Smartorhypo
Highly Overrated But Still Good
Breakinger
A Brilliant Conflict
ActuallyGlimmer
The best films of this genre always show a path and provide a takeaway for being a better person.
Quiet Muffin
This movie tries so hard to be funny, yet it falls flat every time. Just another example of recycled ideas repackaged with women in an attempt to appeal to a certain audience.
mjl529
"Gunsmoke" was one of my favorite westerns growing up, I was very excited when the 1987 reunion movie "Return to Gunsmoke" was made.Unfortunately I wished they had brought back all or most of the regulars that were still living. Ken Curtis, Burt Reynolds, Dennis Weaver, and Roger Ewing were in this if they only had a cameo appearance. Another reviewer wrote that James Arness acted more like his "Zeb Macahan" character than "Matt Dillon", and the ex-Marshal would have definitely "NOT" became a mountain man?? They should have open the movie with Matt & Kitty married and living peacefully on a ranch, with Matt a rancher/cattle buyer.Newly O'Brien as the new doctor of Dodge,since "Milburn Stone" (God Bless Him)"Doc Adams" has passed away. In the original series Newly was being trained by "Doc" in many of the latter year episodes.The Marshal should have been Claude Atkins, Glen Corbett, or even Alex Cord,they looked the part of a Lawman. "Mannon" character was superb, for him to be released from prison and go after Matt & Kitty. This would have turned by rating of 6 to a 10!!
memery-1
This was far better than I was expecting; a solid reunion movie although only a handful of cast members returned. In a sense, this is kind of a "Wrath of Khan" for "Gunsmoke." Returning foe Mannon (expertly played by Steve Forrest) heads into Dodge to wreak vengeance on Matt and Kitty. There are quite a few flashback scenes, but they further the plot. Although James Arness looks a little odd at times (why did they color his hair??), he's still the same Matt Dillon we last saw in the mid 70s. The real scene stealer is Forrest with his blue-eyed glare and gruesome demeanor. Earl Holliman also gives a great performance as Jake Flagg, loyal friend to Matt (although it's never explained why he's in prison). Even the most casual "Gunsmoke" fan will be be impressed.
tvnutt
While it's a joy to see Matt and Kitty back together, this movie sorely lacked any hint of the Gunsmoke magic. In a nutshell, Matt Dillon is now a mountain man, Kitty has left Dodge and Newly O'Brian the former gunsmith and deputy is now marshal.Will Mannon, the evil gunslinger who appeared in a self-titled episode of Gunsmoke, is released from prison to kill Matt and the judge who put Mannon in prison. Another prisoner, Jake Flagg, who is an old friend of Matt's, breaks out of prison by using the warden as hostage. Flagg needs to warn Matt about Mannon. The gunslinger shoots the warden and Flagg is now wanted by a young, overzealous deputy and some bounty hunters. Several of the unscrupulous bounty hunters actually stab Dillon who is found and taken back to Dodge where he awakens to find Miss Kitty. Matt tries to help protect Flagg meanwhile Mannon returns to Dodge where he torments Miss Kitty as he did in the original episode. Back then he had raped Kitty and beat her, something Matt did not know.Okay, inconsistencies. First, but this is my opinion, Matt would not have become a Mountain Man. It's just not him(maybe they got him confused with his Zeb Macahan character from How the West Was Won). Second, Kitty explains why she left Dodge. It's a flashback from the episode "The Badge" where Matt is shot and Kitty just can't handle seeing him hurt anymore. Any fan of the show would know that this episode(don't know when it aired but certainly not in the last year of the show) ends with Matt meeting Kitty and sort of convincing her to come back, which she does. The movie made it sound like she never came back. Amanda Blake left the show in 1974. There are reports she claims she was sick and tired of the character and the commute(she was living in AZ at the time). Others question that producer John Mantley fired her for money reasons. They allegedly did not get along at all. Third, in the episode Mannon, he is apparently shot dead from how the episode ends but I guess it could have been interpreted as him possibly surviving.Those are disappointments show-wise. Other ones that made fans cringe are James Arnesses' hair and make-up, absolutely scary. Kitty looked her age and did not look bad at all. Amanda Blake had contracted AIDS and she later died from the disease 2 years after this film. Ken Curtis did not return, he reportedly wanted more money than Blake. Finally, Matt and Kitty never kiss at the end, they never even get together. She see's him through a window and sheds a tear as he goes back to his lonely life. Reportedly, the original script had Matt walk into the hotel where Kitty was(and you could use your imagination). There were too many Flashbacks which took away from developing the plot to this movie. They actually show one Flashback twice.John Mantley produced the movie and I was surprised someone with such a grasp on GS let this be the end product.Also, the cover art for the movie on this website only show's James Arness. There is another version which has a small picture of Kitty on it.Otherwise, it's fun to see M&K back together.
dinky-4
This made-for-TV movie picks up the "Gunsmoke" characters after Matt Dillon has retired and Miss Kitty has moved to New Orleans. Perhaps this is a miscalculation since these characters, taken past their usual milieu, seem a bit adrift, like figures in a wax museum which is being modernized. (James Arness' hair and make-up sometimes border on the grotesque.) However, fans of the show will probably enjoy this indulgence since it has in its cast a number of welcome faces and it makes effective use of flashback clips from a January 20, 1969 episode of "Gunsmoke" which featured Steve Forrest.Forrest plays a murderous character named Mannon who's first seen stripped to the waist, bound to a wooden post, and receiving a 24-lash punishment with a whip. One wonders what he'd done to warrant such a punishment on his very last day in prison but the reasons for it are never explained. One also wonders why the prison warden cuts short the punishment since Mannon is such a evil character and probably deserves whatever punishment comes his way. The whipping itself, however, is unconvincingly staged with the camera in front of Forrest and the flogger behind him. It's clear the whip is too short to actually strike Forrest's back. He simply jerks and winces whenever he hears the whip crack.One must admire Forrest for doing this bare-chest scene at the advanced age of 62, (he looks pretty good!), and it should be pointed out that he must set a record for the time elapsed between beefcake-bondage scenes. In MGM's 1954 "Prisoner of War", at the age of 29, Forrest -- stripped to a pair of snug-fitting undershorts -- endured a sweaty crucifixion-with-ropes ordeal which marked a highpoint in screen sadomasochism.