Have Gun, Will Travel

1957

Seasons & Episodes

  • 6
  • 5
  • 4
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1

8.4| 0h30m| TV-G| en
Synopsis

Have Gun – Will Travel is an American Western television series that aired on CBS from 1957 through 1963. It was rated number three or number four in the Nielsen ratings every year of its first four seasons. It was one of the few television shows to spawn a successful radio version. The radio series debuted November 23, 1958. The television show is presently shown on the Encore-Western channel. Have Gun – Will Travel was created by Sam Rolfe and Herb Meadow and produced by Frank Pierson, Don Ingalls, Robert Sparks, and Julian Claman. There were 225 episodes of the TV series, 24 written by Gene Roddenberry. Other contributors included Bruce Geller, Harry Julian Fink, Don Brinkley and Irving Wallace. Andrew McLaglen directed 101 episodes and 19 were directed by series star Richard Boone.

Director

Producted By

CBS

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Reviews

GamerTab That was an excellent one.
SpuffyWeb Sadly Over-hyped
DipitySkillful an ambitious but ultimately ineffective debut endeavor.
Sarita Rafferty There are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.
dlsimons-35294 I am 49 years old, young by standards of this show but just old enough to grow up with last of the westerns. I stumbled across his program a couple of years ago and have watch all the episodes more than once when once is generally enough for me with any tv show or movie. After watching several episodes I realized one of the things that drew me to it was how the character, Boon, role reminded me of my late father. A real mans man. A man that would get his hands dirty with the outside work of hard labor, farming, horses and so on but then a businessman who could attend the finest of events. A man that stood for principal and fairness. Taught his boys how to fight, only fight when you have to but if you do, fight to win. A generation when ships were made of wood and men were made of steel. Now ships are made of steel and men are made of wood or even play-doh.
MiddleRowAisleSeat Richard Boone is one of a kind, a screen icon. Like so many of a small select group of actors who graced both the small and big silver screen, he had a compelling presence, enormous charisma, and a face the camera loved. In addition, as an actor, he could hold his own with anyone in Hollywood, from Broadway, or abroad, which allowed many outstanding character actors to be seen on his show in scenes with him without them being able to upstage him.Like fellow actors Bruce Dern and Jack Elam, he was equally effective as the bad guy. No one would ever describe him as having a pretty face. But he had an expressive face with a strong, masculine, dimpled chin, deep set eyes, a broad, intelligent forehead and brow below a head of curly dark hair; and that face many of his fans and admirers described as ruggedly handsome. When he was on screen, all eyes were drawn to him, anxious to see what he would do or say next.He made a great antagonist to actors like John Wayne who had enormous presence and could fill the screen, an accomplishment that allowed us, the audience a chance to relish some truly intense and exciting physical and verbal interactions between them.Have Gun - Will Travel is iconic in itself. It was sharp, well written, taut, well acted and, most often, well directed. As at least one other reviewer has mentioned, many of the episodes were darker than your average western series. It suited the name of the show, the way Paladin dressed and talked (including the poetry and prose he frequently quoted), and the subjects and themes of many of those episodes, where the B&W cinematography often had scenes filmed half in deep shadow, emphasizing and reflecting the darkness of the subject matter or underlying theme. It was both timely and timeless. Many of its episodes have contemporary themes and deal with social and ecological problems we are still dealing with today. Occasionally, the scripts were pedantic or preachy in a very small way for only a moment or two, just long enough for the writer or producer to get their point across. Fortunately, none of the shows I have seen ever lapsed into diatribes. The social or ecological consciousness of some shows remained in the shadows or within the underlying theme, showing up only in a short speech of a very few words at the beginning and/or end of an episode, where all such subjects should be kept in shows that are primarily entertainment in nature. I like this show very much and am glad I am getting a chance to see on the Western Channel of Starz Encore a series that I mostly missed as a child in the '50's and '60's. The series and Mr. Boone are well worth watching for the first time…and again.Richard Boone was perfect in this iconic role that he defined. He was and will remain unique, incomparable, and will never walk this way again. Thank our lucky Starz for the preservation of film, video, and all the other wonderful media where our cinematic memories are kept and treasured.