Why she took such a liking to Wild Bill. He's probably one of the few people who treated her with kindness and respect cause God knows that was in short supply during this time.
Calamity Jane-"You think I'm scared of you?" Al- "Sure you are. If I take a knife to you you'll be scared worse and a long time dying." All said in a conversational tone that makes it that much more intimidating. I've read stomach wounds are an extremely painful and slow way to die.
The Doc was such a fantastic character (among dozens of others). He knew he was indispensable to Al's business, and thus took it upon himself to be the one to stand up to him when necessary.
Except Al was never going to do whatever the Doc feared he was going to do... Doc didn't understand human social dynamics, so he never truly understood Al or his motivations. Al always did what was "best for the camp" while Al was the King... it's why Al's road agents never attacked anyone coming INTO the camp & preyed only upon those leaving the camp. People coming to join were unmolested but those leaving were no longer under that social contract... killing some road agents to clean up the mess was ALWAYS the better option and the one that Al was going to do instead of killing a little girl IN the camp. Al just wanted to make sure that executing them was a necessary step before doing it
Robin Weigerts take on Calamity Jane was so brave. She could have taken so many obvious paths, but she played her as fragile and broken, rather than trying to ham it up. And she was nominated for an Emmy for it (sometimes they get it right). No easy task to stand out in a cast that was so extraordinary.
One of the best things about this show is the realism it depicts regarding frontier life. Women had it harder than anyone. If they didn't sell their bodies outright they were taken by force, and even someone like CJ would have heaps of buried trauma at a time where the only remedy for something like that was to get loaded all day everyday.
@@LumpyAdams I think the meaning was under-appreciated by the public. If you were to drop his name in a theater, most people probably couldn't tell you his roles. But if you mentioned Deputy Pell from Mississippi Burning, Grima Wormtongue from Lord of the Rings, Doc from Deadwood, and Chucky from Child's Play, people would immediately know those roles, and then be surprised it's all the same actor. He's a true character actor, and can disappear into his roles. I think that's why people have a hard time recognizing him.
I've heard so many stories from my grandpa (born 1910, miss him) from old timers when he was a kid about gruff, hard living saloon owners that always seemed to have a soft spot for children. Saloon owners at this time knew their communities and in many ways were key members that contributed behind the scenes. They knew EVERYTHING going on.
Ian McShane was legitimately terrifying in this scene. The confidence, and mix of malice and cold indifference cannot be easy to pull off without it being cartoonish.
Doc and Jane and Al. What I love of Deadwood is all of them stretching to their unintended extremes to make a community. I can't even handle how good Dourif and McShane are in this scene. Best first season of television ever.
Some day this series will be recognized for what it is, 'ART'. Great 'ART'. They'll be using this series in acting schools for a long, long time. Simply nothing compares.
You know what's sooo good about this show the actors play the people they are supposed to be playing. N not over or under acting. Its absolutely amazing!!!!
Agreed. Many of the cast also had recurring roles in Sons of Anarchy. They are unbelievably good. Reverend Smith’s character in Sons was nearly identical personality but entirely different role.
Such an amazing show and such good acting. Al is the greatest TV character of all time. So many different levels to him over the three seasons and the movie.
"don't be mean" is an open window to jane's soul and all the vulnerability and suffering she's endured. the doc is a portrait of a man as a witness to suffering throughout his career and life that have aged him beyond his years. he is in constant care of jane, everything he does and says to her is as a healer. he's biblical, as are many of the characters big and small found throughout deadwood.
One of the best things that ever happened in tv was the Deadwood movie. It was so impossibly good all things considered. Took my favorite show and gave it the ending it deserved. Thank you so much, David Milch.
I think the accurate portrayel is that she wasn't a "badass". Men probably reacted to her the same way as this show. She would peacock and bluster, and at most, other men were amused, but not intimidated.
also a womanizer who pimped out lil girls (children) for a few shots and a few hands at poker. Keep the show for entertainment, try not to idolize the people characterized or you'll find yourself very disappointed.
