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Bonanza Dark Star (1959–1973) Online

Bonanza Dark Star (1959–1973) Online
Original Title :
Dark Star
Genre :
TV Episode / Western
Year :
1959–1973
Directror :
Lewis Allen
Cast :
Dan Blocker,Michael Landon,Lorne Greene
Writer :
Anthony Lawrence
Type :
TV Episode
Time :
1h
Rating :
6.5/10
Bonanza Dark Star (1959–1973) Online

Little Joe comes upon a gypsy girl. Frightened, she runs and falls becoming unconscious. When she wakes, they discover that she believes she is bewitched and so do her people who banished her. Her birth under a dark star has fostered this belief. Little Joe, smitten, must rescue her from this belief, her people and someone posing as a wolf.
Episode cast overview:
Dan Blocker Dan Blocker - Eric 'Hoss' Cartwright
Michael Landon Michael Landon - Joseph 'Little Joe' Cartwright
Lorne Greene Lorne Greene - Ben Cartwright
Pernell Roberts Pernell Roberts - Adam Cartwright
Susan Harrison Susan Harrison - Tirza
Hugo Haas Hugo Haas - Zirko
Arthur Batanides Arthur Batanides - Spiro
Lili Valenty Lili Valenty - Bruja
Argentina Brunetti Argentina Brunetti - Bruja's Helper
Grandon Rhodes Grandon Rhodes - Dr. J.P. Martin

Copyright has expired and is now in the public domain.


User reviews

Teonyo

Teonyo

I think this is one of the worst episodes. There's not much good to say about it. Tirza is pure evil. I didn't like the way she thought, the way she spoke, or the way she acted. I understand they had brainwashed her into thinking she was a witch, but by golly she gave me the creeps! Even more creepy was the fact that Little Joe fell for such an evil girl. And even more creepy - his father thought that she was a "nice girl"? I cannot imagine any fathers I know that would allow his son to marry a woman like that - she was just creepy!!!

I'm not sure what the writer's were thinking when they wrote this one. They didn't even change that witchey voice after she was "converted." All I can say is...what were they thinking? Yuck!
Centrizius

Centrizius

With respect to the previous reviewer, I actually liked this episode. Gypsies were and remain a mysterious people, often hated but usually just misunderstood by outsiders for their independent and occasionally lawless lifestyle. This must have been especially so in the mid-19th century when the country was young and wild. This episode was well written and acted, and Susan Harrison, a rare beauty, played her part with starry-eyed detachment that befitted her role as a young woman seemingly "possessed" by evil spirits. It is rare for Hollywood to treat gypsies sympathetically and I was heartened at the end when no one died and the gypsies left the Ponderosa peacefully. Bonanza usually kills off one to four people by the end of each episode so this was a happy ending by comparison.
NiceOne

NiceOne

I did not find the character of Tirza "evil" at all. Just misunderstood :-)

After all, she had been told all her life she was possessed and exiled from her people. That would make anyone behave strangely.

What is not explained is how an exiled young woman supported herself. Where did she live, what did she do for food? And just one dress, not worn to rags?

Also, someone did die in this episode - Spiro, after the fight with Little Joe. Of course, it was a typical Hollywood death, he gets stabbed in the lower abdomen, and instantly falls over dead.

One more episode in what became a pattern for the show - one of the Cartwright men falling in love with a woman, who must leave (or die), because for one of the men to marry (and stay married) would have changed the dynamic of the show too much.

Rated 6 for the acting, not higher because the story was old, even in 1960.
Runeterror

Runeterror

One of the stranger episodes in Bonanza's history has Michael Landon getting involved with a banished gypsy girl he finds on the Ponderosa. She runs from him when they first meet and trips and hits her head. When she wakes up she declares herself a witch and she's an outcast from her tribe who happen to be squatting on the Ponderosa.

If one is thinking strictly with one's hormones then you can certainly understand Little Joe's interest in Susan Harrison. But even he's not that much a tool of his male member.

Some funny scenes take place between tribe leader Hugo Haas and the Cartwrights when he tries to sell them some inferior horse flesh. Fortunately Lorne Greene and Dan Blocker are up to all his tricks.

I wish the whole episode had been done as light as these scenes were.
Kizshura

Kizshura

Slight spoilers. While hunting Hoss and especially Little Joe come across a beautiful unconscious gypsy girl-supebly played by Miss. Harrison. They take her back to the Ponderosa and discover she is the type who literally bites the hand that feeds her. The Cartwrights learn that she has been insanely rejected by her fellow gypsy people travelling in the area. She believes she is an inhuman animal. She is wild, suicidal and makes a howling call scaring their horses into a frenzy. Eventually Ben meets up with her people and convinces them to slightly give her a chance again. They do and eventually they accept her again and she goes off with them. This ep has less to say about gypsies and more to say about a young lady being rejected and the really horrible feeling rejection can bring upon her. Harrison's character is feeling the tragic sting of rejection no lady should ever know. She only survives because cared for in the meantime. If they had not reconciled her to her people who rejected her I'm the place she would have soon died of the bad internal feeling the gypsies gave her. A true great episode mostly indeed because of the ultra-talented and beautiful Harrison.