*As a footnote, DirecTV shows Have Gun – Will Travel on Channel 538 at 1:52 pm CDT on weekdays and 9:00 am CDT on Saturdays. **For those interested in old classic westerns, on the Western Channel (Channel 538), you can also find Marshal Dillon (the half-hour episodes of Gunsmoke). Then there's Gunsmoke itself (the B&W hour-long episodes of the longest running dramatic series on television, which ran from 1955–1975. There was a reason it lasted as long as it did! Next is Rawhide, which had the best theme song of all time (sung by Frankie Laine). It was also one of the best westerns on television, featuring Eric Fleming as the trail boss, Gil Favor, and launched the career of a young Clint Eastwood as Rowdy Yates (who sings a tune every now and again). I almost forgot Wagon Train, an anthology show concerning different characters, and their lives, on their way west on a wagon train lead by regulars Ward Bond and Robert Horton, and later, John McIntire and Robert Fuller, among others. Two other excellent western series, not currently running on the Western Channel at this time, are Cheyenne with tall, broad-shouldered, narrow-hipped, iconic Clint Walker and Maverick, with America's favorite television actor, James Garner who played Bret, and Jack Kelly who played his brother, Bart, both series of which ran earlier and can be seen in special marathons you have to keep on the watch for. Fortunately, the Western Channel repeats episodes and does a lot of advertising at the end of classic series episodes where you can find out, far in advance, what's coming up. These are all early classic western series I recommend for anyone interested in, just discovering, or rediscovering the genre. There has always been good television and westerns, in particular, if you knew where to find them and what you were looking for. Good hunting and good watching!
Poe-17 Television has, occasionally, left a worthy mark in our world. Mostly it's what's hot, faddish, trendish and popular at the moment. As years roll by the last "hot" is forgotten and bulldozed over by the current "hot" that pops up in our verbiage until the next "hot thing" takes over. Nothing lasts.This western (it wasn't a western, it just used the western setting for it's pallet, a wise choice) dug into the human condition and unleashed a series of morality plays that retain the power to "thunk our noggins" today.Yes, there's over-pumps to make a point and - yeah Paladin must be a couple hundred years old to have done everything he's done but he is, in a quiet way, one of the original superheroes (would make a great graphic novel.The series addressed issues decades ahead of its time.It was about the black, the white and the gray. And the unpopular ideas.Suggestive, challenging, heroic, humbling and holds its weight today.We could use Paladins today.Good stuff. Damned good stuff.
tim-1979 In 1974, a Portuguese(!) cowboy from Rhode Island(!) named Victor De Costa won a federal court judgment in his second suit against CBS for trademark infringement, successfully litigating his assertion that he had created the Paladin character and the ideas used in the show -- which were somehow stolen by HGWT's producers. (Rather dubious since HGWT's original concept was that of a modern day globe-trotting detective.) He claimed he began billing himself as Paladin after an Italian man stood up at a horse show and called him a "paladino." He claimed he'd adopted the phrase "Have Gun, Will Travel" after someone shouted it at him while he was on a bucking bronco. At his appearances he always dressed in black, he handed out hundreds of HGWT business cards, and he even carried a concealed derringer. The physical resemblance between Mr. De Costa and Richard Boone was nothing less than striking.Although monetary damages were not immediately awarded, De Costa stood to gain a tidy sum, as court testimony indicated that HGWT had made more than $14 million for CBS (a titanic amount in the 1950's-60's), plus millions more in product licensing. A year later, a court of appeals overturned the lower court, ruling that the plaintiff had failed to prove that the public had been deceived -- i.e., there had been no likelihood of confusion in the minds of the public -- a necessary requirement for a suit over trademark infringement. However, De Costa kept pursuing his legal options, and in 1991 -- more than 30 years after his first lawsuit was originally filed -- he was awarded over 3 million dollars after quietly trademarking the Paladin character and business card in the late 70's. Unfortunately, Mr. De Costa passed away at the age of 83 before he could receive a single penny.(hgwt.com)