The title character is a wild horse who is tamed by young Molly, the daughter of rancher Don Megowan (no relation).
Villains try to capture Snowfire for their own nefarious purposes, but Molly manages to outwit the bad guys. Filmed on location at Bryce Canyon, Utah, Snowfire was later re-edited into a 60-minute TV pilot.
Snowfire (1958)
Cast: Dorrell McGowan, Melody McGowan
Thursday, February 19, 2009
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Murder Ordained (1987) TV Movie
Matter of Justice, A (1993) TV Movie
A Matter of Justice (1993) TV Movie
Cast: Alexandra Powers, Charles S. Dutton, Cole Hauser, Kyla Pratt, Martin Sheen, Patty Duke
Man Who Lived at the Ritz, The (1988) TV Movie
An American art student is trapped while visiting wartime Paris.
Staying at the fabulous Ritz hotel he chooses to ignore the turmoil and continue living the high-life for as long as possible. Great movie.
The Man Who Lived at the Ritz (1988) TV Movie
Cast: David McCallum, Joss Ackland, Leslie Caron, Maryam d'Abo, Perry King
Staying at the fabulous Ritz hotel he chooses to ignore the turmoil and continue living the high-life for as long as possible. Great movie.
The Man Who Lived at the Ritz (1988) TV Movie
Cast: David McCallum, Joss Ackland, Leslie Caron, Maryam d'Abo, Perry King
Key to Rebecca, The (1985) TV Movie
The Key to Rebecca (1985) TV Movie
Cast: Cliff Robertson, David Soul, Lina Raymond, Robert Culp, Season Hubley
Jack the Ripper (1988) TV Movie
Based on the real life event, this film claims to have had access to top secret Home Office files and believe that their ending is the correct solution to the age old mystery. Interesting take on a true story.
Jack the Ripper (1988) TV Movie
Jack the Ripper (1988) TV Movie
Cast: Armand Assante, Jane Seymour, Michael Caine, Susan George
Internal Affairs (1988) TV Movie
Internal Affairs (1988) TV Movie
Cast: Dennis Boutsikaris, Kate Capshaw, Richard Crenna
Guts and Glory: The Rise and Fall of Oliver North (1989) TV Movie
Guts and Glory: The Rise and Fall of Oliver North (1989) TV Movie
Cast: Annette O'Toole, Barnard Hughes, David Keith, Miguel Ferrer, Paul Dooley, Peter Boyle, Terry O'Quinn
Great Escape II, The: The Untold Story (1988) TV Movie
Allied prisoners tunnel out of a stalag, then return to avenge fellow escapees executed by the Nazis.
The Great Escape II: The Untold Story (1988) TV Movie
The Great Escape II: The Untold Story (1988) TV Movie
Cast: Andrew Bicknell, Anthony John Denison, Charles Haid, Christopher Reeve, Derek de Lint, Donald Pleasence, Ian McShane, Judd Hirsch, Michael Nader
Grass Roots (1992) TV Movie
Grass Roots (1992) TV Movie
Cast: Claude Akins, Corbin Bernsen, Henry Jones, Herb Edelman, Joanna Cassidy, Katherine Helmond, Mel Harris, Raymond Burr, Reginald VelJohnson
Glory! Glory! (1989) TV Movie
Two-part miniseries set in the world of TV evangelism, about a down-and-out rock singer who is hired by a church to improve ratings and donations. Sister Ruth is an immediate hit, and the Church of the Companions of Christ has never been so successful, but an investigative reporter challenges Ruth to the scrutiny of TV cameras. Church officials become worried that Sister Ruth's colorful past will be exposed.
