Hot Lead and Cold Feet

Hot Lead and Cold Feet is a comedy western film made by Walt Disney Productions for Buena Vista Distribution Company starring Jim Dale, Don Knotts, Karen Valentine, Darren McGavin, and Jack Elam released on July 5, 1978.

Plot
Jasper Bloodshy (Dale) runs the rough-and-tumble town of Bloodshy -- named after him because he founded it -- which lives in fear of Jasper's gunslinging son Wild Billy (also played by Dale). Jasper has just found out he has another son named Eli (again, played by Dale), who lives in Philadelphia.

It turns out that years ago, Jasper's crazy ways were too much for his bride from England, so she left -- leaving behind one twin -- and returned to England. With the help of his English butler Mansfield, he writes a new will that mentions Eli, then fakes his death by pretending to fall off a cliff in front of Bloodshy's corrupt mayor Ragsdale (McGavin) and sheriff The Denver Kid (Knotts), both of whom he has just told about his second son.

We next meet Eli, who turns out to be the opposite of Wild Billy. Eli has been trained to live for the Lord. He works as a Salvation Army missionary in Philadelphia with orphans named Roxanne (Debbie Lytton) and Marcus (Michael Sharrett).

One day, during a fight in which people are throwing vegetables at him and the children, Eli receives a telegram informing him about his father's death, a father he didn't know existed. He decides to accept the invitation to come to Bloodshy for his inheritance and take Marcus and Roxanne.

Their stagecoach is held up by the Snead brothers, a group of outlaws that Ragsdale has sent to run off Eli. Unfortunately, nobody was told that Jasper's other son was a twin, so they mistake Eli for Wild Billy (the first of many to mistake the two).

The Sneads return to Bloodshy, but did cause the stagecoach to run off, leaving Eli, Marcus, and Roxanne stranded. On their way to Bloodshy (by foot), they meet a woman named Jenny (Valentine) who is also headed for Bloodshy to start a school. They head for the town together.

Mansfield brings the will to Sheriff Denver to deliver to Ragsdale. From there, it's learned that a contest is involved in the inheritance. Ragsdale sends Denver to find Billy and tell him that the fortune is his.

The contest is a miles-long obstacle course known as the Bloody Bloodshy Trail that involves operating train engines, crossing a gorge using a rope, climbing a mountain, and driving a wagon.

Cast

 * Jim Dale as Eli / Wild Billy / Jasper Bloodshy
 * Karen Valentine as Jenny
 * Don Knotts as Denver Kid
 * Jack Elam as Rattlesnake
 * Darren McGavin as Mayor Ragsdale
 * John Williams as Mansfield
 * Warren Vanders as Boss Snead
 * Debbie Lytton as Roxanne
 * <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Michael Sharrett as Marcus
 * <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">David S. Cass Sr. as Jack (as Dave Cass)
 * <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Richard Wright as Pete
 * <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Don 'Red' Barry as Bartender
 * <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">James Van Patten as Jake (as Jimmy Van Patten)
 * <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Gregg Palmer as Jeff
 * <p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Ed Bakey as Joshua

Production Credits

 * Directed by Robert Butler
 * Produced by Ron W. Miller
 * Written by Joseph L. McEveety, Arthur Alsberg
 * screenplay by Don Nelson, Rod Piffath
 * Music by Buddy Baker
 * Cinematography by Frank V. Phillips
 * Editing by Ray de Leuw
 * Release date July 5, 1978
 * Running time 90 minutes

Production
<p style="margin-bottom: 0in">The film's theatrical accompaniment was a reissue of the 1949 Disney short The Wind in the Willows (from The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad) re-titled The Madcap Adventures of Mr. Toad.

<p style="margin-bottom: 0in">Eli Bloodshy's Iron Donkey, number 11, can be found in the queue for Big Thunder Railroad at Disneyland in California. A second train is also located on the trail from Big Thunder Ranch to Fantasyland.