"Gunsmoke" The Sodbusters (TV Episode 1972) Poster

(TV Series)

(1972)

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7/10
Cattle Rancher vs. Homesteaders Redux
wdavidreynolds11 September 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Clarabelle Callahan owns the water rights in an area a few days away from Dodge City. She lives on a farm with her two children Maria and John. (This is yet another of many examples of a woman and her children living alone on the prairie -- a common Gunsmoke plot element.)

Lamoor Underwood is an obstinate cattle rancher in the area that not only wants the water but wants the local farmers -- "sodbusters" as he calls them -- to leave the area. He resents the presence of the farmers.

(It is interesting to note the karmic implications of someone like Underwood who was involved in taking land from indigenous people to build his cattle ranch now fighting additional settlers who want their own piece of the land.)

Underwood hires a professional gunfighter named Dick Shaw to help "convince" the farmers to leave and Callahan to give up her water rights. Underwood and Shaw are not aware that a man who goes by the name Pete Brown is actually an extremely talented gunfighter named John Jobson who is living on the Callahan farm and helping the family. When Shaw challenges a group of the farmers, Brown resists. Shaw and Brown face off, and Shaw is nowhere near Brown's match.

Underwood and his men ride away from the confrontation and leave the injured Shaw behind. Brown and the farmers tie Shaw to his horse and shoo the horse away.

When the severely injured Shaw is found by a rancher near Dodge, Doc Adams and Matt Dillon are summoned. Doc can do nothing for Shaw, who was shot through a lung and has lost too much blood to survive. Before he dies, Shaw tells Marshal Dillon John Jobson shot him. Matt goes to the area where Underwood and the other farmers live to investigate.

This is a perfect role for actor Morgan Woodward, who plays the cattle baron Lamoor Underwood. Of course, Woodward appeared so often in the series, he almost qualifies as a regular cast member. This is one of his eighteen different Gunsmoke appearances. A young Harrison Ford makes the first of his two Gunsmoke appearances as one of Underwood's hired hands named Print.

This episode features the only Gunsmoke role for actor Alex Cord. His portrayal of the Pete Brown/John Jobson character is convincing.

Actress Katherine Justice, who was featured prominently in television shows throughout the 1970s, portrays Clarabelle Callahan. Real life brother and sister Leif Garrett and Dawn Lyn play her kids. Lyn's portrayal of Dodie Harper Douglas in the comedy series My Three Sons was just ending around the time this episode was filmed. Garrett and Lyn also played siblings in an episode of Wonder Woman, as well as the films Devil Times Five and Walking Tall.

Watch for actor Colin Male who has a small part in this episode as the character Gene Hill. Male never played any big parts, but his voice is well known as the announcer for The Andy Griffith Show.

Milburn Stone makes an appearance early in this episode, but this is one of those episodes where Matt Dillon is the only regular cast member involved, and he is primarily a sideline character, although his law enforcement presence does grow in importance as the story progresses.

The cattle rancher versus homesteader theme is quote popular in the Westerns genre. Of course, it is historically significant because the Homestead Act of 1862 offered 160 acres of public land at no cost if a homesteader filed a claim on the land and successfully established a viable farm.

One of the earliest and best examples of the theme is the 1953 film Shane, and this episode even contains several parallels to that film. Morgan Ryker in Shane is Lamoor Underwood in this story. Shane from the film is Pete Brown here. Jean Arthur's Marian Starrett correlates to Clarabelle Callahan in this story. The Callahan children in this story can be related to Brandon De Wilde's Joey Starrett in the film.

Despite the familiarity of the theme and the lack of much in the way of a connection to the Gunsmoke world, this episode is entertaining, the acting is excellent, and the writing and direction are superb.
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8/10
cattlemen versus ranchers
grizzledgeezer14 September 2013
Any episode with Morgan Woodward -- especially when he's bearded, grumpy, and gruff-voiced -- is worth watching.

Yes, this is yet another episode about someone on the wrong side of the law (or who appears to be) who wants to reform, but is blocked. Several things make this a better-than average example of such stories.

For one, the dialog is un-clichéd, and gives the impression of 19th-century speech. The writer seems to have done his homework.

Another thing is the well-written "unnecessary" scene another reviewer disparages. Woodward's cattleman -- rather surprisingly -- sees himself, like the Indians, as a preserver of the land. He argues that -- as cattle do little more than eat the grass, which grows back * -- he isn't tearing up the land as the farmers are. This is the sort of dialog Woodward delivers so well. (I added this idea to a rethinking of "The Virginian" I'm working on.)

More-sentimental than I'd like, but excellent performance all around (even in the smaller roles). Worth seeing.

* This was also the point of contention between cattlemen and sheep herders. The sheep tore the grass out by the roots, while cattle only cropped the leaves.
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8/10
Good Episode
taurus046326 August 2022
Watching Gunsmoke on Pluto TV is the bomb!! I get to catch episodes I hadn't seen before. Impressed with Morgan Woodard and Harrison Ford 50 years ago. Harrison Ford just turned 80 on July 13, 2022. Alex Cord is superb.
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4/10
One Thing To Note (Harrison Ford)
Cuppajoe2go10 September 2021
Harrison Ford has a bit more involved appearance in this one.
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Cows & Sheep
ob-wan-1237329 August 2018
Alert. Reviewer stating sheep tear out grass by the roots is mistaken. Do some research.
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2/10
Farmland in the Mohave desert?
streetlight217 January 2020
I suppose one could import fodder for cattle but water was rare in the 1870's in the Mohave and other Southeastern California deserts. It's even less likely that sod busters using 19th century crops could grow anything there in the sand using 19th century farming techniques. Various projects have brought Colorado River and other sources of water to some places. If the story was to take place in Kansas, then film the stories there. At least the mountains in this story weren't just east of Mount Whitney which shows up in some supposed Dodge City episodes.
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4/10
A rehashed story that loses interest after another performance
kfo94944 February 2013
A widowed farm owner named Clarabelle Callahan has the legal water rights to a lake in the area. A cattle rancher named Lamoor Underwood (Morgan Woodward) will not negotiate with Clarabelle and even goes as far to hire a gunman to make sure he gets water. But little does anyone know that Clarabelle has a farmhand, Pete Brown, that is very handy with a gun. At an end of a gunfight, Pete will be the one standing.

As one might guess, the writer starts a relationship between Clarabelle, her two small children and the hired-hand Pete Brown. When Marshal gets wind of the trouble he rides out only to find that Pete Brown is actually a wanted gunslinger named John Jobson. As usual Matt has to be lawful and will be taking Jobson back to Dodge. Clarabelle puts a stop to the Marshal's plans. Before Jobson rides off he tells Clarabelle some information about why he chose to work for her. But his reason for riding off might just be to help Clarabelle and the kids.

This was a rehashed story that has been played out many times in a 'Gunsmoke' series. In fact the only thing changed are the character's name. There is also a useless scene in the show between James Arness and Morgan Woodward. Even with the poor use of light the scene was a complete mess. Two sentences would have been enough but we get an entire ten minutes while Woodward tells us about sod-busters and why he hates them. This was not a unique show and offered little interest to keep a viewer's attention. Not one of the better shows.
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