Glory! Glory! (1989) TV Movie
Cast: Ellen Greene, James Whitmore, Richard Thomas
Glory! Glory! (1989) TV Movie
Cast: Ellen Greene, James Whitmore, Richard Thomas
Fifth Missile, The (1986) TV Movie
The Fifth Missile (1986) TV Movie
Cast: David Soul, Richard Roundtree, Robert Conrad, Sam Waterston, Yvette Mimieux
Fatal Vision (1984) TV Movie
Fatal Vision (1984) TV Movie
Cast: Andy Griffith, Barry Newman, Eva Marie Saint, Gary Cole, Karl Malden, Mitch Ryan, Wendy Schaal
Emma: Queen of the South Seas (1988) TV Movie
Cast: Barbara Carrera, E.G. Marshall, Hal Holbrook
Dress Gray (1986) TV Movie
Dress Gray (1986) TV Movie
Cast: Alec Baldwin, Hal Holbrook, Lane Smith, Lloyd Bridges
Doubletake (1985) TV Movie
Doubletake (1985) TV Movie
Cast: Beverly D'Angelo, Richard Crenna, Vincent Baggetta
Deliberate Stranger, The (1986) TV Movie
The Deliberate Stranger (1986) TV Movie
Cast: Frederic Forrest, Glynnis O'Connor, M. Emmet Walsh, Mark Harmon
Day the Bubble Burst, The (1982) TV Movie
A fictionalized account of how the 1929 stock market crash hurt the elite and the struggling, and the forces that may have caused the crash.
The Day the Bubble Burst (1982) TV Movie
Cast: Audra Lindley, Bill Macy, Dana Elcar, David Ogden Stiers, Donna Pescow, Franklin Cover, Laurette Spang, Richard Crenna, Robert Hays, Robert Vaughn, Rue McClanahan
The Day the Bubble Burst (1982) TV Movie
Cast: Audra Lindley, Bill Macy, Dana Elcar, David Ogden Stiers, Donna Pescow, Franklin Cover, Laurette Spang, Richard Crenna, Robert Hays, Robert Vaughn, Rue McClanahan
Brotherhood of the Rose (1989) TV Movie
Based on a novel by David Morrell and filmed entirely in New Zealand, this terrific film is unabashedly old-fashioned escapist espionage fare. Peter Strauss and David Morse play polar-opposite CIA agents, code names Romulus and Remus. Their superior-and father figure-is crusty CIA official Robert Mitchum. Though Romulus and Remus are devoted to Mitchum, he is only concerned with the greater good of the service-a philosophy that has become despotic over the years. Now Mitchum has determined that Romulus is expendable. Escaping from CIA assassins, Romulus and Remus stumble into a vast rule-the-world conspiracy called The Brotherhood of the Rose. Also starring Connie Sellecca, James B. Sikking, M. Emmet Walsh, and Veronica Hamel.
Brotherhood of the Rose (1989) TV Movie
Cast: Peter Strauss, Robert Mitchum, Connie Sellecca, David Morse, James Sikking, M. Emmet Walsh, James Hong
Dadah Is Death (1988) TV Movie
On 9/12/83 two Australians were arrested at Penang Airport in Malaysia carrying 179 grams of heroin.
Great TV movie, immersive Fred Karlin score.
Dadah Is Death (1988) TV Movie
Cast: Fred Karlin, Hugo Weaving, John Polson, Julie Christie, Kerry Armstrong, Robin Ramsay, Sarah Jessica Parker, Shapoor Batliwalla, Victor Banerjee
Great TV movie, immersive Fred Karlin score.
Dadah Is Death (1988) TV Movie
Cast: Fred Karlin, Hugo Weaving, John Polson, Julie Christie, Kerry Armstrong, Robin Ramsay, Sarah Jessica Parker, Shapoor Batliwalla, Victor Banerjee
Bluegrass (1988) TV Movie
Bluegrass (1988) TV Movie
Cast: Anthony Andrews, Brian Kerwin, Cheryl Ladd, Diane Ladd, Judith-Marie Bergan, Kieran Mulroney, Mickey Rooney, Shawnee Smith, Wayne Rogers
Body of Evidence (1988) TV Movie
Body of Evidence (1988) TV Movie
Cast: Barry Bostwick, Margot Kidder
Blood Vows: The Story of a Mafia Wife (1987) TV Movie
Blood Vows: The Story of a Mafia Wife (1987) TV Movie
Cast: Joe Penny, Melissa Gilbert
Blue Yonder, The (1985) TV Movie
Disney-esque charmer about a modern day youngster, obsessed with aviation as his daredevil grandfather had been, and determined to go back in time with the old-timer next door, ex-partner of the boy's granddad, to stop the long ago flyers' daring attempt to be the first across the Atlantic during the roaring '20s - a flight that cost him his life. Peter Coyote as the flyer, Art Carney as the aged, tale-spinning neighbor, and Huckleberry Fox as the boy who travels to 1927 in a time machine gave writer/director Mark Rosman's story, commissioned by The Disney Channel, the aura Uncle Walt would have loved. "The Blue Yonder" was retitled "Time Flyer" when it made its network debut on "The Disney Sunday Movie" in February 1986.
