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The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr. is a short-lived western television series with science fiction elements set in the 1890s, starring Bruce Campbell as Brisco County, Jr. It could be considered a thematic descendant of the 1960s show The Wild Wild West, since it combined elements of the science fiction and Western, and Steampunk genres. It was one of the few western shows aired in the 1990s.
[edit] PlotBrisco County, Jr. is hunting down the John Bly Gang, who murdered his father. By the end of the series, only nine members of the 13-member gang were seen to be captured by Brisco on screen. They were, in order:
In episode 20: "Bye Bly," Brisco and Bowler mention several times that they caught all of Bly's gang. During a classic western showdown in the pilot episode Pete, Stinky and two other outlaws are killed when Brisco ducks, accounting for all 13. Throughout the series, a recurring theme is the large golden "orb" that Bly is searching for. By the end of the series, it is revealed that both Bly and the orb are from the future - the late 25th century - and that Bly wants the alien device so that he can absorb its power and return to his time as a conqueror and tyrant. [edit] StyleThe series featured a mix of tongue-in-cheek, self-referential humor (a running joke throughout the series was that County could actually understand the neighing of his beloved horse, Comet) and real drama, usually centered around County's troubled relationship with his late father and his growing fear that he will never be able to settle down. Another main theme was that Brisco was always looking for "the coming thing" which he found with great regularity. While many were technological (motorcycles, blimps, tanks, and denim), many others were cultural. This includes references to future musicals such as "Annie Get Your Gun" and "Hello, Dolly!" as well as cultural events such as Elvis impersonators, Dunkin Donuts, Led Zeppelin and sobriety tests. The show also featured classic cliffhanger deathtraps halfway through each episode. They ranged from the classic sawmill traps to being tied up and thrown in quicksand. [edit] PropsTwo Mare's Leg pistol props from the show were later reused in the science fiction television series Firefly as a rifle by the character Zoe Washburne.[1] [edit] Theme musicThough the show only lasted one season, the series' majestic theme song composed by Randy Edelman found a new life as part of NBC's sports productions, namely during NBC broadcasts of Major League Baseball and the Olympic Games (played while announcing the upcoming events). [edit] Characters[edit] Brisco County, Jr.Played by Bruce Campbell, Brisco County, Jr. is a Harvard-educated lawyer turned bounty hunter now on a quest to bring to justice the infamous John Bly Gang who murdered his father, Marshal Brisco County, Sr. (R. Lee Ermey). Along the way, he gets into a series of seriocomic adventures involving fantastic villains, beautiful women, and a mysterious brilliant golden sphere known as "The Orb". The Orb's paradoxical nature and seemingly supernatural power is the driving force behind the plots for about a third of the series' episodes. [edit] Lord BowlerPlayed by Julius Carry, Brisco's rival/partner, real name James Lonefeather. In the beginning of the series, Lord Bowler was a rival bounty hunter who competed with Brisco for monetary rewards. Midway through the series Bowler became Brisco's partner and friend. Bowler was frequently depicted wearing his bowler hat and carrying a sawed-off shotgun in a sheath on his back. [edit] Socrates PoolePlayed by Christian Clemenson, Socrates Poole begins as a milquetoast attorney for the Westfield Club, Brisco's employer. Poole and Brisco become close friends by the series' end. [edit] Dixie CousinsPlayed by Kelly Rutherford, Dixie is a con-woman who is Brisco's true love. She is a gifted singer and performer, who regularly woos the crowds with her acts in the many saloons and bars that Brisco encounters on his travels. Though in the earlier episodes her character was portrayed as one of the villains, her conscience routinely convinces her to take the higher road as the series continued, continually challenging her morals. In the later episodes she is much more clearly identified as a "good" character such as in the episodes Wild Card and in And Baby Makes Three. [edit] Pete HutterPlayed by John Pyper-Ferguson, Pete is a mean but hapless gunslinger who "dies" in his first appearance - he was shot in a gunfight - but returns several times throughout the series as a comic foil to Brisco. He has a great affinity for his "piece" (his pistol), leading to the character's catchphrase, "Nobody touches Pete's piece." In the final episode, he declares that he is a "connoisseur of penal lodgings" in reference to jailhouse architecture. [edit] Professor WickwirePlayed by John Astin, Professor Wickwire was an eccentric inventor who supplied Brisco with wacky gadgets that were precursors to modern inventions, such as a land-based rocket on railroad tracks or an "Inner Space Suit". [edit] John BlyPlayed by Billy Drago, Brisco's mysterious archnemesis. In the pilot, Brisco County, Jr. is hired by "robber barons" Robert Fuller, James Drury, and Paul Brinegar, to track down and arrest all thirteen members of the John Bly gang after they kill Brisco County, Sr. while escaping from a train. The series finale reveals that Bly is from the far future and seeks the orb for ultimate power while fleeing the authorities of his own time. [edit] Whip MorganPlayed by Jeff Phillips, first appears midway into the series in Hard Rock. His character is a risk taker anxious at first to avenge his uncles death, but as his character develops the audience sees a more charismatic side to him. His strengths are his quick shooting, poker skills, and a fearless/oblivious attitude toward danger and the many situations he is getting himself into. His main weakness is with the ladies who he constantly falls for in all the episodes that he's in. [edit] Guest starsThe series featured several notable character actors in guest starring roles, including: R. Lee Ermey as County's father; Denise Crosby as a sheriff in an all woman town; Sheena Easton as a rival bounty hunter; Jane Sibbett as a Norman Bates-like murderess; Terry Bradshaw as a rogue colonel who gives orders to his men like a quarterback; Robert Picardo as a corrupt small-town deputy; Timothy Leary as a self-referential spoof of himself, and M.C. Gainey as Bly's right-hand man, who is seemingly killed in the pilot episode only to return later in the series with superhuman powers, courtesy of the Orb. In the pilot, veteran western actors Robert Fuller and James Drury made an appearance. [edit] Episode listEach episode ran for 1 hour (with commercials), except where noted.
[edit] SchedulingThe series ran for 27 episodes from August 27, 1993 to May 20, 1994 on the FOX television network on Fridays at 8 p.m., otherwise known as the Friday night death slot, just before The X-Files which also made its debut in 1993. [edit] SyndicationThe show was later broadcast in syndication airing on the U.S. cable channel Turner Network Television (TNT) from January 1996 to January 2001, but has only been rebroadcast sporadically since. The series was released on DVD on July 18, 2006. On November 16, 2005, AOL and Warner Bros. announced that the series would be included in their new In2TV online television network, and available for viewing online. [edit] DVD releaseOn July 18, 2006, Warner Home Video released The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr.: The Complete Series on DVD in Region 1, an 8-disc DVD set that contains all 27 episodes of the series. The release includes commentary tracks from Bruce Campbell and Carlton Cuse; an interactive menu of Brisco's signature references narrated by Campbell; The History of Brisco County, Jr. documentary; a feature called A Reading from the Book of Bruce; and another gallery hosted by Campbell focusing on the gadgets from the show. [edit] Notes
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Categories: 1993 television series debuts | 1994 television series endings | 1990s American television series | Fox network shows | Science fiction Westerns | American science fiction television series | Steampunk television series | Western (genre) television series | Television shows set in San Francisco | Television series by Warner Bros. Television | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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