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55th Anniversary Viewing
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Branded
"The Test"
Originally aired February 7, 1965
Jason runs into Father Durant (Jason Evers) while being pursued by a group of Indians. Jason uses Durant's wagon for cover while fending them off, but the priest won't fire the rifle that Jason hands him. The two bond some afterward, Jason respecting the priest's principles but not sharing his own reason for being a drifter. Then a party of Comanches comes for Durant, who's been working with them, to explain the incident. Durant makes clear to Jason that he won't fight, but he won't run either. At the Comanche camp, Durant is accused of having contributed to the "ambush" by a warrior named Wild Horse (Jay Silverheels!).
Jason arrives at the camp carrying a spear of peace, and demonstrates some knowledge of the individual Comanches by their reputations and of their ways. He tries to explain how Durant's unwillingness to fight is an attribute of his greater kind of strength...and then gives them a demonstration of turning the other cheek by slapping the priest around a little! The Comanches allow Jason to fight Wild Horse on Durant's behalf, which starts with a jousting-style contest and ends in an on-foot melee between broken saber and tomahawk. Jason wins and Durant persuades Chief Looking Glass (Joe De Santis) to spare Wild Horse's life. The Chief expresses an interest in having Durant teach the Comanche children his kind of courage at his mission.
I was a little unconvinced that the Comanches would be so easily won over by a demonstration of Christian values. I'm no expert on tribal culture, but there was an episode of Hell on Wheels in which Bohannon reluctantly participated in an Indian game that was expected to be fought to the death (which he didn't know going in), tried to spare the life of an opponent (who was the chief's son, I think), and almost got burned alive for shaming said opponent.
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12 O'Clock High
"The Clash"
Originally aired February 12, 1965
https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/the-classic-retro-pop-culture-thread.278375/page-64#post-12176427
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Gilligan's Island
"St. Gilligan and the Dragon"
Originally aired February 13, 1965
This one's odd continuity-wise...the source of the tensions is that the Howells and the girls apparently don't have their own huts yet. Pretty sure we've seen such huts at this point, though this episode seems to establish that they've all been using the community hut.
Mr. Howell comes up with a plan to scare the women back by making it appear that there's a wild animal on the island. The result is a rather fake-looking dragon costume with Skipper in front and Gilligan in back, but Ginger spies on them putting it together. As Mr. Howell coaches them in practicing their growls...
While the women have experienced some initial difficulty with building their hut, the men find themselves having trouble with tasks like laundry, sewing, and cooking, though they're as determined as the women to prove they can get along without the party of the opposite sex. That night, Skipper has a dream of the women "just acting the way we want them to," which has them serving as his harem. Mr. Howell dreams of the women giving him a massage, manicure, and pedicure. The Professor dreams of himself as an actor with the girls as his screaming fans. Gilligan dreams of himself as a bullfighter with the women giving him gifts and taking turns charging through his cape. The men wake up and go outside to get some air, and Mr. Howell's dependency on pills comes up again. They then try to go entice the women back politely, but find themselves rebuffed.
The women go outside and see what appears to be another monster, and assume that it's the men in costume again...until they notice that the men are standing nearby, upon which they're genuinely frightened. Gilligan prepares to approach with a pole being wielded as a lance when the Professor determines from a distance that it's a weather balloon that they could use to send a message to civilization...but they're too late to stop Gilligan from charging in and destroying it.
In the coda, the Skipper determines that the balloon's radio equipment has been smashed into uselessness, but the Professor thinks that they could still repair the balloon and send it up as a signal...only to find that Gilligan has further cut it to pieces to be used as material for clothing and huts.
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55th Anniversary Viewing
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Branded
"The Test"
Originally aired February 7, 1965
IMDb said:Jason befriends a missionary priest to the Comanche Nation. When the Comanche warriors demand a test of the pacifist priest's courage, Jason steps in to demonstrate a broader definition of courage.
Jason runs into Father Durant (Jason Evers) while being pursued by a group of Indians. Jason uses Durant's wagon for cover while fending them off, but the priest won't fire the rifle that Jason hands him. The two bond some afterward, Jason respecting the priest's principles but not sharing his own reason for being a drifter. Then a party of Comanches comes for Durant, who's been working with them, to explain the incident. Durant makes clear to Jason that he won't fight, but he won't run either. At the Comanche camp, Durant is accused of having contributed to the "ambush" by a warrior named Wild Horse (Jay Silverheels!).
