Shimon Wincelberg Movies
Shimon Wincelberg (also sometimes credited as
S. Bar-David or
Shimon Bar-David) has led a life worthy of a feature film or a novel. Born in Germany in 1925, he was raised in a religious Jewish household. He grew up a top athlete, intending to become a rabbinical student, until the realities of life and death in
Hitler's Germany made it impossible to remain in his native country.
Wincelberg arrived in the United States at the end of the 1930s, eventually serving in the Army's 27th Infantry Division in combat intelligence. After the war, he was stationed at a hospital in Japan, where his job was to teach Americanism (i.e., idealized American concepts of justice, governance, and culture) to Japanese civilians. He ended up fascinated by Japanese culture, and started writing professionally in the early '50s, selling his first short story, "The Conqueror," in 1953. That same year,
Wincelberg wrote his first screenplay for the airborne war movie
Fighter Attack. He later penned
On the Threshold of Space (1956), a drama about the high-altitude experiments that were a prelude to the formal space program; but it was his script for a TV drama, The Sea Is Boiling Hot (starring
Sessue Hayakawa and
Earl Holliman), that had a much more profound impact, and led to his theatrical debut. The story of a Japanese and an American soldier who find themselves stranded together on an island during World War II, it was adapted by
Wincelberg for the Broadway stage in 1958 as KatakI (also starring
Hayakawa). Although it was a commercial failure and closed quickly, the production was cited as one of the best plays of the 1958-1959 season, and the Broadway credit only raised
Wincelberg's profile in television circles. By the end of the '50s, he was writing regularly for such television series as Johnny Staccato (starring
John Cassavetes) and The Rebel (starring
Nick Adams). During the '60s, he wrote for Combat!, the final season of Naked City, the first season of
Star Trek ("
Dagger of the Mind," "
The Galileo Seven"), and
Mannix. He used a variety names for his television writing credits, including
S. Bar-David and
Shimon Bar-David, occasionally even taking one for the original story or scenario and using
Shimon Wincelberg for the teleplay when he had written both.
Starting in the early to mid-'60s,
Wincelberg also wrote regularly for
Gunsmoke for a decade, though his biggest impact on a single series may have been on
Lost in Space. He wrote or co-wrote either the scripts or the original stories and scenarios for the series' unaired pilot ("
No Place to Hide") and the first five episodes of the show's first season. The latter, following a very serious and coherent story arc, are generally regarded as the five best shows in the series' entire three-season run. The writer closed out the decade with the screenplay for the European-made,
Charles Bronson thriller
Cold Sweat (1970), directed by
Terence Young.
Wincelberg was even busier during the '70s, a decade in which he had a musical (Only Fools Are Sad) produced on Broadway for what became a five-month run in 1971-1972. He also wrote for numerous TV shows, including Owen Marshall: Counselor at Law,
Nichols, Longstreet,
Hec Ramsey, Bronk, The Magician, Logan's Run,
Police Woman,
The Paper Chase, and Trapper John, M.D.
Wincelberg once explained to an interviewer that television was a means to an end, paying him well enough so he could afford to write books on serious subjects, either alone or with his wife Anita (herself an award-winning writer), often dealing with aspects of Jewish history and culture. In 1998,
Wincelberg -- then 78-years-old -- and co-authors
Richard Sweren and
Ed Zuckerman earned the Edgar award from the Mystery Writers of America for Best Episode in a Television Series for the 1997
Law & Order script "
Double Down," in which the district attorney, in an effort to save the life of a kidnapped driver, is tricked into granting immunity to the killer of a police officer and must find a way to prosecute him.
