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Westerns
Branded:Complete First Season

Branded:Complete First Season

List Price: $28.00
Your Price: $25.20
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This Brand Leaves a Deep Impression
Review: I fondly remember this show as a kid and always wondered why it disappeared after 2 short seasons.Its much better than I remembered it being and I liked it a lot then! Chuck Connors stars as Captain Jason McCord the sole survivor of an Indian massacre.He has been branded a coward and dismissed from the service. He must now make his way in the world finding a life and peace. It's clichied but he is of course innocent we're told though he is not always so certain and it's his innocence is set up as a mirror to highlight the human frailty of those he comes across i his travels. Connor's work in it is excellent and the writing and production values were wonderful for its time. The transfer to DVD is a quality one but the company does note at the start that there is some problem with both the audio and video qualities at times. I found this to be only a minor distraction and should not deter you from buying the set. The price is is reasonable for 3 discs and the bonus episodes of Connor's in The Rifleman and The Four Star Theater were a nice touch as was the all too brief bio of Chuck Connors. I am hoping the company will release the entire season 2 episodes as well Connor's Arrest & Trial and Cowboy in Africa series. Connor's was truly a great actor and Branded will leave its mark in you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: what do you do when you're BRANDED?
Review: Branded is about the life of Jason McCord, West Point graduate and former Captain in the U.S. Cavalry. He was stripped of rank for cowardice under fire during the Battle of Bitter Creek where he was the only survivor, McCord knows he is innocent but refuses to pin the blame where it belongs, his commanding officer, General Reed, who died in the battle.

Disc 1:
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1) Survival - Jason and his friend Roy ride into a town after working on a long cattle drive.
2) The Vindicator - a newspaper reporter from the New York Herald is sent west to do a story on Jason McCord
3) The Test - Jason unintentionally involves a Catholic priest in a deadly encounter with four drunken Comanche's.
4) Rules of the Game - As McCord arrives in the town of Mckinley, he runs into someone he knew from the past.
5) The Bounty - While standing at the bar, a cowboy comes up behind McCord and paints a yellow streak down his back.

EXTRA: The Rifleman: Day of the Hunter

Disc 2:
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6) Leap upon Mountains - While passing by a cemetery; McCord notices a Quaker lady kneeling over a grave and helps her.
7) Coward Steps Aside - A gang of thieves order the deputy to surrender his town. The deputy is play by Johnny Crawford.
8, 9 & 10) The Mission (Part 1, 2 & 3) - McCord is asked to return to Washington D.C. at the request of an old flame.

EXTRA: Four Star Playhouse: Vote of Confidence

Disc 3:
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11) The First Kill - McCord visits the family of a Confederate officer he was forced to kill in battle during the war.
12) Very Few Heroes - McCord becomes involved with a woman in danger of losing her farm.
13) One Way Out - Jason is tricked into visiting a ghost town.
14) That the Brave Endure - A West Point Cadet, Bain, faces ejection for making statements that support McCord's actions at Bitter Creek.
15) A Taste of Poison - McCord is escorting a woman to a medical outpost.
16) Price of a Name - McCord is hired to work on a ranch and it appears the people that want to harm him have more that Bitter Creek revenge.

EXTRA: Check Connors Biography


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Well Worth a Full DVD Release
Review: I disagree with a reviewer who basically criticized this TV western for being dated. To me, it's a fresh and original today as it was when it aired in 1965-1966.

The star, Chuck Connors (best known for his riveting portrayal of Lucas McCain in "The Rifleman,") gives an equally compelling performance here as Captain Jason McCord.

McCord, a West Point graduate, is the sole survivor of an Indian battle at Bitter Creek in the 1800s. Court-martialed as a coward who ran, he was forever "branded" with that stigma and thrown out of the Army, his rank insignia ripped off and his Cavalry sabre broken in two in a military ceremony casting him out of the fort. The humiliating scene was replayed as the opening clip of each episode as a moving western ballad "Branded" was sung over the images.

McCord, who is actually a man of deep conviction and principle, pleaded innocent but refused to testify in his own defense. As the series progresses, we learn that he did so to protect the memory of the honorable General Reid whose eventual senility resulted in what actually occured at Bitter Creek, and also to protect a peace treaty with the Indians. McCord believes that if those politicians who did not want peace learned that General Reid, who had negotiated the treaty, was unfit, they would nullify the document and resume the Indian war.

Thus, McCord accepts his cruel label and fate, forced to live a nomadic life moving from survey job to job (a skill he learned in the military) because of the hatred people have for him. As far as the general public is concerned, McCord ran off to save his life, abandoning those under his command to all die at Bitter Creek.

Remarkably, the series is able to explore in a sophisticated manner the true meaning of bravery and right and wrong as McCord seeks to help those in trouble whom he encounters. Everyone who deals with McCord ends up understanding that the coward's label pinned on him is far from correct, and that he is a man of grit, bravery and honor.

In some ways, the themes of this series are similar to those explored in Kung Fu almost a decade later: lessons of morality, spirituality, honesty, bravery and the fundamental meaning of right and wrong and personal responsibility presented through the accessible medium of a western.

This show's unforgettable ballad, music by Dominic Frontiere, lyrics by Alan Alch, entones in part: "All but one man died there at Bitter Creek, and they say he ran away... Not a single charge was true... Branded, marked with a coward's shame, what do you do when you're branded, will you fight to clear your name?"

