Buffalo Bill, Jr. Quotes
Judge Ben 'Fair and Square' Wiley: Wait'll I get my clothes on. I'll go out and catch that sidewinder!
Movie: Buffalo Bill, Jr.
Judge Ben 'Fair and Square' Wiley: Well, I guess there's nothing left to be judged, and it's my painful duty to find you guilty as charged
Calamity: But, Judge, you can't put him in prison!
Judge Ben 'Fair and Square' Wiley: And as Judge of this court, it's my duty to pronounce sentence. I sentence you to a hot bath... with plenty of soap and water - and a good home-cooked meal. And furthermore, you'll remain in the custody of me and Bill till we can find out where in tarnation you come from.
Calamity: But, Judge, you can't put him in prison!
Judge Ben 'Fair and Square' Wiley: And as Judge of this court, it's my duty to pronounce sentence. I sentence you to a hot bath... with plenty of soap and water - and a good home-cooked meal. And furthermore, you'll remain in the custody of me and Bill till we can find out where in tarnation you come from.
Movie: Buffalo Bill, Jr.
[first lines] [scene depicts Custer's Last Stand]
Judge Ben 'Fair and Square' Wiley: These men fought and died for the Seventh Cavalry. They were young men - their commander, George Armstrong Custer, was 22 when he graduated from West Point, 37 when he died under the flag at the Little Big Horn. The history of the West is filled with the names of heroic men - young men, some of 'em forgotten by the dusty pages of time. But there's one young fellow who's name won't never be forgotten - not be me, anyhow, because, in a way, I named him myself. I found him after Indians had attacked a wagon train. He was a mere child at the time; parents both killed in the massacre. I found him wandering through the Black Hills, a little baby safe in his arms wrapped in a buffalo robe. The baby was his sister. I adopted the homeless Bridger kids. I named the girl "Calamity" and the boy I called "Buffalo Bill, Jr."
Judge Ben 'Fair and Square' Wiley: These men fought and died for the Seventh Cavalry. They were young men - their commander, George Armstrong Custer, was 22 when he graduated from West Point, 37 when he died under the flag at the Little Big Horn. The history of the West is filled with the names of heroic men - young men, some of 'em forgotten by the dusty pages of time. But there's one young fellow who's name won't never be forgotten - not be me, anyhow, because, in a way, I named him myself. I found him after Indians had attacked a wagon train. He was a mere child at the time; parents both killed in the massacre. I found him wandering through the Black Hills, a little baby safe in his arms wrapped in a buffalo robe. The baby was his sister. I adopted the homeless Bridger kids. I named the girl "Calamity" and the boy I called "Buffalo Bill, Jr."
Movie: Buffalo Bill, Jr.