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Milsome was prevailed upon to gussy up the proceedings. He did, but the result serves to emphasize the ultimate pointlessness of this whole enterprise. Everything that was complicated and implied in
Lonesome Dove—the subtle, shifting relationships between the main characters, their crisscrossing pasts—is tidied up, spelled out, and tediously resolved in Return. Stick around for seven hours and you'll find that this is a perfectly decent Western; you might even shed a tear or two. But you'll also know that, when it's finished, a grand piece of TV mythmaking has been reduced to a horse opera.
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tears in his eyes. They are meant to be tears of truth, but it's easy to believe they are the result of riding through a long, heartbreaking disappointment. "Return to
Lonesome Dove," which spreads its seven hours thinly across three evenings (8 p.m. Sunday and Tuesday, 7 p.m. Thursday, CBS-Ch. 2), does more than suffer by comparison with the original. It is a mess on its own terms, closer in emotional depth and action to old episodes of TV's "The Cisco Kid" than to the original "Lonesome Dove." But what could you expect? The original was one of a kind.
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also attacks Clara's family and Gideon while they are on their way into town. Gideon and four others die in the ambush, and Clara is severely wounded. However
Johnson manages to warn Call of the attack. Call returns to canyon where the attack had taken place, finds Gideon's body, and also finds a blood trail leading away in another direction. He, Pea, and Isom follow the trail and find Cherokee Jack attempting to flee into nearby hills. Isom chases Jack down, and before Call executes him, Jack tells him about the arrangements he had made with Dunnigan.
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688:. Actor Jon Voight calls this chapter of the Dove series a masterpiece and hoped the sequel is "as meaningful" as the first. The day before filming began, Voight stepped forward and said a prayer. He wanted everyone to remember to thank the author Larry McMurtry, who gave us these magnificent surroundings. Filming lasted for 2 months, until production was completed in August 1993.
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mother's brother, a bandit, but she had jumped in front of a bullet meant for the bandit. He also reasons with her that her father, Gus, had not raped her mother by pointing out that her name, Augostina (the feminine derivative of "Augustus"), was given to her by her mother to honor her father's memory. Call then makes her a partner in the ranch.
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uneasy with
Dunnigan because of his campaign to drive the other ranchers of the region out of business, but is reluctant to part ways because of the debt he feels he owes him. Added to this is the pressure being placed on Newt by Dunnigan who starts to treat him "like a son", and his wife, who begins showing an increased romantic interest in him.
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It's asking a lot of the still-young-looking Rick
Schroder to handle the heavy legacy of "Lonesome Dove." At the end of "Return to Lonesome Dove," the sequel to the majesterial 1988 mini-series, when Schroder's character Newt takes off into the sunset to live out his own dusty dreams, he does so with
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Call and Clara bury Gideon, whereupon Clara decides she wishes to leave
Montana and return home. Newt goes to speak with Ferris, and tells her that he doesn't feel that their arrangement of him assuming Dunnigan's estate should still be valid. She tells him that she feels it is, but he cannot accept.
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Dunnigan's alliance begins persecuting the smaller outfits, using cattle his men had planted in the other men's herds as an excuse. Call rounds up all the men he can, and attempts to stall
Dunnigan long enough for reinforcements to arrive from other unaffiliated groups. He confronts Dunnigan with the
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Upon reaching
Montana, the horse drovers begin to settle in at Hat Creek ranch. Call and Augostina have a confrontation, in which she reveals the reason for her animosity towards him: he had accidentally shot her mother. Call convinces her that her mother's death was an accident. Call had tracked her
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Dove II relies far too much on what Dove I used as window dressing: long, deep shots of rolling farmland and dusty desert. Lonesome Dove's director of photography, Douglas
Milsome, has been bumped up to second-unit director here, and it's clear that, in the absence of vivid atmosphere in the script,
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As the herders head north, they stop at Miles City, where
Johnson has his bandages removed. Gideon begins showing a romantic interest in Clara, inviting her out on a dinner-date. They are observed by Dunnigan, who secretly hires Cherokee Jack to stir up trouble between The Alliance, and unaffiliated
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As part of their deal, Cherokee Jack attacks a small herd of cattle on Kenilworth Ranch, killing two cattlemen in plain view of Dunnigan and Newt (who is now aware of Dunnigan's plan to name him his inheritor). Dunnigan uses this attack to stir up fear, and to begin to consolidate his control. Jack
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After his return to Montana, having left his 'wife' with Clara, Call is disturbed to find Newt working for Dunnigan, believing that he is only there because of his young wife. But Newt is determined to honor his debt to Call's neighbor, and later confronts his father and tries to explain why he was
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Miraculously, Clara Allen, July Johnson, Clara's two daughters, Johnson's son, her ranch-hand, Cholo, and Many Tears, survive the inferno but Johnson is badly burnt. They head off to town to recover, just as Gideon and the others arrive. Through Gideon, Clara soon learns of Gus's secret daughter,
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Call meets Dunnigan on the range, and comes into conflict with him and his "Montana's Cattleman's Alliance". Things come to a head when he decides to surround his property with barbed wire, and the wagons and the wire are destroyed by a group of masked men. Newt, now distanced from Call, becomes
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they are involved in a bar fight that concludes with the shooting of two locals. Surrendering to the sheriff, they are helped by his neighbor, Gregor Dunnigan, and paroled into his custody as employees (Newt had previously rescued Gregor's young wife, Ferris Dunnigan, from cattle rustlers).
