"Gunsmoke" Dooley Surrenders (TV Episode 1958) Poster

(TV Series)

(1958)

User Reviews

Review this title
9 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Nice Hat!
wdavidreynolds9 March 2022
Three filthy, rag-tag buffalo hunters and their cook are camping on the prairie. They are drinking from a jug, and one of the men, the buffalo skinner named Emmett Dooley, is drunk and rowdy. At some point he "falls asleep." When he wakes, Colpitt, the leader of the group, and the cook are preparing to break camp. Colpitt accuses Dooley of killing Faber -- the other hunter -- the previous night. Colpitt leaves Dooley alone on the prairie.

Dooley does not remember shooting Faber, but he accepts Colpitt's account of the events. The despondent buffalo hunter walks to Dodge City and turns himself into Matt Dillon. Marshal Dillon is understandably skeptical of Dooley's account of the events.

Matt, Chester Goode, and Doc Adams ride to where the buffalo hunters were camped. They find Faber's body buried there, but he was stabbed to death instead of being shot as Dooley thinks.

Matt becomes convinced Colpitt killed Faber. After returning to Dodge, he releases Dooley from jail. He tells Dooley not to leave town in the hopes that Colpitt will be lured there. Poor old Dooley remains convinced he killed Faber and should be in jail.

Strother Martin returns for his fourth Gunsmoke appearance. He is the central character in this story as the slow-witted Emmett Dooley character.

Familiar actor Ken Lynch makes the third of twelve Gunsmoke appearances as he plays the devious Colpitt character in this story.

Ben Wright makes his first Gunsmoke appearance as Mr. Ross, a store owner in Dodge. Wright would play the same character once more in a Season 9 episode. Wright appeared in eleven different Gunsmoke episodes, but he only played the store owner in two of those stories. The Cal Ross character first appeared back in Season 1, but was originally played by actor Lou Vernon. It was never made clear if Ross's store and Mr. Jonas's stores were in competition, or if it was the same store that was operated by different people. Over the course of the series, there were several different store owners in Dodge City.

James Nusser, who would eventually begin playing the character Louie Pheeters in the series, makes an appearance as the cook, Nelson. Viewers must watch very closely to see him. He is easy to miss.

Martin's performance as Dooley is the focus of this episode. Dooley is a unique character -- insane when drunk, friendly when sober, of questionable intelligence, with a tendency toward brutal honesty. His conviction that he is a killer that belongs in jail is both pitiful and mildly amusing, as is his repeatedly asking Matt if it would be okay for him to stop by and visit the Marshal.

It is easy to understand some viewers being overwhelmed by Martin's performance. The character is supposed to be a person that exhibits personality extremes, and Martin plays the part to the hilt.

This series entry is another tragedy featuring several trademark John Meston elements. Dooley is a character that elicits the viewer's sympathy, while Colpitt is more of a traditional Meston amoral creation. As far as Colpitt is concerned, other humans are disposable once they have provided whatever service he needs. The Dooley character provides the sacrificial balance of justice to Colpitt's evil.

A highlight of the episode is the scene inside Ross's store where Kitty Russell and Matt discuss her hat. This scene is further evidence of the unspoken romantic relationship that exists between Matt and Kitty. They sound more like a married couple than a friendly man and woman.
6 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Very well played by Strother Martin
kfo94945 July 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Strother Martin makes his fourth appearance in the series and gives another fine performance as a slow-minded hide skinner, Emmett Dooley, that has been told by his partners that he killed a man while shooting a rifle in a drunken state. The partner, Colpitt, leaves Dooley alone on the prairie saying that he does not want a murderer riding with him. Dooley loses all his possessions and money he would have gotten by his partner riding off. Dooley feels so bad about the situation that he rides into Dodge and tells Marshal Dillon that he has killed a man and deserves to be locked up.

Matt, Chester and Doc ride out to where the incident happen only to debunk the story that Dooley has been telling. Matt believes that there is more sinister works going on in this situation and sets up a trap to find out. But the ending of this tale will take a left turn into a place that the viewer did not want to wander.

