"Gunsmoke" Blind Man's Bluff (TV Episode 1963) Poster

(TV Series)

(1963)

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8/10
In the end, the good somehow came through
kfo94945 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Wow- after watching I do not think I have seen so many unsavory characters in all my life. Matt runs into a hornet's nest of thugs and just downright awful men. But most of the situations was downright useless to the story. But I assume that since the episode centered around a good moral man the writer felt led to add a few bad ones- and boy were they bad.

In a fairly simple plot three guys are playing poker at the Long Branch. Billy Hayes, Billy Poe and a man named Walker. After Hayes takes all of Walker's money the games breaks up. However Walker meets Hayes outside with intentions of getting his money back. Instead he kills Hayes. When Billy Poe comes outside the saloon he sees Hayes on the ground. He goes to help and all the dying man can say is 'you killed me'. Poe gets scared and takes off. When Marshal Dillon gets to the scene the dying man tells him Billy Poe killed me and then he dies.

The story seemed set but then the script turned into a bizarre world of thuggery. The first indication was in a rather simple scene when a cowboy comes up to Matt and asks if he is looking for Billy Poe because he had seen him in the town of Elkader. When Matt told him there was no reward money for the information the cowboy replied with 'I hope (Poe) shoots you'. Nice guy.

But that is only the beginning as Matt makes his way to Elkader and meets some of the fancy townsfolk in that area. The only one that would come to the aid of the Marshal was none other than Billy Poe. But because of Matt's ethics, he still has to take Poe into Dodge to stand before the Judge for murder. Unless Matt can find the third person of the poker party (Walker) looks like the innocent Billy Poe will hang.

The writer wanted a clear difference between the bad men and the innocent naive Billy Poe. Will Hutchins does a great job of making the viewer feel for the character of Poe. His actions and innocent face makes the viewer feel that they know the faultless character as if a family member. Even with the heinous characters in the show, the good somehow came through.
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8/10
More unsavory characters show up in "Blind Man's Bluff"
chuck-reilly31 January 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Guest star Will Hutchins stars in "Blind Man's Bluff" as an innocent bystander who is accused of murdering a fellow gambler in Dodge City. The victim's own last words condemn him and they're taken as the "gospel truth" even though the poor guy is delirious at this point. So Will has no choice but to skedaddle with Marshal Dillon in hot pursuit. At that point, the story takes a left turn. In another town, Dillon is mugged and left for dead in an alley by a motley crew of despicable bad guys. "Gunsmoke" specialized in presenting these kinds of rotten eggs, and they usually show up by the bushel load in the series. Dillon survives, but temporarily loses his eyesight from the severe beating. Still on the lam, Hutchins joins up with the muggers and they decide to finish off the Marshal once and for all. But Hutchins has a change of heart when he sees that his evil cohorts intend on roping and dragging the Marshal to death. He steps in at the last moment and saves Dillon. Miraculously, Dillon regains his eyesight just in time so that he can beat the hell out of the bad guys. After some persuading from the good Marshal, Hutchins reluctantly gives himself up even though he faces a death sentence if convicted. The episode ends on a happy note when the real killer has a pang of conscience and turns himself in at the last moment before poor Will goes on trial for murder. "Blind Man's Bluff" is a slightly above average entry in the series, and Hutchins' wide-eyed deer-in-the-headlights expression fits his character to a tee. You'd never know that Hutchins is actually 6-1 because he looks like a standing next to the 6-7 Marshal Dillon (James Arness). Hutchins is best-remembered now for his early 1960s western series "Sugarfoot" in which he played a character very similar to the one here. That being an innocent-looking fair-minded nice guy.
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