Wincelberg's dramatic work has appeared in the book The Theatre of the Holocaust. Among his and his wife's serious writing collaborations is The Samurai of Vishogrod: The Notebooks of Jacob Marateck (1976), a retelling of the life and adventures of a Jewish man in late 19th and early 20th century Poland and Russia, from the shtetl to service in the Tsar's army in Manchuria and the 1905 Ruso-Japanese War. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

- 1997
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A police officer is killed and a hired driver kidnapped during a carjacking. Detectives Briscoe (Jerry Orbach) and Curtis (Benjamin Bratt) manage to capture one of the perpetrators, who offers to reveal the whereabouts of the missing driver to Assistant D.A. Ross (Carey Lowell) in exchange for immunity on the cop-killing charge. This potential deal results in much professional grief for Ross' partner Jack McCoy (Sam Waterston). Edie Falco returns in the role of defense attorney (and McCoy's ex-lover) Sally Bell. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1970
- PG
- Add Cold Sweat to Queue
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From Dr. No director Terence Young comes this action thriller starring Charles Bronson as Joe Moran, an ex-con whose old gang of drug dealers has just been released from prison. When it turns out the thugs have been holding a grudge against him, they kidnap Moran's wife, played by Liv Ullmann. In order to get her back and get his revenge, Moran is forced to take on the whole crew by himself. Written by Albert Simonin and Shimon Wincelberg, Cold Sweat was based on the novel Ride the Nightmare by Twilight Zone scribe Richard Matheson. ~ Matthew Tobey, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Charles Bronson, Liv Ullmann, (more)

- 1966
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A wounded Littlejohn (Dick Peabody) awakens to find that he's been kidnapped by four scruffy French children. As a means of survival, the enterprising youngsters intend to "sell" Littlejohn to the highest bidder, just as they've done with several other American and German prisoners in the past. Despite its title, this is not a "cute" episode by any means: the scene in which one of the children grabs a gun and kills an intruder is one of the most harrowing in the series' history. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1965
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The Seaview takes on a joint mission with a pair of Russian scientists to salvage the remains of a wrecked Soviet undersea lab, which was destroyed by huge schools of migrating whales. When one of the team is killed in an accidental collision with a whale, the surviving scientist, Dr. Katya Markhova (Gia Scala), insists on making a last-ditch effort to examine the wreckage. Admiral Nelson (Richard Basehart) won't risk another man, and decides to accompany her himself on the dive. But the dive is interrupted by the arrival of a huge sperm whale, which swallows the entire bell. Captain Crane (David Hedison) manages to get the whale sedated sufficiently so that it comes to a temporary rest on an undersea plateau. He has hope that the admiral and Dr. Markhova could be alive if the bell is intact, and decides mount a rescue mission -- inside the whale. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi
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- 1965
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No, the Robinsons' planet is not invaded by a group of 1960s pop singers. The titular fifth-dimensional creatures are a race of luminous aliens, in search of a new brain for their malfunctioning computer. When Dr. Smith (Jonathan Harris) is chosen to donate his brain, the cowardly physician declines the honor--and offers the brain of Will Robinson (Bill Mumy) as a suitable replacement. This episode incorporates some "jetpack" footage from the original Lost in Space pilot episode. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1965
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The un-aired Lost in Space pilot "No Place to Hide" kicked around underground video collectors' circles for close to 20 years, but until its release, first through Columbia House on tape in the late '90s and later as part of the FoxVideo DVD set Lost in Space: Season 1, it wasn't available to ordinary viewers. The first eight and a half minutes of the show are substantially the same as events in the first episode of the series, "The Reluctant Stowaway," but with two key differences: There is no Dr. Zachary Smith (and, hence, no "reluctant stowaway" -- so no saboteur), and there is no robot. There are also differences in the Robinson family's mission. Their ship, called the Gemini 12 rather than the Jupiter 2, will be traveling for 98 years, with the Robinson party in suspended animation, to Alpha Centauri. (Someone didn't do the math, as they're to be traveling for 98 years at virtually the speed of light, which would enough time to make several round trips to a star only 4.4 light-years away.) The plot changes substantially from what was used in the series at just under nine minutes into the story, as the ship encounters a circular swarm of meteors that leaves it critically damaged. The spaceship is next seen going into a low orbit around a planet and entering the atmosphere on automatic controls (with the family still in stasis) for a crash-landing. The plot then jumps ahead six months, to a recollection of events in Professor John Robinson's journal, read over a montage of space castaway life by Guy Williams. The Robinsons are seen living a spartan, but survivable, existence, and we see events that were ultimately used in episodes four and five of the series .