Jason arrives at the camp carrying a spear of peace, and demonstrates some knowledge of the individual Comanches by their reputations and of their ways. He tries to explain how Durant's unwillingness to fight is an attribute of his greater kind of strength...and then gives them a demonstration of turning the other cheek by slapping the priest around a little! The Comanches allow Jason to fight Wild Horse on Durant's behalf, which starts with a jousting-style contest and ends in an on-foot melee between broken saber and tomahawk. Jason wins and Durant persuades Chief Looking Glass (Joe De Santis) to spare Wild Horse's life. The Chief expresses an interest in having Durant teach the Comanche children his kind of courage at his mission.
I was a little unconvinced that the Comanches would be so easily won over by a demonstration of Christian values. I'm no expert on tribal culture, but there was an episode of Hell on Wheels in which Bohannon reluctantly participated in an Indian game that was expected to be fought to the death (which he didn't know going in), tried to spare the life of an opponent (who was the chief's son, I think), and almost got burned alive for shaming said opponent.
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12 O'Clock High
"The Clash"
Originally aired February 12, 1965
IMDb said:Gen. Savage is shot down over the North Sea between England and Nazi-occupied Norway. He manages to make it to a life raft only to find he's sharing it with a downed German fighter pilot, Col Dieter. Savage has an emergency radio and Dieter is wounded, but he has the only gun in the raft, the current is pushing them toward Norway, and Allied search-and-rescue operations are seriously hampered by foul weather. For a few long hours, the war is reduced to its most basic equation, man versus man.
https://www.trekbbs.com/threads/the-classic-retro-pop-culture-thread.278375/page-64#post-12176427
We've all seen this story before, though in trying to look up the earliest known example, I came across a Wiki entry for Enemy Mine that gave a small list of antecedents in which a 1965 war film was the earliest entry. I'd be interested to know if somebody knows of one that goes back further than that.
In this example, although Savage and the colonel have their moments of bonding, it doesn't end well...they remain opponents to the bitter end, which comes when the one who isn't the star of the show dies in a struggle over his gun on a barren little island that they go ashore on. In the coda, Savage does look into trying to get the wallet pictures of the colonel's family, which were his most prized possessions, back to them.
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Gilligan's Island
"St. Gilligan and the Dragon"
Originally aired February 13, 1965
Wiki said:The women tire of being held subservient to the men and decide to separate and build their own camp. The men soon realise how much they need the women, and so they try to scare the women back.
This one's odd continuity-wise...the source of the tensions is that the Howells and the girls apparently don't have their own huts yet. Pretty sure we've seen such huts at this point, though this episode seems to establish that they've all been using the community hut.
Mr. Howell comes up with a plan to scare the women back by making it appear that there's a wild animal on the island. The result is a rather fake-looking dragon costume with Skipper in front and Gilligan in back, but Ginger spies on them putting it together. As Mr. Howell coaches them in practicing their growls...
The girls pretend to be frightened and beat the dragon with poles until the duo come out of the costume.Thurston said:Good heavens, I think we've found an answer to the Beatles!
While the women have experienced some initial difficulty with building their hut, the men find themselves having trouble with tasks like laundry, sewing, and cooking, though they're as determined as the women to prove they can get along without the party of the opposite sex. That night, Skipper has a dream of the women "just acting the way we want them to," which has them serving as his harem. Mr. Howell dreams of the women giving him a massage, manicure, and pedicure. The Professor dreams of himself as an actor with the girls as his screaming fans. Gilligan dreams of himself as a bullfighter with the women giving him gifts and taking turns charging through his cape. The men wake up and go outside to get some air, and Mr. Howell's dependency on pills comes up again. They then try to go entice the women back politely, but find themselves rebuffed.
The women go outside and see what appears to be another monster, and assume that it's the men in costume again...until they notice that the men are standing nearby, upon which they're genuinely frightened. Gilligan prepares to approach with a pole being wielded as a lance when the Professor determines from a distance that it's a weather balloon that they could use to send a message to civilization...but they're too late to stop Gilligan from charging in and destroying it.
In the coda, the Skipper determines that the balloon's radio equipment has been smashed into uselessness, but the Professor thinks that they could still repair the balloon and send it up as a signal...only to find that Gilligan has further cut it to pieces to be used as material for clothing and huts.
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