The Blue Yonder (1985) TV Movie
Cast: Art Carney, Huckleberry Fox, Peter Coyote
The Blue Yonder (1985) TV Movie
Cast: Art Carney, Huckleberry Fox, Peter Coyote
Blood & Orchids (1986) TV Movie
Blood & Orchids (1986) TV Movie
Cast: Kris Kristofferson, Madeleine Stowe, Sean Young
Blacklist: Hollywood on Trial (1996) (TV)
Documentary detailing the events surrounding the hearings held by the House Un-American Activities Committee in the 1940s and 1950s to investigate alleged Communist infiltration in Hollywood. Uses interviews, archival footage and clips from Hollywood films.
Blacklist: Hollywood on Trial (1996) (TV)
Host: Alec Baldwin
Birth of the Beatles (1979)
Supposedly the Beatles tried to stop this film but it's not that bad considering they were casting for lookalikes rather than acting ability. Filmed in Liverpool, it follows the birth of the Beatles from their beginnings in Liverpool then to Hamburg and finally to America. A large focus of the film is on the days in Hamburg and Stu Sutcliffe. Pete Best was a technical consultant and the music is by the noted tribute band, "Rain". This is the only Beatle biopic made while John Lennon was alive.
Birth of the Beatles (1979)
Birth of the Beatles (1979)
Cast: Stephen MacKenna, Rod Culbertson, Ray Ashcroft, Ryan Michael, David Wilkinson, John Neville, Brian Jameson
Bigfoot (1987) TV Movie
A family goes to the mountains for a few days, and there they meet... Bigfoot!
Two young campers are confronted by a tribe of eight-foot ape-like creatures which have been the subject of many legends. After their first shock they discover that a ruthless hunter is determined to capture and exploit them. The kids enlist the aid of an anthropologist to save the creatures from harm.
Fun movie for kids but starring two Hollywood heavyweights for the adult viewers.
Two young campers are confronted by a tribe of eight-foot ape-like creatures which have been the subject of many legends. After their first shock they discover that a ruthless hunter is determined to capture and exploit them. The kids enlist the aid of an anthropologist to save the creatures from harm.
Fun movie for kids but starring two Hollywood heavyweights for the adult viewers.
Bigfoot (1987) TV Movie
Cast: Colleen Dewhurst, Timothy Brown, Lucy Butler, Candace Cameron Bure, Jerry Chambers, Dianne Wiest
Between Two Women (1986) TV Movie
Between Two Women (1986) TV Movie
Cast: Colleen Dewhurst, Farrah Fawcett, Michael Nouri
Betty Ford Story, The (1987) TV Movie
'THE BETTY FORD STORY,' ON ABC
By JOHN J. O'CONNOR
Published: March 2, 1987
''The Betty Ford Story,'' on ABC tonight at 9, is one of those sui-generis television presentations that command attention more for their subject matter than their artistic merit. As a portrait of alcohol and prescription-drug addiction, the film is carefully subdued and, despite its messy subject, insistently tasteful. But as a glimpse into the private life of a former and very much admired First Lady of the United States, ''The Betty Ford Story'' is genuinely compelling and an unusual profile in courage. Holding it together, powerfully yet sensitively, is the performance of Gena Rowlands in the title role.
