Parts that got to you


Just watched the episode where Maurice has his childhood home brought to town.
He breaks out his old stuff and starts to relive his childhood.
Starts to recall stealing his brothers toys, he feels terrible about it.
Thought it was really touching him talking to the ghost of his kid brother.

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I like the scene at the very end of the episode where the Flying Man has a crush on Marylin and is leaving on the bus. Sad music plays and Chris reads the Robert Burns poem, "Red, Red Rose." It ends, "I will come again my love, though it were ten thousand mile."

It makes me feel a sweet heartache for unrequited crushes I have had, and a sadness for how time and distance separates all humans eventually. How sometimes relationships or friendships you have longed for in life just can't happen as you'd hoped; that sorrow.


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"If you put your mind to it, you can accomplish anything." -George McFly

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Sad, melancholy, sweet heartache, unrequited wishes, isolation, good work and good personal qualities that go unnoticed - that has a strong appeal for many people. It's often in a unique collection of experiences for each of us. But a common feeling for uncommon events. Makes for good writing or acting. It's the flip side of fun and excitement, which was what most people seemed to prefer as priority. The rarer a thing is, often the more it is valued. But nowadays, fun and excitement is almost a dime a dozen. Shoot-em-up games of almost any conceivable types. Same for love novels. I like natural adventure myself. But at my age, the woods and wilderness will not long be an option. Then I can become a real wilderness wannabee, and buy the full NX DVD set to watch.

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Parts that got to you - k-man-3

Yeesh! There are so many.

Top one for me has got to be Joel and Maggie's goodbye in "The Quest." "Everything I never said." Got goosebumps just typing that. The capper is Marilyn's gaze upwards, then, simply, "Goodbye."

Ed and Joel's goodbye at the end of "Up River" is another powerful moment. I think Darren Burrows was caught in the moment too--his gasp/exclamation after they've hugged is either his best acting or a genuine emotional moment for him.

Speaking of Ed, his confrontation/reconciliation with Maurice at the end of "Balls" is moving to me. And speaking of Maurice, after he has his "coronary event" in "The Mystery of the Old Curio Shop," he does his high-dive next to the waterfall at the end of the episode; the martial music helps that one along.

And the one that first got me hooked on the show was at the end of "A-Hunting We Will Go," when Ed and Ruth-Anne dance on Ruth-Anne's grave to that wonderful music on the soundtrack.

So many great moments that touch the heart and spirit--and I'm NOT a New Agey, touchy-feely kind of guy. No wonder this is still my favorite TV show . . .


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"Death is an old joke but it's new to everyone." - Ivan Turgenev

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When the old lady kept telling everyone she was going to die, and Joel kept insisting that there was nothing wrong with her and she was going to live- when she did die, it was the first time Joel seemed human to me.

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When the old lady kept telling everyone she was going to die, and Joel kept insisting that there was nothing wrong with her and she was going to live- when she did die, it was the first time Joel seemed human to me. - Ditto-head

Nedra Larkin in "First Snow." Very powerful episode; the thread involving Maurice and Shelly is almost as strong as Joel's lesson.

Ruth-Anne's comments to Joel after Joel learns that Nedra has died are what are most moving to me. She tells him that he's "just a doctor"--not in a dismissive way, but in a way that tells him that he's just a part of something larger and more profound--and then Ruth-Anne says that Nedra "died well," which is a concept that is hard to fathom in the West.

Meanwhile, Maurice has some reckoning of his own with respect to his relationship with Shelly, and Shelly knows it too. There scenes here may be their best in the series.

Great choice, Ditto-head.
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"Death is an old joke but it's new to everyone." - Ivan Turgenev

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I think he meant eds goodbye with joel in up river not the quest. He hugs him before leaving the viliage. Kind of proud of joel and kind of sad he will not come with him. The one with lady that wants to die really stays with you.

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Oh, so many - in one of Christmas episodes when Maurice meets his son for the first time - the Christmas pageant was so meaningful, and when Holling sang Ave Maria to Shelley in the church; an episode already mentioned where Ed buys the unorthodox present for Ruth-Anne; Chris struggling with his yearly art exhibit (light), the episode where Maurice hosts the dinner party that Joel thinks he's not invited to - I don't know why but I love the atmosphere of the episode.

Oh! One of my favourites: when Joel's Uncle Manny dies and everyone looks for other Jewish people to say the "kadish" (wrong spelling, I'm sure). The final moments of the episode when Joel speaks to the town and everyone worships in their own manner - it gives me tears in my eyes to think that this is a reflection of my own hope for the world - that people would be free to worship (or not) in their own vein, as long as we love, support and accept one another.

I think I'll be pulling out the DVDs this weekend. :)

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Be excellent to each other!

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Oh! One of my favourites: when Joel's Uncle Manny dies and everyone looks for other Jewish people to say the "kadish" (wrong spelling, I'm sure). The final moments of the episode when Joel speaks to the town and everyone worships in their own manner - it gives me tears in my eyes to think that this is a reflection of my own hope for the world - that people would be free to worship (or not) in their own vein, as long as we love, support and accept one another. - Ikillthreads

Great choice--"Kaddish for Uncle Manny" is quite moving. It also shows how the town rallies around Joel in his time of need--Maurice especially spearheading the effort to find ten Jews to sit shiva with Joel.

The lesson that Joel realizes, of course, is that it's not the religious persuasion that is important as much as the sense of community surrounding him while in mourning. The final scene in the church is deeply touching, and it further assimilates Joel into Cicely.

That doesn't mean that there cannot be a few jokes along the way, from Joel scoffing that no Jew is going to be named "Buck" to (one of my NX favorites) his dream sequence when he's told by the Western "shiva posse" that, "We're packin' strudel, son--but it won't keep."

Spoiler: One of the deleted scenes on the Season Four DVDs is from the final scene in "Kaddish for Uncle Manny." It has Chris and Bernard interrupting Joel's ceremony to correct him on a point of order, and not only does it undermine Joel, but it has a flippancy about it. I'm glad that it didn't make it into the final cut because it really undercuts the poignancy of that last scene. Chris and Bernard spontaneously standing up in silent respect is a much more powerful moment without any embellishment.

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"Where there's smoke, there's work." "Shoes for industry!" - Firesign Theatre

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Bump

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So many great moments already mentioned here, with this one in particular:

Oh! One of my favourites: when Joel's Uncle Manny dies and everyone looks for other Jewish people to say the "kadish" (wrong spelling, I'm sure). The final moments of the episode when Joel speaks to the town and everyone worships in their own manner - it gives me tears in my eyes to think that this is a reflection of my own hope for the world - that people would be free to worship (or not) in their own vein, as long as we love, support and accept one another.

I'd also add the episode in which an old tree needs to be cut down. When some of the townsfolk (Chris and Ed?) visit the remaining trunk, "Turn! Turn! Turn" by The Byrds is heard and the episode ends. Such a powerful scene!

Do you have any tobacco?

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The one where Ed starts to cry and Maurice holds him. 2 reasons, Ed loses his happy go lucky facade for once and Maurice shows he has compassion. Wow!

Spenser with an "S", like the poet.

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