I agree, irkofan, if you're still reading. Al became the "sin-eater" of sorts, for Deadwood. He could have held the high moral ground and not sacrificed Jen or given up Trixie...and Hearst and his private army would have burned the place down, with all the innocents still in camp. Milch has said Al was a good man who knew none of the behaviors of goodness (as is believable from his upbringing, which, btw, would have almost certainly included being sexually abused as a child.
Mary Jane Canary was my neighbor in Deadwood , lived just a floor above me , folks dun call her calamity fer nothing , though she got a horsey mouth , that gal sure got a kind heart
If, of the tens of thousands of facets of humanity that reveal themselves in trauma, there are some that the artists of Deadwood did not offer to us completely, damn all if I could name one.
I still can't believe the same man who played "Lovejoy", the charming, charismatic, jolly art con, is the same one playing Al Swearengen, one the most intimitating and evil characters in Deadwood; which is saying a lot.
@KiLLxDoZeR If you don't appreciate her character, you don't deserve Deadwood. As a matter of fact, if you don't appreciate ANY characters you don't deserve Deadwood. They're all integral part of it.
"Who the fuck are you?" When Al looks her in the eye, she is instantly terrified of him and you see it in her face and body language. These actors did an amazing job.
@williamrafe1 That girl was the only living witness to a robbery-gone-wrong by Al's road agents. Al was told by doc cochran that the little girl was still unconscious, thus unable to talk. Al wanted to see for himself and did. He was contemplating killing her so she couldn't tie the murder of her family to the gang and ultimately Al.
Mr Chopsticks Yes, she is very attractive. But it's a hell of a lot easier to make someone attractive look ordinary or ugly, than the other way around.
Janes confrontation with the doctor, she revealed an important part of her backstory. “Oh you think he’s the first? I’ve fuck plenty by tougher fucks then he was an littler fucks then she was”. In that small frame of dialogue we learn two important thing: we learn a bit about Janes sexuality/history (something the writers later touch up on) and that it had severe traumatic outcomes on her life. The Wild West wasn’t a safe place for women to be. Unlike Hollywood terminology of the dashing hero riding into the western sunset. A lot cowboys were misogynists, racists, sexists who would beat women, get drunk and would rape women. And if you were a women you either had to be married or being a prostitute in the saloons. Not to mention the sheer volatile fact it was almost a hundred-and-twenty-years still in the making before discovering modern medicine.
@George Washington he never said all were... read the full comment he’s absolutely right? And maybe you would know that if you bothered to open a history book about the Wild West
I could be remembering it wrong, but wasn't there something about her having an abusive father and Swearengen reminded her of him? Hence why she crumbled so fast.
All she really said to Charlie Utter, is that Al scared her, and that she hadn't been scared like that since she was a little girl. She didn't specify, if it was cause of an abusive father. Unless I'm not remembering, but I'm re-watching the show right now, and am well passed this episode, and don't recall her mentioning her father at any point.
I think Al knew that the Doc would not allow Dan entry to harm that girl and he realized it was wrong and never questioned it so he killed the scumbag who hurt her and her family instead and probably slept a lot better.
Lmao AL is literally pure evil and absolutely believed the guy would do what he sent him to do. I think you're giving al a lot of credit which is strange, the show is pretty clear about what kind of guy he is
This was probably the only scene that I felt bad for Al Swegan. His s reputation as a pimp ended up succeeding his existence as a human being. He was only checking on the health of the child but everyone else that had her in their care assumed the worst of him.
I wonder how the real Calamity Jane would’ve handled herself in this situation. Though she was a legend mostly in her own mind. She was said to be tough, brave and good with a gun. She had a very hard life which in turn made her a hard woman. So I’d like to think she would’ve stood her ground and not have been intimidated by any man. But who knows.
First glimpse at Al being a softie deep down. He could've easily killed the girl and should have. But his conscience got the best of him and he forced Dan to do it for him, telling him it'd be easy and Jane could be pushed over with a feather.
