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10/10
Wonderful (so cute the pretension, y'all)!!
19 September 2016
This hidden gem makes a lot of modern "comedies" look like the wastes of time they are. This is social commentary farce at its best. A "street smart" teen girl who is in trouble with a criminal "boyfriend" getting her fanny pulled out of the fryer by a more than able but branded "senile" (even by his own daughter) older man. This film is a perfect look at where we are now and how younger generations need to sometimes stop and be silent before they cause more trouble. At 42, I can say that because I can see precisely where Kate went wrong and where Bill did everything right. LOL

Now in all seriousness, this is a brilliant work, with an icon of the previous generation working with someone who would later become an icon of the next, in a light and breezy but very likable and coherent plot of a comedy. Two people with absurd individuals around them finding common ground, but his was supposed to be a bomb?? This film was made for an audience that had not matured yet, and now it is being seen by many as the classic it is.
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Boston Legal (2004–2008)
10/10
Getting letters..
19 March 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is one of the most intense series ever made. David Kelly, in 101 episodes, thoroughly thrashed everything from the Two Party system to city district pandering, from "public decency" D.A.s to sexual surrogacy, and from Asperger syndrome to Alzheimer's. He also, along the way, thoroughly destroyed the hypocrisies of the exaggerated extents that feminists will go to to preserve how rape, Roe v. Wade, and sexual harassment are defined (yet shielding themselves to allow for the very same behaviors..) and to how men will do the same as far as religion, guns, and relationship territorial boundaries go.

In short, in five seasons, David Kelly does more to show why the last seven nearly destroyed the Constitution and only people who really think (like him as in think for themselves, not think exactly like him..)can and will save it. It transcended the "legal dramedy" it was, and reached beyond the scope of many shows before, during, and since its run.
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Disturbingly Closer than the "serious" movie.
17 May 2013
Warning: Spoilers
While Wanda Holloway was delusional, she was by far the most pitiable person in the entire situation, and this movie presents that. The ABC movie falsely portrayed her as a savvy sociopath, when in truth the woman was really disturbed and bumbling like a combination of Barbra Jean from Reba and Lola Granola from Bloom County brought to life.

The TRULY most chilling part was near or right before the credits, with the other mother, Verna Heath, forcing her daughter Amber (both the intended victims...) to redo a cheer after a football game over and over.. the football field lights going out but "Mom" still forcing her to do it over and over again....
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I Can Make You Love Me (1993 TV Movie)
10/10
A Real True Story True Story....
18 July 2012
Warning: Spoilers
****WARNING- THIS REVIEW CONTAINS POTENTIAL SPOILERS**** I remember hearing about the real story on the news my first year of high school, especially how people followed the story afterward on and off till the final phase of the trial. Having said that, anyone giving this movie an over critical review really needs to take a look within themselves.

While Brooke Shields and Richard Thomas are the stars of this tele-film, the support of the ensemble cast that gives it an even stronger foundation. While liberties were taken with more minor things in comparison to the main thrust of the saga, a number of them were psychologically geared to cover ground on the way far too many viewers took the ridiculously naive positions that either Laura Black led Richard Farley on or that she was "misunderstanding the situation.

Even dismissing those things, as well as the comparison of "John Boy" in the role of a disturbed man who was in real life "built like a bear", the heart of the movie is about how a delusional personality can go that intensely spiraling out of control. A man who went from being self-disciplined enough to spend an entire decade in the military to the first ever stalking-connected workplace massacre all because he believed people "thought he was weak" or "a joke" doesn't make anyone feel sorry for Richard Wade Farley, and it shouldn't because it can't. That he "never had a criminal record" nor "committed a single act of violence before" (that is according to his defense at the time...)casts him in an even more despicable light as it spotlights more what he always was: an abusive bully who mastered the mask he wore all of those years looking for the right target.

Laura was portrayed as having said "What did I do?" when she was loaded in the ambulance. The film, and how it ends, gives that answer: Laura Black didn't do anything, except be the perfect target for a disturbed sociopath who, even if she HAD agreed to the "one date", would NEVER have let her go. The frightening part is that the way it really turned out made the body count a hell of a lot smaller than it would have been if she HADN'T been that strong to fight him.
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