The castaways determine that the planet's orbit will result in a potentially lethal winter, and then discover a race of one-eyed giants, standing 50-feet tall and living in the mountains near where the ship crashed. Professor Robinson and Don West (Mark Goddard) are trapped in a cave by one of the creatures (Lamar Lundy), but are rescued when Will Robinson (Billy Mumy) arrives with a laser pistol. The travelers abandon their spaceship in the face of the coming deep freeze, and along their journey discover an ancient ruin with the mummified remains of something non-human before crossing the inland sea to safety. The latter segment contains a whirlpool scene -- the work of L.B. Abbott and Howard Lydecker -- that is still chilling. The program ends with the Robinsons setting up a new camp, not realizing that they are being observed and evaluated by a pair of aliens.
With the exception of the ending, all of this action will be familiar to longtime fans of the series from its usage in episodes one, four, and five, although some shots and scenes here run longer than they were in the finished program. Perhaps the best of these is the extended version of John Robinson's rocket-pack ride over the alien landscape in search of his missing daughter Penny, a scene set to Bernard Herrmann's hauntingly beautiful, yet moody, seascape music from Beneath the 12-Mile Reef. As John Williams had not yet been engaged to write the score for the episode (or a title theme), all of the music here is tracked in from Herrmann's scores from various 20th Century Fox feature films, including The Day the Earth Stood Still, Journey to the Center of the Earth, and Beneath the 12-Mile Reef. Although less overtly suspenseful than what Williams would write, Herrmann's music gives all of this material a strangely beautiful, poetic quality -- perhaps not as suspenseful as the network wanted, but quite lovely in its way. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi
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- 1965
-
While it is true that Lost in Space officially debuted on September 15, 1965, every true fan of the series knows that it actually begins on October 16, 1997, the date that the Robinson family, along with pilot Don West (Mark Goddard), are to be launched in the space vessel Jupiter 2 on a colonization mission to Alpha Centauri. Shortly before lift-off, the Robinsons are given words of encouragement by their trusted associate Dr. Zachary Smith (Jonathan Harris)--who, once he is alone, reveals himself to be an enemy agent, intent upon sabotaging the Jupiter 1 before it reaches its destination. For this purpose, Smith has planted a booby-trapped robot in the space vessel, programmed to destroy both the vessel and its occupants. Unfortunately for Smith, he himself is trapped on board the Jupiter a few seconds before the final countdown! Much of the expository footage in this episode is lifted from the original pilot film for Lost in Space, in which neither Dr. Smith nor the robot appeared. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1965
-
The Robinson family starts to explore the planet where they've crash-landed, but still face the threat of Dr. Smith (Jonathan Harris) and the robot, which he has set out to kill anyone it finds. Will Robinson (Billy Mumy) interrupts its attempt to kill him by getting it to play chess until Smith can be persuaded to deactivate it. They find out that the planet supports at least one potentially dangerous life form: a hybrid planet/animal micro-organism in the soil that can take root in and take over a larger host, and which also seems to be the start of an evolutionary chain. A hint of what lies at the other end of that chain comes when the robot blows its circuits over something it encounters while investigating a strange noise. Meanwhile, Professor Robinson (Guy Williams) and Major West (Mark Goddard) discover that because of the planet's long elliptical orbit, they're due for a lethal deep-freeze and need to move south -- and run right into a 50-foot Cyclopean giant (Lamar Lundy). Will rescues them, and they prepare to escape the coming cold; but first the professor must find the missing Penny (Angela Cartwright), and flies across the landscape using his rocket-pack to locate her. They arrive back just in time, leaving the unwilling Smith behind in the Jupiter 2 to try and survive the cold on his own. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi
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- 1962
-
British criminologist Dr. Avatar (Philip Coolidge) is a staunch advocate of phrenology, a once-popular (and long discredited) theory which states that a man's criminal tendencies can be determined by the bumps on his head. Hiring Paladin (Richard Boone) as his guide, Avatar is determined to prove his theory by studying the noggin of an elderly, reclusive gunfighter named Jake Trueblood (Roy Barcroft)--who is understandably disinclined to be anyone's guinea pig! This episode was originally scheduled to air on December 30, 1962. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1962