@irkofan I know its been four months since you got into the argument, with that other guy, but I just wanted you to know , I completly agree with your views on the character of Al in this show. The real guy wasn't this guy of course, but that not withstanding the character certainly was human, bad, and good as almost all humans are.
I've been imagining Full House characters having past incarnations in Deadwood: Jesse = Al Swearengen 😍 Stephanie = Sofia/Sophia DJ = Trixie Becky = Dolly Danny = Dan Carrie Fowler = Carrie the blonde "lady of the night". Kimmy Gibbler = Calamity Jane!
I love this scene so much. I only wish Al had whispered the knife line into her ear to seal that deadly intimacy. Would've added a layer to the scene later where she breaks down and says she hasn't been that scared since she was a little girl.
Trusting Jane is a really good example of how blind sympathy can get innocent people hurt. Doc is negligent for leaving that poor confused person to protect a child from Al. Then again, people don't really care about kids unless they're their own so who better than somebody who'll never have children of her own. She tried, I guess, but reality has no sympathy.
@@silversnail1413 A-yup. Also, it's clear the last thing she wants is to be attractive to a man and get attention sexually/romantically. She goes out of her way to avoid that. Same reason.
People really did not use these words like they did on this show. But when you got individuals who are writing and do not have a clue about the real history you are going to get these words used nearly dozens of times per show. This was a time were nearly everyone was packing at least one gun and knew how to use said guns. If someone used these words against most individuals back then they would very quickly be in a gun fight. Since that other person was very likely going to go for their gun.
@@ChrisStavros Depends on the town since town marshalls/sheriffs would create rules so that they could try and keep down the violence. Sure the famous fast draw shootouts were actually very rare but when you have a large amount of booze being consumed things did get out of hand at times.
Which was that, nearly everyone owned a gun, was skilled with it and ready to use it at the drop of a hat. That just does not jive at all with the facts.
@@ChrisStavros The facts; well first this was in the mid to late 1870's which was only ten years after the Civil War, Wild Bill was killed August 1876, the Battle of Little Bighorn took place in June 1876 and individuals did carry guns and knew how to use them. My issue is with the Hollywood writers who think that people back then used a certain word 40-60 times a day. Poor writing is poor writing and well Hollywood got no one who can write worth anything these days.
I am in awe of how great these actors are. And in the service of great writing.
This series was in every way a masterpiece.
sometimes you get those moments when acting, directing and writing intertwine with each other so perfectly it makes you wanna cry tears of joy.
I love this show. It single-handedly improved my profanity skills by at least 50%.
"Don't be mean". It's such a revealing line. She's been left with such little self-worth that it didn't even cross her mind the doc was being sincere.
@The Beast 2spooky5me
Why she took such a liking to Wild Bill. He's probably one of the few people who treated her with kindness and respect cause God knows that was in short supply during this time.
"You don't want to interfere with me". God, he deliver a line...
Calamity Jane-"You think I'm scared of you?"
Al- "Sure you are. If I take a knife to you you'll be scared worse and a long time dying."
All said in a conversational tone that makes it that much more intimidating. I've read stomach wounds are an extremely painful and slow way to die.
The Doc was such a fantastic character (among dozens of others). He knew he was indispensable to Al's business, and thus took it upon himself to be the one to stand up to him when necessary.
Except Al was never going to do whatever the Doc feared he was going to do... Doc didn't understand human social dynamics, so he never truly understood Al or his motivations. Al always did what was "best for the camp" while Al was the King... it's why Al's road agents never attacked anyone coming INTO the camp & preyed only upon those leaving the camp. People coming to join were unmolested but those leaving were no longer under that social contract... killing some road agents to clean up the mess was ALWAYS the better option and the one that Al was going to do instead of killing a little girl IN the camp. Al just wanted to make sure that executing them was a necessary step before doing it
@@nationalsocialism3504 WTF? He literally sent Dan to kill her. Dan and the doc lied to him and pretended that Jane abducted her
Robin Weigerts take on Calamity Jane was so brave. She could have taken so many obvious paths, but she played her as fragile and broken, rather than trying to ham it up. And she was nominated for an Emmy for it (sometimes they get it right). No easy task to stand out in a cast that was so extraordinary.