Based on Mrs. Ford's 1978 autobiography and on subsequent interviews with the Ford family, Karen Hall's script limits the television scenario to the last chapter of the book. The film opens in 1978 as Mrs. Ford enters the alcoholic rehabilitation center of a naval medical center in California. Shaken and wary, she still insists that she does not have a drinking problem. The scene returns to 1974, a time when Betty Ford was urging Vice President Gerald Ford (Josef Sommer) to retire from politics, only to be frustrated by the unfolding Watergate scandal. After Richard Nixon's resignation, Gerald Ford would be President and his family would be pushed further into the public glare. During the next four years, Mrs. Ford, already taking ''so many pills for so many aches,'' would sink gradually into serious addiction.
Along with Robert Papazian, David L. Wolper (''Roots'') is an executive producer. His son, Mark Wolper, is the producer. And the distinguished television veteran David Greene (''Friendly Fire,'' ''Fatal Vision'') is the director.
Care has clearly been taken. The underlying candor is modulated with an understandable respect for the woman concerned. Passing references are made to her earlier years, especially to her dancing ambitions. She obviously is a wife who has trouble adapting to the fact that, because of his career, her husband is required to devote enormous time away from home. When Mr. Ford decides to run for the Presidency in 1976, his wife complains: ''What am I going to do? Ask you not to run? You wouldn't bow out and you know it.''
In addition to suffering from arthritis, Mrs. Ford discovers she has breast cancer and has to undergo a mastectomy. Later, she will have to cope with two assassination attempts on her husband. Worn out by the demands of campaigning in yet another election, she finally begins retreating more into her own silent, alcohol-supported world. Her family is stunned to find merely human the woman they had always taken for granted as the gracious and unshakeable center of their world. Accepting that something has gone terribly wrong, they gather as a group and, with professional help in what is called an intervention process, bluntly insist that she seek help.
There are no ''Lost Weekend'' horrors in this depiction of an alcoholic. Mrs. Ford becomes noticeably haggard-looking and grows testy about criticism. We see her momentarily being clumsy or nodding off discreetly at public functions. But the more embarrassing incidents take place off camera. Her children talk of finding her passed out, or of her chipping a tooth in a fall. There is no doubt, however, about the seriousness of her problem, and when Mr. Ford does face the fact, the scene is tremendously moving as Ms. Rowlands, back to the camera, simply breaks into piercingly painful sobbing.
At the end of the film, Betty Ford appears herself, delivering a ''message of hope'' to those who may have similar problems and advising them to call Alcoholics Anonymous or the National Council on Alcoholism. Mrs. Ford, Gerald Ford and their family deserve unstinting respect for their courage, decency and exemplary concern for others.
The Betty Ford Story (1987) TV Movie
Cast: Gena Rowlands, Josef Sommer, Nan Woods, Concetta Tomei, Jack Radar, Joan McMurtrey, Kenneth Tigar, Laura Leigh Hughes, Daniel McDonald, Brian McNamara, Bradley Whitford, Michael Greene, Stanley Grover
Cast: Gena Rowlands, Josef Sommer, Nan Woods, Concetta Tomei, Jack Radar, Joan McMurtrey, Kenneth Tigar, Laura Leigh Hughes, Daniel McDonald, Brian McNamara, Bradley Whitford, Michael Greene, Stanley Grover
Beryl Markham: A Shadow on the Sun (1988) TV Movie
The singular life of Beryl Markham - renowned aviatrix, author and adventurer - is depicted.
Raised by her father in colonial East Africa, Beryl hunted with the Maasai, bred thoroughbred horses, romanced Denys Finch-Hatton and defied constraining social rules. Based upon her own memoir 'West With the Night'.
Beryl Markham: A Shadow on the Sun (1988) TV Movie
Raised by her father in colonial East Africa, Beryl hunted with the Maasai, bred thoroughbred horses, romanced Denys Finch-Hatton and defied constraining social rules. Based upon her own memoir 'West With the Night'.
