Protraph
Lack of good storyline.
Cleveronix
A different way of telling a story
Mischa Redfern
I didn’t really have many expectations going into the movie (good or bad), but I actually really enjoyed it. I really liked the characters and the banter between them.
Adeel Hail
Unshakable, witty and deeply felt, the film will be paying emotional dividends for a long, long time.
bkoganbing
Scott Brady whose film credits include both westerns and noir got a chance to do both in his two year series Shotgun Slade. Slade was a combination bounty hunter and detective and was strictly a man for hire going throughout the West wherever someone would pay for his services.It wasn't always bring him in dead or alive with Slade. He was hired on all kinds of work, missing persons, recovery of stolen loot, etc. He was not a fast draw so he had a weapon that was quite the equalizer. He carried a two barrel long gun called an 'over and under'. The top barrel was for rifle bullets, the bottom barrel fired shotgun shells for up close and personal killing in case he had a group of nasty outlaws all bunched together.Scott Brady played the cynical Slade in the best tradition of Mickey Spillane in boots and chaps. One thing that was unusual for a western never used before or since was instead of western music a jazz score accompanied the action. Different if nothing else.Shotgun Slade lasted for two years and then went into syndication forever it seemed like. It was certainly as unique a western series as we ever had.
Gatorman9
I just saw this on DVD for the first time last night and enjoyed because it was so much like Peter Gunn. What the other reviewers have said regarding the musical score and general tone of the show (especially in the dialog and the attitude portrayed by the star) is true. While it is by no means realistic, it was stylish enough in it's Kennedy-era way to be more entertaining to watch than the vast majority of what you can find on commercial TV today, so don't "dis" it. I wish that more of this kind of thing was available. Newton Minow must be rolling over in his grave at just HOW vast a wasteland modern television has become today.
westpoint64
I've got 2 episodes of "Shotgun Slade" on DVD. It seems to me that Revue Studios was, indeed, trying to copy "Peter Gunn", right on down to having its blonde "Edie Hart"-type girl singer girlfriend character, played by Monica Lewis. Unlike "The Wild Wild West", which was played half-straight to be something of a "spy show in the West", "Slade" was played totally straight. The show is so bad that it's unintentionally funny. The acting and plots are hammy, phony, and unconvincing. Scott Brady was a former boxer so he knows how to throw a punch but the opening of the show gives you an idea he's not much in the acting dept. (and the rest of the show confirms it)...Its badness makes this show a real find. You'd have to look far and wide to find a tackier "Adult Western" of the time period.
Don Doss
I've been enjoying a number of Shotgut Slade episodes recently. However this episode is one the better ones. Sue Ann Langdon plays the part of the sheriff's daughter who is representing a town committee. The committee hires Slade to determine the credentials of a man who claims to have a sizeable stake in the town. The man was recently released from prison having been sent there by Slade. The man has a vendetta against Slade and has hired a young man in town, known to have a fast gun, to kill Slade. The story is further complicated by the fact that Sue Ann has a crush on the young man. Sue Ann played her part admirably, as expected.