"I don't want law; I want justice."
faunafan26 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Frontier justice, that is; the hangin' kind. Perennial Western character actor Morris Ankrum delivers lines like that better than almost anyone. When wily old rustler and accused murderer Pop Keith is saved from being lynched and the marshal who's bringing him in is killed, Cheyenne vows to make sure Keith gets to Santa Loma for trial even though he doesn't believe the old man's a murderer. Along the way, he encounters one hardship after another, including a nefarious deputy sheriff, a rancher (Ankrum) bent on revenge, a cunning prisoner, the old codger's feisty, single-minded daughter, and a lack of water in an unforgiving desert.

All the players are excellent and the production values are, as usual, authentic and convincing. With each episode, we're learning a little more about Cheyenne Bodie. Besides being an imposing presence physically, he's an honorable, intelligent, confident manly man, ready for action but with a soft side that makes him even more appealing. Plus, we get a taste of his sense of humor in just about every episode. For example, after he has thwarted Mary Keith's efforts to ambush the marshal and she tries to grab his gun, Cheyenne says in that droll baritone, "Your manners need improvin', ma'am. When you want somethin', say 'please'." It's little glimpses like that into the character that endear him to thousands of devoted fans. Clint Walker brought something very special to the screen that means even more now, decades later, because there haven't been any heroes like him since.
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5/10
Run Of The Mill Western, But Still Enjoyable
pepe-469 November 2006
Cheyenne working as a deputy for U.S. Marshal Merrick, helps to prevent Pop Keith being lynched for a murder he says he did not commit.

The lawmen then take Pop on a long journey to stand trial, picking up his daughter Mary along the way. The murdered man's father, Ed Roden Snr, the instigator of the lynching, will not let things rest until his son's killing is avenged and tracks the small band looking for any opportune moment to get even.

When the Marshal is fatally wounded, Cheyenne promises him that he would make sure that the old man stands trial, although he believes that Pop is innocent.

Does Pop make it to trial? Well, Cheyenne certainly has some problems along the way, one of them being Mary played by attractive Warner Bros starlet Diane Brewster, who tries to wind her way into our hero's heart.

Clint Walker as always, has the charisma to make the most ordinary movie watchable with his laid back style and powerful on screen presence.
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3/10
cleaver remake of a classic
sandcrab27715 January 2020
The writers stole the whole film "along the great divide" and re-scripted it for clint walker in this episode of cheyenne called "the travelers" ... this is not the only western classic they've done this to ... i never liked clint walker or cheyenne because of this stealing of other peoples work
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