One of the best things about this show is the realism it depicts regarding frontier life. Women had it harder than anyone. If they didn't sell their bodies outright they were taken by force, and even someone like CJ would have heaps of buried trauma at a time where the only remedy for something like that was to get loaded all day everyday.
David Milch wrote the character, not Robin Weigert
agreed. Great performance. So many little wrinkles that a lesser actor would not have added.
@@Space_Ghost_Hunter Not to mention all the death she must have seen in the Civil War.
@@nothere413 ayy Dismemberment Plan!
Brad Dourif is the most underappreciated actor of our time.
He's actually one of the most sought out character actors that there's ever been so.. no lol.
@@LumpyAdams sought out for cock?
@@LumpyAdams I think the meaning was under-appreciated by the public. If you were to drop his name in a theater, most people probably couldn't tell you his roles. But if you mentioned Deputy Pell from Mississippi Burning, Grima Wormtongue from Lord of the Rings, Doc from Deadwood, and Chucky from Child's Play, people would immediately know those roles, and then be surprised it's all the same actor. He's a true character actor, and can disappear into his roles. I think that's why people have a hard time recognizing him.
@@martinaxe6390 Disappear is right in my case. Took five episodes before I even began to realize it was Brad.
Wise person knowns when they're outmatched. The devil himself couldn't have been more terrifying than McShane in that moment. Love this show!
Mans got to know his limitations
It's not just who he was, it's who he was to her.
Al’s expression after he says hello to Sofia-regardless of how he was in the beginning, he’s always had a soft spot for the innocent children.
I've heard so many stories from my grandpa (born 1910, miss him) from old timers when he was a kid about gruff, hard living saloon owners that always seemed to have a soft spot for children. Saloon owners at this time knew their communities and in many ways were key members that contributed behind the scenes. They knew EVERYTHING going on.
Al was an Orphan as well, he had a soft spot for Jewell (the Gimp as he called her) as well
He wanted to murder her…
The actress who plays Jane is too much. Like she's too talented. Her character always literally hurt to watch. She's amazing.
Robin Weigert. She is truly outstanding.
Incredible
Phenomenal job
Well put
She played a good lawyer in SOA as well
Years later....and this performance still stands out.
Well done Robin Weigert.
Ian McShane was legitimately terrifying in this scene. The confidence, and mix of malice and cold indifference cannot be easy to pull off without it being cartoonish.
Doc and Jane and Al. What I love of Deadwood is all of them stretching to their unintended extremes to make a community. I can't even handle how good Dourif and McShane are in this scene. Best first season of television ever.
McShane absolutely NAILS this scene; and that chillingly dismissive wee smile he has as Al turns his back to Jane is perfection!!
The Bee So agree. His eyes scare the shit out of me! Like a white pointer shark when he gives you the death stare.
He nails évery scene to be fair. He plays the sh*t out of Al Swearengen!
Some day this series will be recognized for what it is, 'ART'. Great 'ART'. They'll be using this series in acting schools for a long, long time. Simply nothing compares.
One of the greatest series ever, and Jane was perhaps the most moving, riveting characters. What a performance!
Robin Weigert. Spectacular. Beautiful.
You know what's sooo good about this show the actors play the people they are supposed to be playing. N not over or under acting. Its absolutely amazing!!!!
Swearengen was one of the best anti-heros ever put on film. Cold blooded.
He’s not as cold blooded as it seems.
more akin to a fallen angel whos developed a taste for hell but cant quite shake the memory of heaven.
the actors in DEADWOOD are incredible,and some of these people i've never heard of,again,incredible series
Agreed. Many of the cast also had recurring roles in Sons of Anarchy. They are unbelievably good. Reverend Smith’s character in Sons was nearly identical personality but entirely different role.
Such an amazing show and such good acting. Al is the greatest TV character of all time. So many different levels to him over the three seasons and the movie.
