
The Rifleman: Stopover
The North Fork stagecoach must stop at the McCain ranch because of a severe snowstorm.

The North Fork stagecoach must stop at the McCain ranch because of a severe snowstorm.

A sheriff's daughter runs off with her boyfriend (John Ericson), unaware he is a murderous bank robber.

Cheyenne takes an old mill train home.

The corrupt sheriff of Stagge City jails Cheyenne on charges of vagrancy.

A vengeful gunfighter (Wings Hauser) tests Teaspoon's integrity Teaspoon's third wife wants to reconcile.

Seasoned mountain man Joe Meek becomes a frontier legend when he risks his life in a fearless charge to save the woman he loves from Crow warriors.

When an elusive bandito terrorizes early Los Angeles County, a reporter shadows the sheriff who is hunting the outlaw it will be seen if the reporter can stay objective or takes matters into his own hands when he comes face to face with the killer.

When Elijah Briant is elected sheriff, the mild-mannered druggist and former teacher tries to enforce the law without carrying a weapon he soon faces a serious challenge when the last surviving members of the Wild Bunch descend on his town.

Lucas faces lynching for unwittingly buying stolen horses.

Hoss and Little Joe spend the most unforgettable night at the carnival when Little Joe's date disappears.

Cheyenne is forced into a gunfight with the Laverson brothers, leaving one dead and one out for revenge.

Cheyenne hunts wild horses.

Today, the buffalo is the quintessential symbol of strength, freedom and the unspoiled American West. However, in the late 1800s, the nation's buffalo were nearly wiped out by ruthless hide hunters. Those majestic herds, which once numbered in the tens of millions, were down to less than 500 animals. This is the story of the handful of determined men and women who mobilized to save the ones that were left in a last-ditch effort to stave off extinction. Ranchers like Charles and Mary Ann Goodnight rescued orphaned buffalo calves and built small herds. Former buffalo hunters like Buffalo Bill helped build public sympathy. And politicians like Theodore Roosevelt helped pass laws to protect the remaining animals. The effort would be a generational one, with buffalo herds carefully tended, bred, and passed down to new stewards when their old protectors passed away. Thanks to their efforts, there are an estimated 500,000 buffalo thundering across America's grasslands once again.

After pulling a bank heist in Mexico, the outlaw Rio (Marlon Brando) and his partner, Dad Longworth (Karl Malden), make a run for it, but Dad has bigger plans than freedom. He betrays Rio and absconds with the loot, and Rio ends up in prison. Years pass before Rio finally breaks free to enact his long-plotted revenge. Tracking Dad to California, Rio learns he's become a sheriff -- which is no deterrent -- but when Rio falls for Dad's stepdaughter, Louisa (Pina Pellicer), he has second thoughts.

Lucas faces lynching for unwittingly buying stolen horses.

Hoss and Little Joe spend the most unforgettable night at the carnival when Little Joe's date disappears.

Cheyenne is forced into a gunfight with the Laverson brothers, leaving one dead and one out for revenge.

Cheyenne hunts wild horses.

Today, the buffalo is the quintessential symbol of strength, freedom and the unspoiled American West. However, in the late 1800s, the nation's buffalo were nearly wiped out by ruthless hide hunters. Those majestic herds, which once numbered in the tens of millions, were down to less than 500 animals. This is the story of the handful of determined men and women who mobilized to save the ones that were left in a last-ditch effort to stave off extinction. Ranchers like Charles and Mary Ann Goodnight rescued orphaned buffalo calves and built small herds. Former buffalo hunters like Buffalo Bill helped build public sympathy. And politicians like Theodore Roosevelt helped pass laws to protect the remaining animals. The effort would be a generational one, with buffalo herds carefully tended, bred, and passed down to new stewards when their old protectors passed away. Thanks to their efforts, there are an estimated 500,000 buffalo thundering across America's grasslands once again.

After pulling a bank heist in Mexico, the outlaw Rio (Marlon Brando) and his partner, Dad Longworth (Karl Malden), make a run for it, but Dad has bigger plans than freedom. He betrays Rio and absconds with the loot, and Rio ends up in prison. Years pass before Rio finally breaks free to enact his long-plotted revenge. Tracking Dad to California, Rio learns he's become a sheriff -- which is no deterrent -- but when Rio falls for Dad's stepdaughter, Louisa (Pina Pellicer), he has second thoughts.