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Risking his life to save Caleb Musgrove (Stanley Adams) from being poisoned, Paladin (Richard Boone) finds out that his efforts are all for naught. The "poisoning" is just the latest in a long series of practical jokes perpetrated by Caleb on friends and strangers alike. Now Paladin must end Caleb's "reign of humor" before one of his so-called jokes backfires in a fatal fashion! ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1961
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Jewish immigrants Nathan and Rivka Shotness (Martin Gabel, Roxane Berard), first seen in the fourth-season episode "The Fatalist", make return appearances in this entry. Paladin (Richard Boone) is invited to serve as best man on the occasion of Rivka's wedding. Unfortunately, the festivities may be interrupted--violently--by the arrival of Billy Buckstone (Noah Keen), against whom Nathan once testified in a murder trial. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1961
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The fifth season of Have Gun, Will Travel begins as soldier-of-fortune Paladin (Richard Boone) provides escort for Adella Forsyth (Mary Fickett), a prim, idealistic nurse who is determined to minister to a frontier town that would rather have a male doctor. While trekking through a wintry mountain pass, the two travellers meet a pair of scrungy prospectors (one of whom is played by future Oscar winner George Kennedy), who may have killed their partner. The experience proves to be a harrowing one for Adella--so much so that Paladin worries that she'll forget her dreams about being an "angel of mercy." With this episode, Kam Tong returns after a season's absence in the role of pixieish bellhop Hey Boy. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1961
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Riding into a dusty Arkansas town, Paladin is greeted with the spectacle of a man chained in the street. The hapless prisoner turns out to be Dr. Simeon Loving (Donald Randolph), accused of murder by self-appointed "hanging judge" Elroy Greenleaf (Harold J. Stone). At the risk of his own neck, Paladin offers to act as Dr. Loving's defense counsel to save the man from the gallows--even though the wily Judge Greenleaf has pretty much stacked the deck against the prisoner. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1960
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Summoned to San Francisco's chinatown by the city's police department, Paladin (Richard Boone) agrees to provide protection to Chinese detective Joe Tsin (Benson Fong). But there are two major complications: Tsin has been marked for death by a vicious Tong, whose hatchet men have never failed to dispatch a victim yet. Also, Tsin is deeply concerned that he will "lose face" if he accepts Paladin's help. Lisa Lu, who would join the Have Gun--Will Travel cast as "Hey Girl" during the series' fourth season, is here cast as Li Hwa. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1960
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Two-fisted Irish salesman Ike Brennan (Robert Gist) comes to Paladin (Richard Boone) to help save the life of Brennan's wife, currently held hostage by Indians. Paladin agrees to help Brennan deliver a wagonload of trade goods--food, blankets, etc.--to use as ransom. What the gunslinger doesn't know is that the shipment also includes a Gaitlin gun (an early form of machine gun), which the Indians plan to use in a fullscale war against the Cavalry. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1960
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Paladin (Richard Boone) is summoned by the US Army to seek out Col. Nunez (Shepperd Strudwick), who had made a name for himself (and not a good one!) during the Civil War. Rumor has it that Nunez and his Native American wife Serafina (Lorna Thayer) have become renegades, aligning themselves with the hostile Apaches. Tracking down Nunez, Paladin finds out that the deranged colonel is arming and training the Indian for an all-out war against the whites--but the gunslinger may not live long enough to relay this information to the authorities. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1960
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Have Gun, Will Travel opens its fourth season with an ethnic slant, a particular specialty of scriptwriter Shimon Wincelberg. Martin Gabel is seen as Russian-Jewish immigrant Nathan Shotness, who after witnessing a murder is pressured to keep quiet by a tough town boss. Nathan's daughter Rivka (Roxanne Berard) asks Paladin (Richard Boone) to provide protection for her father until the murder trial. The situation worsens when Rivka is kidnapped by the killer, a particularly vicious customer named Smollet (played by Robert Blake at his pre-stardom nastiest!). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1960