Beryl Markham: A Shadow on the Sun (1988) TV Movie
Cast: Brian Cox, Claire Bloom, Frederic Forrest, Jack Thompson, James Fox, John Rubinstein, Joseph Mydell, Nicola Pagett, Peter Bowles, Rupert Frazer, Stefanie Powers
Battles: The Murder That Wouldn't Die (1980) TV Movie
Battles: The Murder That Wouldn't Die (1980) TV Movie
Cast: William Conrad
Monday, February 16, 2009
Banyon (1971) TV Movie
Banyon (1971) TV Movie
Cast: Anjanette Comer, Darren McGavin, Herb Edelman, Hermione Gingold, José Ferrer, Robert Forster
Baby M (1988) TV Movie
Mary Beth Whitehead, the genetic mother, was artificially inseminated with William Stern's sperm, becoming surrogate mother of the child. Despite what was stated in the surrogacy contract, Mr. Stern's wife, Elizabeth, was not infertile, but rather she had multiple sclerosis and was concerned about potential health implications of carrying a child.
Mary Beth Whitehead later wrote a book about her experience. Additionally, an Emmy-award winning 1988 television movie about the case was featured, starring Jobeth Williams as Whitehead.
Baby M (1988) TV Movie
Cast: Bruce Weitz, Dabney Coleman, JoBeth Williams, John Shea, Robin Strasser
Baby M (1988) TV Movie
Cast: Bruce Weitz, Dabney Coleman, JoBeth Williams, John Shea, Robin Strasser
Ann Jillian Story, The (1988) TV Movie
Published: Monday, January 4, 1988
ANN JILLIAN has kept a tight rein on "The Ann Jillian Story," the television movie on NBC at 9 this evening. A year or more of skirmishing took place before Ms. Jillian settled on a teleplay by Audrey Davis Levin. Corey Allen is the director. And Ms. Jillian plays herself. The result is admirable in some ways, puzzling in others.
The film focuses on two key events in Ms. Jillian's life: her marriage to Andy Murcia, a Chicago policeman who eventually became her manager; and her battle with breast cancer, for which she had a double mastectomy in 1985. Ms. Jillian is obviously a determined woman. Since her widely publicized operation, she has returned to performing and is active in various cancer prevention programs.
The puzzling part of "The Ann Jillian Story" has to do with the performer's career. We see her in the first scenes as a kind of show-business gypsy, traveling wherever a song-and-dance gig can be found. But she is not, apparently, your ordinary chorine. She stays in luxury hotels, even when she is down to her last couple of dollars and eating nothing but pizza. When she finally sings for Sergeant Murcia, played by Tony Lo Bianco in what looks like an homage to Tony Danza, Ms. Jillian appears to be a kind of nightclub chanteuse, in the manner of Hildegard or Edith Piaf.
Later, she gets her big break in both the road and Broadway productions of 1979's "Sugar Babies," starring Mickey Rooney and Ann Miller, who aren't even mentioned here. The show was, of course, an exuberant tribute to the irrepressible vulgarity of vaudeville and Ms. Jillian's success stemmed as much from her statuesque figure as from her ability to sing and dance. Not long after, however, she would quite capably play the lead in television's "Mae West Story." But that movie, another celebration of pop vulgarity, isn't mentioned here either. Instead, we get, at appropriate intervals, Ms. Jillian as elegant singing star. The casual viewer is likely to come away with the impression that she was the 1980's answer to Barbra Streisand.
Otherwise, "The Ann Jillian Story" fits neatly into the special television genre specializing in uplift and inspiration. The courtship of Ann and Andy is sometimes a bit stormy but always cute. They scream a lot but are clearly meant for each other. And she has other supports, most notably her Roman Catholic religion and her Lithuanian family. Her mother is especially protective, warning Andy that he had better be good to her baby. Giving the film an extra fillip, Mom is played by Viveca Lindfors, who makes sure she steals every scene in her immediate vicinity.
The subject of breast cancer is treated with admirable candor, from the initial discovery of suspicious lumps to the painful postoperative adjustments. Warmly, even ferociously supported by husband and family, Ms. Jillian survives the ordeal admirably. But there is another element in her recovery - her driving ambition. Fearing the loss of a job, she tells her doctors that she must get back to work 11 days after the cancer operation. She tells her television bosses, "Don't let me go to surgery without knowing that I have work to come back to." A good deal of the same determination can be sensed in the way she has shaped this film. In any event, she looks healthy and glamorous and turns in a remarkably gritty performance.