"don't be mean" is an open window to jane's soul and all the vulnerability and suffering she's endured. the doc is a portrait of a man as a witness to suffering throughout his career and life that have aged him beyond his years. he is in constant care of jane, everything he does and says to her is as a healer. he's biblical, as are many of the characters big and small found throughout deadwood.
This show was so amazing.
Nothing was more terrifying than Season 1 Al
One of the best things that ever happened in tv was the Deadwood movie. It was so impossibly good all things considered. Took my favorite show and gave it the ending it deserved.
Thank you so much, David Milch.
" You dont want to interfere with me. "
Powerful performances. This was a damn good show, one of the best ever.
Cause that's Al fuckin Swearengen.
According to Wiki the portrayal of Calamity Jane was pretty accurate. She was known to be a badass but was also kind and compassionate.
I think the accurate portrayel is that she wasn't a "badass". Men probably reacted to her the same way as this show. She would peacock and bluster, and at most, other men were amused, but not intimidated.
also a womanizer who pimped out lil girls (children) for a few shots and a few hands at poker. Keep the show for entertainment, try not to idolize the people characterized or you'll find yourself very disappointed.
"Sure you are. And if I take a knife to you you'll be scared worse and a long time dying."
That would be an awesome intro to a death metal song.
Internet Connection hahahaha
" One who kills, makes it business, and one who starts the incident, makes it personal. " - Jay Citti
I don’t make many wishes but a deadwood movie was one of them. May 31st I’ll be left with 6 wishes.
Jane was the major reason I watched this show.
I personally love the way Al just chuckles and carry’s on after Jane says she’s not scared to die or scared of nobody hahaha
He saw right through her
I agree, irkofan, if you're still reading. Al became the "sin-eater" of sorts, for Deadwood. He could have held the high moral ground and not sacrificed Jen or given up Trixie...and Hearst and his private army would have burned the place down, with all the innocents still in camp. Milch has said Al was a good man who knew none of the behaviors of goodness (as is believable from his upbringing, which, btw, would have almost certainly included being sexually abused as a child.
Mary Jane Canary was my neighbor in Deadwood , lived just a floor above me , folks dun call her calamity fer nothing , though she got a horsey mouth , that gal sure got a kind heart
If, of the tens of thousands of facets of humanity that reveal themselves in trauma, there are some that the artists of Deadwood did not offer to us completely, damn all if I could name one.
Jane was always such a sad character.
Now that is what menacing is.
Robin Weigert and Brad Dourif highly underrated actors. Hope they're both in the upcoming Deadwood movie.
Yep they are, trailer was released today!!!
Weigert was nominated for an Emmy. And Dourif? The ultimate supporting actor.
I still can't believe the same man who played "Lovejoy", the charming, charismatic, jolly art con, is the same one playing Al Swearengen, one the most intimitating and evil characters in Deadwood; which is saying a lot.
Al wasn't evil. He was chaotic neutral and dark but not evil.
Cy was pure evil and George Hearst
@KiLLxDoZeR If you don't appreciate her character, you don't deserve Deadwood. As a matter of fact, if you don't appreciate ANY characters you don't deserve Deadwood. They're all integral part of it.
the writer said that one reason jane can't stand up to Al is he reminds her too much of her father and it scares her
Must've been some father.
"Who the fuck are you?" When Al looks her in the eye, she is instantly terrified of him and you see it in her face and body language. These actors did an amazing job.
@williamrafe1 That girl was the only living witness to a robbery-gone-wrong by Al's road agents. Al was told by doc cochran that the little girl was still unconscious, thus unable to talk. Al wanted to see for himself and did. He was contemplating killing her so she couldn't tie the murder of her family to the gang and ultimately Al.
Every moment Jane was on screen was priceless lol
What a great show
Man...poor Jane.😨
@Bwigdosh Kimgdort
Al's reputation for blood letting was more so known then her reputation of being fearless and foolhardy.
oddly enough this made me like jane more.