Excellent work by Strother Martin playing the mentally slow man that has a child-like personality. With the great acting and a nice script this episode proved to be a winner. Excellent watch.
9 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Strother Martin does his thing
LukeCoolHand23 March 2022
Any time Strother Martin is in any film or TV show I will always watch if just for Martin. He always steals any scene he's in, whether a serious one (Cool Hand Luke) or a comedic scene(True Grit). The man knew how to act and he knows it. Probably very easy to direct also. He was on Gunsmoke 11 times which tells me they loved having him. He was on several other TV series as a guest but always seemed to show his stuff best on Gunsmoke. This episode was no exception.
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Strother Martin Showcase
dougdoepke29 July 2007
Few character actors of the period were more distinctively memorable than the scrawny Strother Martin. Despite his lack of heft, he could be quite menacing in the right role (Cool Hand Luke). Here his knack for offbeat characters is on display as a quirky buffalo skinner named Dooley. He's convinced that he's killed a man in camp and insists Matt lock him up. But Matt's skeptical after Doc examines the nature of the wounds. So Matt turns him loose in an effort to lure the real killer into town.

Some good byplay between Matt and Kitty in the mercantile store as Amanda Blake's lines fairly sparkle with coy good humor. Still, writer Meston's flair for unusual characters remains the entry's highlight. Dressed in dirty rags, Martin certainly looks the grubby skinner part, at the same time his demeanor alternates from pitiable pleading ("Please Marshal, can I come visit some time") to drunken menace ("I get plain mean when I drink whiskey"). Even so, the climax leaves Matt pondering what it's all about. I wish Meston had connected Dooley's odd behavior with life on the isolating great plains of the buffalo hunt. The harshness of those elements is enough to unhinge most anyone. Anyway, it's a better-than-average 30 minutes.
19 out of 23 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Agreement
darbski17 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
I agree completely with the other two reviewers. Strother Martin, who used to refer to himself as "The Scum of the Plains" has a field day with this role, showing again, and for many years later what a great character actor does with any role he or she is given. I also agree that it wouldn't have hurt the ending for Matt to be a little kinder to Dooley; a bath, clean clothes, and then when he was going after the cook, lock him back up for his own good. Doc shoulda thought about it before he told Dooley anything. Sad for ol'Dooley.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Cooter vs Dooley
jamdifo18 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Strother Martin plays a slow person again in Gunsmoke just like he did before as Cooter (episode same name). Cooter was much better than Dooley, though this entry is OK. This entry has some comedic situations, the best being Dillon commenting on Kitty's hat after she's been wearing it for 4 months.

I don't understand why Dillon keeps telling people his plans. He tells Dooley where the 2 guys are. You just know he's going to go after them. It is a little hard to believe that the slow witted Dooley could knife both those guys, especially when they wanted to kill him. In one of his most saddest shootings, Dillon shoots dead Dooley (while he's shooting like crazy drunk on whiskey). Its Dillon's 56th confirmed kill on the show.
8 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Overwrought
maskers-871265 October 2018
Another typicalllly overwrought "chew the scenery" performance by Strother where he tries not to,leave room for anyonw else. He' never heard of less is more.
6 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Buffalo Hunters
StrictlyConfidential5 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
(*Emmett Dooley quote*) - "I got drunk and killed him with a rifle."

In a drunken haze, Emmett Dooley believes that he killed a man with a rifle. His co-workers convince him that he did just that.

Dooley seeks out Marshal Dillon, confesses to the murder and turns himself in.

Meanwhile Dillon checks into the matter and soon finds out that things aren't what they seem.
0 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Horrible ending
darextrodinare24 April 2022
Not a very enjoyable episode! Good performances all the way around but the ending sucked and it didn't really make much sense. Now I've seen every episode of gunsmoke at least twice and I'm aware you don't always get a happy ending but with such a likeable main character it deserved better writing!
5 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed