"Maverick" The Cats of Paradise (TV Episode 1959) Poster

(TV Series)

(1959)

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8/10
Maverick: The Cats Of Paradise
jcolyer122916 May 2015
In "The Cats Of Paradise," Modesty Blaine wants to buy cats to sell to a mining town besieged by mice. Bret resorts to the thousand dollar bill pinned inside his coat. Naturally, Modesty cons Bret, even tries to have him shanghaied. We learn that eights and aces are the "dead man's hand." Wild Bill Hickok supposedly held these cards when he was murdered in Deadwood. Bret was always quoting his pappy, and those words of wisdom became known as pappyisms: Bret says, "A man who sticks his head in the sand makes an awfully good target." The women in the series left much to be desired. Whether it was Modesty Blaine, Melanie Blake or Samantha Crawford, they were always trying to make off with the money.
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8/10
The feral cat business
bkoganbing13 September 2018
After saving Mona Freeman from drowning in Sacramento, Bret Maverick decides to back her in a new line of work. She's collecting feral cats. from one and all in Sacramento to take them to the small mining camp town of Paradise where the rats and mice are overrunning the place. But when they make it to Paradise she double crosses Garner in a most undignified way.

As in the previous Maverick story where Jack Kelly is conned this proves once again that the fatal Maverick weakness seems to be thinking with the male member. Though I have to say there really was no great reason to try and con James Garner out of his earnings. Just pay him off and he's out of her life and he has a fresh grubstake for poker which of course is why he went into the feral cat business.

But Freeman has other con games in mind. Familiar folks like Buddy Ebsen as the sheriff and Richard Deacon as the undertaker are in the cast.

Mona is some piece of work.
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Pull Up a Tombstone and Let's Play Cards
dougdoepke28 September 2008
Not every script can drop in "perfidy" without trading in the action for a dictionary. This is an offbeat screenplay that humorously manages to keep us interested without need of a college degree. In passing-- I remember as a boy in a small western mining town how important cats were to keeping down the rat population. It's little known facts like this that can turn an good episode into a memorable one.

Once the series' light-hearted approach was established, coming up with teleplays that kept that approach for a full 60 minutes must have been a challenge. Many later episodes unfortunately veered from humor to more conventional seriousness, which is understandable since the series was breaking new ground in a genre where conventions were almost literally set in sacred stone. Producers must have agonized at times over how many liberties could be taken with the unconventional Maverick "hero". After all, they were, in a sense, tinkering with John Wayne.

Here Bret is trying to dodge a devious woman, a murderous sheriff, and a "friend" willing to sell him out for a measly $200. His future is none to bright since everybody has an angle that doesn't include him. But as long as he's got a tombstone to hide behind, 13 male cats, and a can of shoe polish, he'll probably be around for the next episode. Fine work from Buddy Ebsen as the surprisingly mean sheriff, Lance Fuller as a parody of Have Gun, Will Travel's Paladin, and that most unlikely Westerner Richard Deacon as the undertaker, along with a hilarious shootout that likely put the series on the Humane Society's do-not-watch list. All in all, 60 minutes that never once veers from a humorously light-hearted approach.
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2/10
They blew it!
schappe120 April 2023
Warning: Spoilers
After the success of the "Gunsmoke" parody in season two, ("Gun-Shy", January 11, 1959"), it was a natural thing for "Maverick" to take on "Have Gun Will Travel", the third ranked show in the ratings that season, ("Gunsmoke" was #1, "Wagon Train" #2). The grumpy yet principled Paladin was the exact opposite of Maverick and they would have made a wonderful odd couple if their paths intersected on the same quest, paladin insisting that they not only had to succeed but had to do it by doing the right thing while Maverick would do anything non-lethal to achieve the goal. One can imagine Maverick rolling his eyes while Paladin did one of his soliloquys.

Instead, they make the Paladin character a supporting player who had been hired to kill Maverick as well as the local sheriff, (the real Paladin is always explaining that he's not an executioner) and gets killed by that Sheriff early on. The episode itself is one of the worst mavericks, so bad that the ratings dropped 5% the week after this was aired. They tried to replace the archly untrustworthy Samantha Crawford with a new character, Modesty Blaine, played by the sweet-looking Mona Freeman. Ron Bishop, (who a decade later, created Mannon, "Gunsmoke's" most famous villain), wrote Modesty as a cut-throat character who hired the Paladin clone to shoot Maverick and the Sheriff. This comically violent episode ends with the sheriff being shot down in the street, hardly a thigh-slapping moment. It's about a scheme to obtain cats for a mining camp bothered by rats and mice, probably the only script ever written about that.
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