The greatest tv show ever
Best show ever
Robin Weigert is actually very attractive. They did a great job making her homely.
Mr Chopsticks Yes, she is very attractive. But it's a hell of a lot easier to make someone attractive look ordinary or ugly, than the other way around.
@@777Psychodelia Degeneration is a one way street.
The real Jane was "unatractive", and Robin Weigert's portrayal was exceptional and moving.
Great scene..
Damn! That woman can _act!_
Nose to nose with a killer.
As a possible descendant of "Calamity Jane" Cannery, I thoroughly enjoyed Robin Weigert's portrayal of the legendary western character.
Jane always seemed afraid of men when it came to a direct confrontation. Old history...?
Janes confrontation with the doctor, she revealed an important part of her backstory. “Oh you think he’s the first? I’ve fuck plenty by tougher fucks then he was an littler fucks then she was”. In that small frame of dialogue we learn two important thing: we learn a bit about Janes sexuality/history (something the writers later touch up on) and that it had severe traumatic outcomes on her life. The Wild West wasn’t a safe place for women to be. Unlike Hollywood terminology of the dashing hero riding into the western sunset. A lot cowboys were misogynists, racists, sexists who would beat women, get drunk and would rape women. And if you were a women you either had to be married or being a prostitute in the saloons. Not to mention the sheer volatile fact it was almost a hundred-and-twenty-years still in the making before discovering modern medicine.
@George Washington he never said all were... read the full comment he’s absolutely right? And maybe you would know that if you bothered to open a history book about the Wild West
In my interpretation she saw a demon in front of her and still tried to stand up to it.
Infinite Number of Words, Infinite Number of Possibilities.
McShane performance is perfection
Swearengen is a cold blooded killer but he would never harm a child. I wish they would do a spin off about how he met Jewel
I could be remembering it wrong, but wasn't there something about her having an abusive father and Swearengen reminded her of him? Hence why she crumbled so fast.
All she really said to Charlie Utter, is that Al scared her, and that she hadn't been scared like that since she was a little girl. She didn't specify, if it was cause of an abusive father. Unless I'm not remembering, but I'm re-watching the show right now, and am well passed this episode, and don't recall her mentioning her father at any point.
@@cmcproductions26 Could be some other older man than her own father but I'd say it definitely was somebody.
I think Al knew that the Doc would not allow Dan entry to harm that girl and he realized it was wrong and never questioned it so he killed the scumbag who hurt her and her family instead and probably slept a lot better.
Lmao AL is literally pure evil and absolutely believed the guy would do what he sent him to do. I think you're giving al a lot of credit which is strange, the show is pretty clear about what kind of guy he is
@williamrafe1
I think Wild Bill loved her only as a friend.
Thars true they NEVER had a romantic relationship!!! Now there is s movie out there that says otherwise n its WRONG!!!!
It is film greatness.
She turned to a blubbering lump when Al looked at her...
Anyone know the name of the song playing during the doc and al scene?
I love the music at 1:50
Damn, who wouldn't?
Al and Jane should have had more scenes together. Including a few funny ones.
@JimmyHook uh.. reverend smith?
This was probably the only scene that I felt bad for Al Swegan. His s reputation as a pimp ended up succeeding his existence as a human being. He was only checking on the health of the child but everyone else that had her in their care assumed the worst of him.
I wonder how the real Calamity Jane would’ve handled herself in this situation.
Though she was a legend mostly in her own mind.
She was said to be tough,
brave and good with a gun.
She had a very hard life which in turn made her a hard woman.
So I’d like to think she would’ve stood her ground and not have been intimidated by any man.
But who knows.
Great acting.
I never thought through watching this series that Al would have ever hurt a child.
Not personally no but he would send one of his henchmen to do it, he sent Dan to do it but he couldn’t do it
When Al was still the bad guy
Al was always the bad guy..he just wasn't the worst guy in Deadwood.
First glimpse at Al being a softie deep down. He could've easily killed the girl and should have. But his conscience got the best of him and he forced Dan to do it for him, telling him it'd be easy and Jane could be pushed over with a feather.
