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7/10
Good portrayal of music business. Bad portrayal of hero
23 July 2014
This film is a fairly realistic portrayal of the life country stars face--whether you're the aging star trying to come back after crumbling under pressure, a rising star full of innocence and idealism with only a naive dream telling you what you're about to experience, a cynical streetwise veteran who has seen it all and who abhors the spotlight while still benefiting from it, or auxiliaries known as management who whore after the money and don't really have a clue about music or what their stars are going through. What I really don't like about this film is the way they make Beau out to be some kind of hero. He's a heartthrob for sure, with his white tooth smile and low timbre voice, but he's really a jerk. First of all, good AA sponsors NEVER get romantically involved with those they're sponsoring. That's an absolute capital offense in that circle, and this movie illustrates why. The recoverer is not strong enough to handle the vagaries of a new relationship and becomes weaker still if the sponsor later breaks it off. Second, he's getting involved with a married woman, and her husband seems to sense that he's more than just a sponsor right from the start. Finally, he takes up with her biggest fear--the up-and-comer that she sees replacing her. No wonder she saw her end and the need to exit. And if that wasn't bad enough, she had a so-called husband who hasn't quite forgiven her not only for their lost baby, and now suspects her affair (which is verified in the movie) but mostly for the botched Dallas concert which probably cost them oodles of $$$ that deep down he lusted after and now is trying to recover before she is really ready yet. Oh I know, he wants to get her back out before she's forgotten completely, but he withholds love, affection, and attention--denying her unconditional love and support she desperately needs right now. So she turns to Beau--who unfortunately seems to think that part of meaningful support takes place between the sheets. It's debatable if he withdraws because he truly thinks he shouldn't be doing this or if he's getting the hots for the New Young Girl. Either way he's screwed up and she paid the price, which he doesn't seem to realize his culpability for.
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Cold Case: Justice (2007)
Season 5, Episode 10
7/10
informative though historically not quite accurate
25 February 2012
This is an excellent episode for teenage daughters to watch to learn about the dangers of rape and how quickly a Dr. Jekyll type guy every girl dreams of can turn into a Mr Hyde that is every girl's nightmare. It has just one problem: It was cast in the wrong time period. I went to college in the late 70s-mid 80s and I can tell you that by 1982 there was much more knowledge and understanding about rape than is pictured here. For instance, the lack of understanding that rape is an act of violence and not an act of sex, the girls blaming themselves, the police and administration unwilling to do anything, girls being blamed for what they wore, or bringing guys to their apartments, etc..this was not part of the 80s time frame...now if the episode had been cast in the early to mid 70s it would have been far more accurate as the understanding at that time was much like was pictured here... nonetheless the episode has redeeming value as stated above....
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Cold Case: The Key (2006)
Season 4, Episode 7
The adventures, disillusionment, and aftermath of the 70s
17 September 2011
In its episodes, Cold Case frequently presents a historical survey of selected time periods....the issues, trends, consequences and resulting aftermath that led to the next time periods' reactive changes in response...and is seen through the life philosophies of those who lived in that time....in this episode we have the Swinging '70s....as one who was a young person then and in the 80's that followed, I have to say that the portrayal was quite accurate in many ways....

...Swinging burst on the scene sounding like a heck of a lot of fun at the time...a way to be freer as an individual and not tied down by rules of the past...here it is portrayed as a response by men to the women's liberation movement of the '60s...and there was some truth to that(BTW I'm a man writing this)...however it didn't take long before some reactive consequences reared up...the children were the first to show how uncomfortable, bewildered, and eventually contemptuous they were about actions of their elders which destabilized their families...then the swinger participants themselves realized how a lack of expectations led to a lack of the security, comfort, and stability in their lives which after all things considered they really couldn't do without....and then finally some couldn't handle the emotionally crushing psychological devastation that resulted...one because she was too naive to know what had really been happening around her and the other because he was too young and too full of adolescent libido to really process what an older, more experienced person would have realized was a reactionary flirtation, not a demonstration of genuine sexual interest....

....yet just like the 70s, the aftermath led to some favorable changes in one's awareness....our once repressed schoolteacher finally comes to realize that she had spent her whole life following others' footsteps and that true self actualization was realized not by holding on to someone else but within her own self, and she had to do this on her own. This reflected the change in thinking that occurred from the 70s to the 90s with many people in the USA.