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The Hotel Carleton becomes a hotbed of intrigue after Prince Hilo (David Janti) from the Sandwich Islands (aka Hawaii) is killed at the doorstep of Paladin (Richard Boone). Not long afterward, Paladin is entrusted with a valuable signet ring by Hilo's consort, Princess Molokai (Ziva Rodann). This places the gunslinger smack in the middle of the various and sundry machinations perpetrated by a stunning array of sinister-looking foreign agents. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1960
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The title character in this episode is a grizzled old prospector, played by former Theater Guild stalwart Russell Collins. Long, long ago, Crowbait was given some valuable silver by a friendly Paiute chief (Eddie Little Sky). Now the venerable prospector needs more silver on behalf of his daughter Amanda (Jacqueline Scott), but the Chief is nowhere to be found. Paladin (Richard Boone) is hired by Crowbait to search for the Paiute's secret silver mine--if indeed such a mine still exists. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1960
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In several Have Gun, Will Travel episodes, gunslinger Paladin (Richard Boone) crosses the paths of actual historical figures. This episode represents the one-and-only time that Paladin confronts a fictional character from classic literature--namely, Phileas Fogg (Patric Knowles), the unflappable globetrotting protagonist of Jules Verne's Around the World in Eighty Days. During the American leg of his world-girdling odyssey, Fogg hires Paladin to safely guide himself, his valet Passepartout (Jon Silo) and his beautiful travelling companion Princess Aouda (Arlene McQuade) to the town of Reno, Nevada. Unfortunately, Paladin's assignment nearly ends before it begins when the tiny party arrives on the shore of a particularly treacherous river. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1960
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Pat Wayne, the real-life son of John Wayne, is cast as Ben Huttner, the illegitimate offspring of a wealthy Virginia colonel. The good news is that Huttner has fallen heir to the colonel's $5,000,000 estate. The bad news is that Huttner is on the lam from the law, charged with robbery and manslaughter. Catching up with Huttner, Paladin (Richard Boone) offers the man a choice: relinquish all claims to his inheritance, or return with Paladin to stand trial--and very likely face a quick execution. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1959
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Werner Klemperer, best known to sitcom fans as bumbling Colonel Klink on Hogan's Heroes, here trades his German accent for a French one in the role of Gallic restauranteur Etienne Ledoux. Hoping to add a bit of class--and an extra layer of protection--to his eatery in the rough-and-tumble mining town of Panamint, Ledoux has purchased a large and expensive plate-glass window. The challenge now is to deliver the window to Panamint in one piece...and that's where Paladin (Richard Boone) comes in. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1959
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Mexican aristocrat Don Luis Ortega (Edward Colmans) hires Paladin (Richard Boone) to escort his daughter Soledad (Luis Montell) to San Francisco. During the journey, Paladin finds himself constantly imperiled by a hotheaded peon named Doroteo (Rafael Campos), who once worked for Ortega as a ranchhand. Does Doroteo want to get his hands on Soledad--or does he have something more "revolutionary" in mind? (Hint: Doroteo's friends call him Pancho...as in Pancho Villa). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1959
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Patricia Medina returns as aristocratic Englishwoman Diana Coulter, a character introduced in the earlier episode "The Lady". Receiving an invitation to Diana's wedding, Paladin arrives to discover that the woman is being forced against her will to wed B.G. (Theo Marcuse), a boorish Texas rancher whom she's been trying (and failing) to "gentrify." Championing Diana's cause, Paladin must also fight off his own feelings toward the woman. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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- 1958
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Paladin (Richard Boone) is hired to track down elderly outlaw Pappy French (Hank Patterson), who years earlier had robbed the bank of Mercede and absconded with $50,000 in gold, leaving his partners in the lurch. Upon meeting Pappy, Paladin grows rather fond of the old coot, who with a broken leg and no horse is certainly not enjoying his ill-gotten gains. Though he is still determined to bring Pappy in, the outlaw persuades him to offer protection against his vengeful partners. This is the first of several episodes written by celebrated scenarist-playwright Shimon Wincelberg, who as Simon Bar-David later penned the classic Star Trek entries "The Galileo Seven" and "Dagger of the Mind". ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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