"The Rifleman" The Boarding House (TV Episode 1959) Poster

(TV Series)

(1959)

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8/10
Learning Lessons
mitchrmp7 February 2015
Though the story surrounding Julia is interesting and I have it practically memorized, my favorite is Mark at the table giving Ms. Anderson a stern lecture on country etiquette. He tells her his Pa learned him by whipping him. This is the only reference that I know of in all five years of The Rifleman that any physical punishment is shown. Lucas grabs Mark's ear and drags him into the other room, no doubt to show him some of that old-fashioned discipline.

I think it's sad that it's made clear later in the series that Lucas would never "hit" his boy. I've been told that the difference is a change of producers during the first season. Lucas became more gentle and loving instead of harsh and telling his boy to face the facts of life. I really wish they hadn't changed it because the first was more realistic...

Still, I really love the father/son relationship throughout the entire run.
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8/10
"I'll take Five-Letter Words Starting With W, Alex."
grizzledgeezer21 June 2013
Things have changed a lot in 55 years. The Hallmark Channel calls itself "The Heart of Television" and promotes "Frasier" for its implicit "family values". That show -- along with "Cheers" and (especially) "The Golden Girls" -- are lynchpins in Hallmark's programming. Each is persistently adult in tone and content, with many episodes needing a TV-14 rating -- though I can't remember any receiving higher than TV-PG. * In all three series non-marital sex is perfectly acceptable. (Adultery is not.) Frasier constantly complains that he isn't "getting any", while Blanche Devereaux (obviously named after Blanche DuBois) is (as Dorothy calls her) a slut.

MeTV promotes "The Rifleman" as a heartwarming program the whole family should watch. ** Yet it can be extremely violent -- on some occasions pointlessly so. The Wikipedia article gives an estimate that Lucas killed more than 110 people over five seasons. Had MAD spoofed the series, it's easy to imagine Mort Drucker rendering piles of bodies lying around North Fork, with toe tags reading "McCain", followed by the date of death.

I raise these points, not because I'm in favor of censorship (I'm not), but to emphasize how writers once had to tiptoe around "delicate" issues that now are discussed without a second thought, and pre-teens are exposed to (also without a second thought).

Sam Peckinpah -- who wrote and directed this episode -- wanted "The Rifleman" to be an "edgy" program, and this episode is definitely that. It's understandable that North Fork's citizens wouldn't want their town to become known as a fun place to gamble -- but why should they object to female dealers? Of course, it's not card dealing they're worried about, but the W word. (What do you think will be going on in the new "boarding house", anyway?) Yet prostitution isn't mentioned, or even hinted at.

The trademark Peckinpah violence is present, of course, with Lucas taking part in a particularly nasty knife fight where he's obliged to wield a meat cleaver in self-defense. It's startling, and for a second, one wonders whether the Good Guy will turn the Bad Guy into mincemeat. Have no fear, kiddies -- the fight ends when Lucas slams the cleaver into the wall, right next to the bad'un's head.

One has to wonder how such programming could be broadcast during a time when children were (presumably) watching. I have no doubt that present-day practices will seem equally hypocritical 50 years from now. Heck, they do /now/.

* The TV ratings system is so poorly applied -- with programs containing significant sex and violence receiving TV-PG and even TV-G ratings -- it should be looked into. But there's no agency -- Federal or private -- enforcing accurate ratings. Neither parents nor the networks care.

** In the pilot, when Johnny Crawford -- a little blond gerbil -- runs to Chuck Connors, and Connors picks him up and kisses him -- it is difficult not to burst into tears.
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10/10
A lesson on the evils of classism.
Alexyz2 April 2021
The Boarding House features a powerful scene regarding the evils of classism. The scene involves a dinner gathering in which one person is both extremely proud of their own lineage while simultaneously being hideously spiteful of another person who has remade themselves into a model citizen.

The scene is a riveting reminder that classism may be the root cause of other societal ills that fester to this day.
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10/10
OMGOSH can we AT LEAST stick to commenting on this Rifleman episode?!? Dang!
davislaurie15 February 2022
Geez, i really do feel bad when i never actually type a review, i just come here to comment. Also enjoy reading other ppl's reviews/comments. Usually i can help myself feel better when i see that someone else has contributed a great review but not this time. Currently the only other review here has almost nothing to do with this episode. Or maybe even nothing, i began to drift off towards the end of (?) shoot! Forgot the title! ... it's "Grizzled-something's" comments. It begins by discussing several shows that have absolutely nothing to do with the Rifleman. Or even westerns! Then (i think) that's when they rambled on randomly about censorship. Lol finally discussing the Rifleman series (in general) only to point out that it's too violent! OMGOSH it's a shoot 'em up western FFS! The opening sequence sports Lucas rapidly shooting his gun! But you didn't expect any violence?!? There's more, but now i'm just too disgusted to go on. Basically it's just one never ending lecture about nothing. Go read it yourself - you'll either get very pissed or laugh hysterically - i did both.
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10/10
It's about forgiveness.
tsn-4873013 July 2023
Warning: Spoilers
One of my favorite episodes as it's about forgiveness and second chances, something even today far too many people look down their noses at.

When a woman moves to town to open a boardinghouse Lucas recognizes her and has a bit of a struggle reconciling his feelings before deciding everyone deserves a second chance. Unfortunately a snobbish woman from the East disagrees when enemies from the past re-emerge and try to blackmail her, which actually brings the "proper" lady into their league (which is hinted at by the writers as she's in the same stage headed out of town as the two ladies of questionable reputation).

Still, led by Lucas and the Banker the town's people rally behind her and show the bullies up as cowards. The only problem I have is why didn't she stay? Another potential love interest for Lucas that didn't test well with audiences?

I get it was groundbreaking that he was a single father in the old West. But the truth is in reality a widower rancher with a son like him back then would have almost certainly remarried within a year or two at the most just to be practical. Under the circumstances staying unmarried would have been nearly unheard of.
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