As in previous episodes, the music really set the stage....again here I would have used a different song for the end, however..."Landslide" by Fleetwood Mac would have been a better choice although it was already the closing song for another episode (Fireflies)...another good choice would be "Songbird" again by Fleetwood Mac (a band which made a career of making record-selling albums dealing with individual instability from failed relationships)....Or for a really unique music application, try "Winter" by the Rolling Stones....a little known track off the otherwise mediocre "Goat's Head Soup" album of 1973... a song which takes a wistful look back at the mixed results of the past and a dimly hopeful wish for the future...
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Cold Case: Revolution (2005)
Season 2, Episode 14
The real '60s
17 September 2011
Flashback to the '60s....the real '60s...not just the romantic reminiscence you sometimes hear about Woodstock...or the unbridled roar of muscle cars...or the activists' idealism ... that's what this particular episode of Cold Case offers the viewer...while it's by no means complete (you can't do a detailed account in an hour show, especially when you have to make room for the story line) the episode does a pretty good job of showing what life was life for the average young person just trying to live their life back then...which if you were male often consisted of avoiding getting shipped to Vietnam and coming back in a box, wheelchair, state of permanent mental derangement, etc....while females pondered the idea of a new way of life for them...for the average young person in this country one can see that it was a much rockier road than the aging hippies would have us believe...and a lot less freer for that matter... yet in spite of it all true love flourished as it always does...and those in that state kept those memories for the rest of their lives and for them as for others in the past true love came but once in a lifetime...

and the Vietnam vets came back with mixed feelings towards the draft resistors....knowing themselves how traumatic the war was and how the WWII romantic images they might have had in war had no basis in reality yet harboring at least some amount of contempt towards those who did not answer the call...and all this added to the multiple schisms in society that left the comparatively cohesive, conformal '50s behind....this episode illustrated it all quite well...

As with other episodes, this one used periodical music...and for the most part the choices were quite good---except for the last song---"I Say A Little Prayer For You"....it seems strange that this innocuous love song would be used in the aftermath of the chain of events of this episode....especially considering that the hit version by Dionne Warwick was not used but a lesser known more modern sounding version by Aretha Franklin....a better choice would have been "Crystal Blue Persuasion" by Tommy James....this song departs from the bubble gum topics of his previous songs to take a pained look at the past and a hopeful, healing view to the future and would have matched the mood created by the series of events in this episode a whole lot better...other than that it was quite a thought provoking episode.
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Cold Case: 8 Years (2006)
Season 3, Episode 11
The decline of Heartland USA
17 August 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Bruce Springsteen's music provides an emotional touch to this episode, songs well chosen for the scenes even if they were released at a later date than the scene setting. With all its faults, this episode is especially poignant in this day and age as the heartland manufacturing jobs that the four main characters would once have likely wound up in after high school, which would have given them a secure if not luxurious lower-middle class existence are now all but gone today. As a result, the four are left with unrealistic dreams of glory in highly competitive, cutthroat fields of athletics and entertainment or a desperate turn to shady, illicit activities that nearly always lead to a bad end, with a few low paying, dead end positions in between as the only respite.

Of course there are faults. The music dates we mentioned. But are we really to believe that May drove a stolen car in the open for a dozen years without anyone catching on? Even if she changed the license plate, the VIN number would be detected by DMV's across the country. Speaking of cars, even in 1980 that 1972 Chevelle SS convertible driven by Clem would have been way out of reach price-wise for someone like him; this car in the pristine condition that this one was in was worth about $5-7k in 1980, which was quite a lot of money then; equal to $28,000-$30,000 now, because the car was so rare, especially in convertible form (Chevelle SS convertibles today go for $50k-$100k). Not to mention the fact an 8 year old 1970s car subject to Pennsylvania winters with salted roads would likely be a rust bucket by 1980 and not anywhere near the shape this car was in. A standard Chevelle, Malibu, Challenger, or Cutlass in appropriate rusty condition would have been a better choice and would have emphasized the modest background and lack of opportunity available to these four.

Even so, the episode provides an poignant, reminiscent look at what Heartland America was and what it is now, with the Boss pulling the emotional heartstrings which have an all-too-solid and disconcerting basis in reality in them. It all provides food for interesting thought at the direction America is taking today.
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Christine (1983)
music
29 July 2008
I don't know if anyone has mentioned this before, but the 50s music was interesting in that most of it came from artists who suffered untimely, tragic deaths....Buddy Holly and Richie Valens of course were killed in a plane crash at the height of their careers...Johnny Ace ("Pledging My Love") died playing Russian Roulette with a pistol....Larry Williams ("Bony Maronie") was killed in 1980 by a gunshot wound to the head; he had been involved with drug dealing for years and it was thought to be a gang execution....I think Dion was still alive at the time this movie was made("I Wonder Why"); I'm not sure about the rest of the Belmonts....
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