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brimfin (26)


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Jonathan Tucker My proposed end to the episode "Gordon Kemp" Reimagining "On Thursday We Leave for Home" Part 2 Reimagining "On Thursday We Leave for Home" Am I the only one who was annoyed that...(SPOILERS)? View all posts >


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My wife and I saw her in Donnie Brasco and Six Days, Seven Nights, both of which we thought were good. I later saw Return to Paradise on a pay channel. She was good, but I hated the ending of the film. Thank you for all your suggestions. I've finally concluded that he reminded me of David Lyons, who starred in THE CAPE and GAME OF SILENCE. I'm' sure some people do. But not Rush. He led an exemplary life and I'm sure he doesn't regret it. That's a shame. I enjoyed his character of Ralph Dibney, and thought he did a great job playing him. His name reminds me of the phrase "heartily sorry" from our Catholic Act of Contrition, and that's the way he sounded in his apology. I'm not in favor of punishing people for things they said years ago. I believe in forgiving people who are genuinely sorry. Oddly enough, I was writing a gag post about Greg Berlanti doing a new show based on PEANUTS, complete of course with diversity, and various social justice agendas. To make it sound authentic, I listed genuine actors to play the parts and I used Hartley Sawyer to play the grown-up Charlie Brown. I agree that he would make a good Darrin in a BEWITCHED remake. The first episode "In His Image" was the best. A good mystery that built nicely. Wonderfully acted. And a story that really needed an hour to do it justice. In "Attack of the Barbarians" (ep26), Tony has a brief romance. And if you look carefully in the first episode and in "The Kidnappers", (ep28) you'll see subtle hints that Doug and Ann were in love. But overall, it's true there was not much time for romance on the show. Those two are probably his best. I also liked The Reluctant Astronaut. Jughead is not his real name. In an early second season episode when he was registering at the South Side school, a girl referred to him as Forsythe Pendleton III. His father's name is Forsythe Pendleton Jr., but everyone calls him FP for short. That name was used in the flashback episode about the Midnight Club. For me, it's "The Masks." That old man seems deranged and his heirs never seem anywhere near as evil as he claims they are. Yes, I know they are all happy when he dies, but - frankly, who could blame them? So such a cruel fate as turning their faces grotesque permanently seems undeserved. Any why does nothing happen to the old man's face? It might seem more fair if his face became hideous but it just didn't matter because he was dead. That excuse by the doctor that he has the face of death is quite feeble. Also, I've always liked Virginia Gregg and Milton Selzer so seeing them come to bad ends makes the episode even worse for me. View all replies >