A version of this review appeared in print on Monday, January 4, 1988, on section C page 18 of the New York edition.
The Ann Jillian Story (1988) TV Movie
Cast: Ann Jillian, Tony Lo Bianco, Viveca Lindfors
Angel in My Pocket (1969)
A homespun minister (Andy Griffith) and his family move to a small town where he tries to win the support and trust of his new congregation. A wonderful family movie.
This is a Family Film Festival production and the very special in-studio guest is 1955 Miss America, Lee Meriwether.
This is a Family Film Festival production and the very special in-studio guest is 1955 Miss America, Lee Meriwether.
Angel in My Pocket (1969)
Cast: Andy Griffith, Jerry Van Dyke, Kay Medford, Lee Meriwether, Henry Jones, Edgar Buchanan, Gary Collins, Jack Dodson, Margaret Hamilton, Bob Hastings
Ambush Murders, The (1982) TV Movie
Alfie Darling (1975)
Alfie returns, up to his old womanizing ways, until he meets his match in sophisticated magazine editor Abby. His pursuit is complicated by his encounter with Norma and the fact that a jealous husband won't let him forget about his time with his wife Fay. Great follow up to the original and superstar Rula Lenska is just fabulous!
Alfie Darling (1975)
Cast: Alan Price, Jill Townsend, Joan Collins, Minah Bird, Paul Copley, Rula Lenska
Aaron's Way: The Harvest (1988) TV Movie
Aaron's Way: The Harvest (1988) TV Movie
Cast: Belinda Montgomery, Jessica Walter, Kathleen York, Merlin Olsen, Samantha Mathis
Merlin Olsen died a couple days ago. He was openly acknowledged as a great man and an avid humanitarian. No one didn't like Merlin Olsen. To me he was even more, he was a personal hero. The Los Angeles Rams were my childhood favorite football team. From 1970 forward until their departure in 1993, I was a "Number 1" fan. I no longer follow the NFL, and the Rams of old are a distant memory. But I will always be a "Number 1" fan of the great Merlin Olsen. RIP.
Year in the Life, A (1986) TV Mini-series
This show, "A Year in the Life" was a 1986 miniseries and a one hour dramatic series which ran on NBC during the 1987-1988 television season.
The series began as a three-part miniseries which was first broadcast in December 1986. As suggested by the title, the miniseries followed the various members of the Gardner family of Seattle during the course of one year. The major event of that year was the sudden and unexpected death of wife and mother Ruth Gardner (Eva Marie Saint). Great stuff, very engrossing with early look at some stars of today.
A Year in the Life (1986) TV Mini-series
Cast: Adam Arkin, Amanda Peterson, David Oliver, Diana Muldaur, Dirk Blocker, Eva Marie Saint, Jayne Atkinson, Richard Kiley, Sarah Jessica Parker, Scott Paulin, Trey Ames
Cry for Help, A: The Tracey Thurman Story (1989) TV Movie
Tracey Thurman was a real-life Connecticut housewife who, throughout her marriage, suffered horrendous abuse at the hands of her husband. The beatings culminate in a single bloody night when Buck Thurman stabs his estranged wife 13 times. She survives--barely--and Buck is arrested. Having failed to get proper protection from the local police force, Tracey successfully sued the officers in 1989. The long-range result was the Thurman Law, which called for mandatory arrests in wife-beating cases in Connecticut and several other states. Nancy McKeon, who plays Tracey Thurman in A Cry for Help, starred in the film in the hope that it would prevent Buck Thurman's early release from prison. A Cry For Help: The Tracy Thurman Story first aired on October 2, 1989; Thurman was scheduled for release in 1991. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
A Cry for Help: The Tracey Thurman Story (1989) TV Movie
Cast: Bruce Weitz, Burton Collins, Dale Midkiff, David Ciminello, David Wohl, Graham Jarvis, Nancy McKeon, Philip Baker Hall, Priscilla Pointer, Seth Isler