I love it. The fight scenes and even some of the emoting were painful to watch, but if one takes the premise of loyalty, care, honor and right as worthwhile and worth preserving, We owe the Terry family a huge debt of gratitude. Thanks again.
It just was not yet the time when John Wayne, and others, had developed the fighting techniques that made them much more realistic. But you get the idea anyway.
Unlike Clint Eastwood's character The Man With No Name in a Fist Full of Dollars and A Few Dollars More Tom Tylcer shoots and misses 9%% of the outlaws he has gun battles with. I can only presume this is because back in the day (when these early westerns were being made) these black and white movies were generally made for families with plenty of young kids in the theaters and they (being the writers and directors) didn't want to show killing very often, if at all. Thus outlaws and the good guys will shoot at each other time and again with almost no one falling down dead. Interesting how the movies have changed over the years isn't it? StocktonRob
they were always having kangaroo courts, kangaroos dont live in america, so, where did they get the kangaroos to put on the jury ? or, did they, just punish kangaroos for being illegals
Don't insinuate nothing about Westerns on the web you can't insinuate no underage shenanigans around this place it's timeless it's Godly it's righteous and it's good clean fun shooting and killing people and all that sort of stuff lol