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money purse about his relationship with Cherokee Jack, which Dunnigan denies. Newt, seeing the evidence, knows that Dunnigan is lying, and goes to join Call. Dunnigan attempts to shoot Call, whereupon Newt shoots Dunnigan and the others surrender.
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While on the trail, however, Isaac is killed by the outlaw Cherokee Jack, and is buried with a headstone dated "Gone to glory 4 August 1878". Isom has to take his place in leading the herd. When the children become sick, Augostina heads off to
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of the Hat Creek Cattle Company, Pea Eye served as a corporal in the Rangers under Gus and Call. Pea Eye (his real name long forgotten) is not especially bright, but he is reliable, brave, and kind. He follows Call's lead without
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is the only film in the series to be filmed in the state of Montana. Principal Photography began in late May, early June 1993. Filming locations took place in and around the mountain areas of Southwest Montana, areas between
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village. The chief recognizes him as an enemy, but nevertheless honors his bravery with a horse, a rifle, and his widowed sister Many Tears. Call then heads off to meet Clara Allen, and learns of Newt's situation.
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as Newt Dobbs, a young orphan raised by Gus and Call. His mother was a prostitute named Maggie Dobbs, who died when he was a child. He suspects that Call is his father despite Call not formally admitting
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groups including free-rangers and homesteaders. Dunnigan's aim is to solidify The Alliance's hold on the territory, so they will have complete control over the cattle/beef market in years to come.
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for medicine, but is forced to shoot her army escorts when they attempt to rape her. Gideon then helps her with a fabricated alibi when an army patrol arrives to investigate.
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dressmaker and ex-ranger, and wrangler Isom Pickett. They are also joined by Pickett's family and his brother, Isaac. Walker also hires a group of Mexican
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He goes on to say his goodbyes to Call as well, expressing a desire to move on, and Call finally proudly identifies himself as Newt's father.
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unable to finish his mission. Meanwhile, back in Ogallala, lightning strikes start wildfires that destroy all of the Allen homestead.
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Newt, still in charge at the Montana ranch, leaves Pea Eye Parker in charge and heads off with Jasper Fant to meet Call, but while in
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Meanwhile, Call captures an outlaw named Cherokee Jack Jackson, but barely escapes with his life after Jack's gang rescues him.
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as July Johnson, a former sheriff of the town of Fort Smith, Arkansas. July has become a hand on the property of Clara.
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as Agostina Vega, a Latina wrangler on the Mustang drive to Montana, the daughter of Augustus McCrae.
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Call, having jumped into a river and trekked barefoot across the plains, stumbles half-dead into a
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as Gregor Dunnigan, a wealthy Montana rancher on a spread near the Hat Creek Cattle Company.
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of the Hat Creek Cattle Company. He is often troublesome and at times incredibly weak.
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as Isom Pickett, an African-American cowboy who agrees to help Call herd his Mustangs.
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To help drive the herd he seeks the help of former companions Gideon Walker, a
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as Jack "Cherokee Jack" Jackson, an African-American outlaw raised by the
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and first aired on November 14–17, 1993. The story focuses on a retired
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Augostina, and also agrees to allow her herd to go north with Call's.
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were also subsequently made into TV miniseries. Many fans of the
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as Ferris Dunnigan, the young wife of Gregor who befriends Newt.
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The sequel received mixed reviews. According to Ken Tucker:
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Captain Woodrow F. Call, having just buried his friend
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because of their divergence from McMurtry's storyline.
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RETURN TO LONESOME DOVE TRAILS FAR BEHIND THE ORIGINAL
49:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
1018:Television series about the Texas Ranger Division
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433:at the home of Clara Allen, with a herd of wild
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704:on DVD on July 6, 2010 by the Rhino studio.
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700:on May 20, 2003. It was also released in
109:Learn how and when to remove this message
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317:is a 1993 American four part television
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682:Virginia City, Montana
421:near Lonesome Dove in
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648:Jack Caffrey as Cholo
502:Part IV - The Passing
485:Part III - The Legacy
1013:Lonesome Dove series
767:Entertainment Weekly
750:Accessed 2014-03-29
678:Nevada City, Montana
629:as Jasper Fant, The
543:Clara Forsythe Allen
394:Lonesome Dove series
43:improve this article
1008:Fiction set in 1878
785:Accessed 2014-03-29
783:The Chicago Tribune
769:Accessed 2014-03-29
523:Cast and characters
460:Part II - The Forge
413:Part I - The Vision
431:Ogallala, Nebraska
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637:William Sanderson
584:Reese Witherspoon
556:Louis Gossett Jr.
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621:Nia Peeples
568:Oliver Reed
531:as Captain
442:San Antonio
323:John Wilder
264:November 14
153:Directed by
147:John Wilder
982:Categories
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735:References
692:Home media
686:Texas, USA
656:Production
627:Barry Tubb
602:blacksmith
529:Jon Voight
453:Miles City
361:Emmy Award
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278:1993-11-17
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168:Jon Voight
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968:(1995–96)
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402:canonical
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16:1993 film
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