Buckskin
Buckskin
| 03 July 1958 (USA)
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    Reviews
    BlazeLime

    Strong and Moving!

    Lucybespro

    It is a performances centric movie

    StyleSk8r

    At first rather annoying in its heavy emphasis on reenactments, this movie ultimately proves fascinating, simply because the complicated, highly dramatic tale it tells still almost defies belief.

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    Guillelmina

    The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.

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    DanestarProductions

    If copies exist, It would be great to have them on again, or around for viewing. Todays television doesn't have enough roll models, with morals, manners, and ethics. Perhaps it is time for a modern day version of this type of series. Westerns were all the rage at one time and every network had them. now it's cops, and investigators, nurses and doctors, all OK but more hard core, to the point with violence and sex. I'm not condemning them just saying we need to mix it up a little, with some good shows, that set a standard for living by. It is shows like "Buckskin", "Big Valley", and God Bless " Roy and Dale" for giving us their lives, to set such standards.Sincerely, A. R. Danes

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    dougbrode

    This show was one of the rarest of rarities - a summer replacement series that proved so popular it was picked up the following year to replace one of the fall season's first casualties, with new episodes being filmed. It actually had an extremely long run, despite the fact that only 39 episodes (ordinarily a single season) were shot, because it could be played either as an evening western or as a kiddie show on Saturday morning. This had to do with an interesting innovation - whereas most westerns (ever since the classic movie SHANE) had a little boy in a supporting role, this was the first TV series to actually tell the story of the old west from a child's point of view. Luckily, they had a fine young actor in Tommy Nolan, who lived in the small town of Buckskin with his Mom. As she ran a boarding house, all sorts of odd and interesting characters passed by, and each of their story's was depicted as to its impact on the child as he gradually grew up. In a way, it resembled the original LASSIE (with Jeff, not Timmy), only shifted back in time and taken from the midwest to the north west. And without Lassie, of course. There was a solid, decent town marshal, but again, we only saw him as the child saw him. There was a warmth to this show that was missing from many of the other TV westerns of that time. And while it never made a big splash, it does hold a nice nostalgic place in the memories of those who remember catching it.

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