"Her eyes are open."
Don't take it so hard Jane. That was Al Swearengen. He could intimidate Michael, Jason, Freddy & Chucky.
Jane was always afraid of men deep down.
The actress displayed her deep injury, hurting, a past of being terrorized by men.
Most women are
Somewone know wehre i can find that song? :O
@irkofan I know its been four months since you got into the argument, with that other guy, but I just wanted you to know , I completly agree with your views on the character of Al in this show. The real guy wasn't this guy of course, but that not withstanding the character certainly was human, bad, and good as almost all humans are.
I know of no show that built tension the way Deadwood did.
"Her eyes are open" lol swearengen just has that big d energy
Helloo.....
This scene would have went very differently if Charlie or Bill had been in the back.
Great point and something to wonder for sure.
Charlie would have known better than to mess with al
That would of been very very interesting if Wild Bill would of been there. Just imagine that would of happend..
Jane disliked this
I've been imagining Full House characters having past incarnations in Deadwood:
Jesse = Al Swearengen 😍
Stephanie = Sofia/Sophia
DJ = Trixie
Becky = Dolly
Danny = Dan
Carrie Fowler = Carrie the blonde "lady of the night".
Kimmy Gibbler = Calamity Jane!
@hrothgleas Cy was definitely more evil than Al.
Al still would have whooped his ass though.
I love this scene so much. I only wish Al had whispered the knife line into her ear to seal that deadly intimacy. Would've added a layer to the scene later where she breaks down and says she hasn't been that scared since she was a little girl.
Trusting Jane is a really good example of how blind sympathy can get innocent people hurt. Doc is negligent for leaving that poor confused person to protect a child from Al. Then again, people don't really care about kids unless they're their own so who better than somebody who'll never have children of her own. She tried, I guess, but reality has no sympathy.
Never had children? Surely someone tapped it
The only person who can scared to death Jane.
Emrod82 She was afraid of Cy Tolliver, as well. Jane was abused when she was younger so she's easily intimidated by strong, violent men.
+Silver Snail14 Al isn't strong.
@@silversnail1413 A-yup. Also, it's clear the last thing she wants is to be attractive to a man and get attention sexually/romantically. She goes out of her way to avoid that. Same reason.
People really did not use these words like they did on this show. But when you got individuals who are writing and do not have a clue about the real history you are going to get these words used nearly dozens of times per show. This was a time were nearly everyone was packing at least one gun and knew how to use said guns. If someone used these words against most individuals back then they would very quickly be in a gun fight. Since that other person was very likely going to go for their gun.
Almost nobody actually carried a gun on a day-to-day basis in the old west, particularly not in town limits.
@@ChrisStavros Depends on the town since town marshalls/sheriffs would create rules so that they could try and keep down the violence. Sure the famous fast draw shootouts were actually very rare but when you have a large amount of booze being consumed things did get out of hand at times.
@@chestersleezer8821 They were extremely rare and while things did get out of hand "at times", we're now pretty far from your original claim.
Which was that, nearly everyone owned a gun, was skilled with it and ready to use it at the drop of a hat. That just does not jive at all with the facts.
@@ChrisStavros The facts; well first this was in the mid to late 1870's which was only ten years after the Civil War, Wild Bill was killed August 1876, the Battle of Little Bighorn took place in June 1876 and individuals did carry guns and knew how to use them. My issue is with the Hollywood writers who think that people back then used a certain word 40-60 times a day. Poor writing is poor writing and well Hollywood got no one who can write worth anything these days.
Sometimes shit just steamrolls ya.
If Al had hurt her Dourif would have got all Exorcist 3 on his ass!
Jane chill. You're just like my mom who's also named Jane.
Al would never hurt that kid. Never.
Of course he would..
@@jimmykray9583 Obviously not
@@RepublicConstitution he sent Dan to murder her? It’s only because Dan couldn’t go through with it she’s alive.
Wait?! Brad dourif is in this show.