Kimble is captured by Lt. Gerard while traveling with a group of migrant workers. During a violent wind storm, Gerard is badly injured and Kimble has to convince the others to help him save ... Read allKimble is captured by Lt. Gerard while traveling with a group of migrant workers. During a violent wind storm, Gerard is badly injured and Kimble has to convince the others to help him save Gerard's life.Kimble is captured by Lt. Gerard while traveling with a group of migrant workers. During a violent wind storm, Gerard is badly injured and Kimble has to convince the others to help him save Gerard's life.
- Deputy #2
- (as Laurence Aten)
- Laborer
- (uncredited)
- Laborer
- (uncredited)
- Narrator
- (voice)
- (uncredited)
- Deputy Number 2
- (uncredited)
- Laborer
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaDuring early 1966 filming of the third-season episode "Ill Wind", the crew played a prank on David Janssen, during rehearsal with John McIntire and Jeanette Nolan. Janssen, a fan of the Adam West series, Batman (1966), that had premiered in January 1966, was rehearsing with McIntire and Nolan in front of a canvas backing, when the crew lit a miniature light with a Bat stencil placed on. Director Joseph Sargent asked, "What the hell is that for?" To this, an understanding Janssen cracked, "Somebody's trying to tell me I'm a 'Bat' actor."
- GoofsWhen Kimble asks people to donate blood he only states that Gerard's blood type is type B, without mentioning the necessary Rh factor, a critical point he shouldn't have ignored. (If Gerard's blood type is B- he could easily die if the donor is B+.) Alternatively, Kimble could have asked for blood type O-, which is universally acceptable by everyone, regardless of their own blood type. Furthermore, Kimble states in Joshua's Kingdom (1966) that his own blood type is O-. He could have donated his own blood.
- Quotes
Jonesie: [Throughout the episode Jonesie gradually sings this song one stanza at a time] From the hills at night the outlaw came, / Just running for to live, / And the pretty little girl never knew his name, / Still all her love she give.
Jonesie: It's a sad, sad song that I'm singing, / It's a sad, sad tale that I tell, / About a love that a poor girl is bringing, / To a man who is destined for Hell.
Jonesie: At the outlaw's heals the sheriff rode, / With a gun strapped to his side, / And the ever running man lived the outlaw's code, / Take love but never a bride.
Jonesie: So chase went on both day and night, / With the sheriff gaining some, / 'Till they didn't give a hang who was right or wrong, / Just when the end would come.
Jonesie: It's a sad, sad song that I'm singing, / It's a sad, sad tale that I tell, / About a love that a poor girl is bringing, / To a man who is destined for Hell.
Jonesie: Now the outlaw faces the sheriff's gun, / On this night one man must die, / But no matter who sees the morning sun, / The girl is sure to cry.
Jonesie: It's a sad, sad song that I'm singing, / It's a sad, sad tale that I tell, / About a death a sheriff is bringing, / To a man destined for Hell.
Jonesie: And the outlaw lives like a running man, / With the next hill in his eye, / And they'll always be a sheriff with a gun in hand, / And a girl who'll surely cry.
- SoundtracksTheme from The Fugitive
Music by Pete Rugolo
Kate is sweet on Kimble, and he seems to like her. Jonesie, played by actor Tim McIntire, is a farmworker with a guitar providing running commentary via folk songs throughout the episode. He is upset that Kate now feels about Kimble the way she used to feel about him.
A news article on migrant workers includes a photo with Kimble in the background, leading Lieutenant Gerard to the Crawford farm, a very large farm where the migrants in the photos are said to work. However, a hurricane arrives, making a huge demand for the services of Kimble. Conflicts between the manager and the farmhands raise the tension level.
Gerard captures Kimble, but both are caught by the storm. Kimble repeatedly saves Gerard's life, to the puzzlement of his friends, who cannot understand why Kimble would save the man trying to get him killed. Kate, whose love for Kimble is mature and unselfish, grows in character through her association with Kimble, and her folks learn a few things as well.
- ynot-16
- Nov 30, 2006
Details
- Runtime50 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1