Sixteen of the 48 half-hour episodes produced are released in this three-disc set. I hope the others are forthcoming.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: SURPRISE,SURPRISE!!
Review: I have waited so long of this series,that i am overwhelmed by Joy.I have seen this series in the late sixties on German Television and it had since then no rerun.But in all this years it has some special memories in my mind.One of the best opening sequences of all time(Conners thrown out of the army etc.),a song and theme which is grand and i never forgot,Conners as big hero often beat by three or four guys,but never quit to get justice done,his horse an beautiful palomino(more a horse for an indian)and his special weapon his broken sabre.I remember some kind of sadness and lonleyness about the performance from Conners because of all the braveness he showed in every episode he must fight against his reputation as a coward.This series lasted only two season and was cancelled while conflicts with Conners and the studio cant be setteld.For me it is one of the finest western shows of all times,much underrated and better than the rifleman.The second season must have 32 Episodes and i hope it will published soon.After Have Gun Will travel this is the second western show with a full season on DVD.Maybe the studios are awakened and begin to realize that the kids who loved all the western shows of their youth are now adults with money in their pockets.Sorry ,before i buy one DVD of Smallville,Friends or Buffy i would buy tons of Gunsmoke,Bronco,Laramie etc.This set is for us who loves an old fashioned hero and a lot of gun and fistfights.I recommend this set highly.Buy it,for 25 Bucks it is an unbelievable great deal and it will give you the goosebumps.Believe me it worked for me!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Branded
Review: I was overjoyed when I learned that this series was on dvd and I was not disappointed in getting it. This was a well written ,well acted honest show,one of the last to show the importance of character and principles and of putting duty and country before self. Connors plays a strong character who knows who he is and a coward or deserter he is certainly not.A lesser man would have died of depression but Jason McCord rebuilds his life and teaches a lot of lessons of manhood as he roams through the west
making himself useful and helping those in need.
My 7 and 9 year old boys have eojoyed watching it as well.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Tough Conners, memorable show, good DVD transfer.
Review: The main issues with picture quality are in the opening credits. In some, the opening theme/story set-up is dark or blotchy. But the episodes themselves are in good shape. Chuck Conners is tough and principled, unwilling to yield to pressure to clear his name at the cost of someone else's name. This is just terrific stuff, all about 'values' and yet without being preachy or cloying. Highly recommended.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: EDITED , CUT episodes. Buyer Beware!
Review: The shows have been edited by about 3-4 minutes each, these are the cut versions seen in syndication. Unacceptable. I wouldn't accept my paycheck missing 15-18% of my money, I'd be unhappy if I bought a book and found that 15% of the pages had been ripped out, so why should I pay $$$ for a DVD missing 15-18% of the footage? Avoid this set and spend your money elsewhere. The same company also released edited GUNS OF WILL SONNET shows, so buyer beware.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: BRANDED TO BE HAD!
Review: This is a nice collection. A good western from the sixties starring Chuck Connors. As far as quality goes...it's good, but not as good as some. It's very watchable and very worth the price. Watching it makes you feel more like you're watching an old 50's tv show and not from 1965, that's the reason I give it only four stars. It's 3 disc and has 3 special extras, one on each disc. It's a Marathon Music and Video release by KingWorld. For those of you that love old tv westerns, this DVD set is for you. This is a show that's not seen much anymore and I was surprised to see it out on DVD. It's black and white with some color episodes. The shows all run a little over 22 minutes long, the Four star playhouse runs over 25 minutes and the short bio runs 5 minutes and 50 seconds. I love watching these for they bring back great memories of the sixties. The following is the list of episodes and the special extras. You won't be sorry in buying this set...trust me. I found it on Amazon only. I couldn't find it anywhere else.
FIRST SEASON DVD SET:
disc 1-
#1."Survival"1/24/1965
#2."The vindicator"1/31/1965
#3."The test"2/7/1965
#4."Rules of the game"2/14/1965
#5."The bounty"2/21/1965
extra:
The rifleman: "Day of the hunter" 1/5/1960
disc 2-
#6."Leap upon mountains" 2/28/1965
#7."Coward steps aside" 3/7/1965
#8."The mission" pt. 1 color3/14/1965
#9."The mission" pt. 2 color3/21/1965
#10."The mission" pt. 3 color3/28/1965
extra:
Four Star playhouse: "Vote of confidence" 1955
disc 3-
#11."The first kill"4/4/1965
#12."Very few heroes"4/11/1965
#13."One way out"4/18/1965
#14."That the brave endure"4/25/1965
#15."A taste of poison" 5/2/1965
#16."Price of a name" 5/23/1965
extra:
Chuck Connors' Biography b/w & color

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Classic western, lousy DVD release
Review: With the relative small number of western television programs available on DVD, I held great hope for this set. I had never heard of Marathon Music & Video (don't know why Amazon has it listed as released by "On Deck"), but thought this purchase was a reasonable risk, as it IS the entire first season, and not just a packaging of some random episodes. Wrong. I guess I should have been smarter, based on the poor packaging.

The transfers are VHS quality. These are also edited versions of the episodes, as their total running time is only 22 minutes. Best guess would be that these are the syndicated versions of the program, rather than the original broadcasts.

Sound is on a par with the video, meaning, the volume control must be turned up, and hiss is ever present.

Worst of all, and basically salt in the wounds, is the appearance of that one item that is dreaded most by DVD collectors....the "bug" in the bottom right corner with an "MM&V" logo. There is no excuse for this on ANY release. This is why the consumer buys DVD's...to get away from this nuisance which has become the bane of cable television.

Oh well....another lesson learned. Add Marathon Movie & Video to the list of companies to avoid, along with Madacy, Platinum, Alpha Video, Vintage, and VCI.




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