yeah, it's intense all right...

-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: "James A. Landrith, Jr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
I saw Lonesome Dove when it originally aired on network TV.

I loved it so much I bought it on VHS many years ago and yet still haven't 
watched the tapes. Too sad.

Funny thing that...

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...... Original Message .......
On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 05:11:20 +0000 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>ditto, i teared up at that end of that movie too.
>
>Speaking of crying, yesterday and today my wife and I watched the 
miniseries "Lonesome Dove" for the first time on some cable channel named 
ION. Man, that was one gut-wrenching, poignant ride! So many people dying, 
women being raped or nearly so, marauding Indians, broken dreams, life 
cheap out in the wilds. A fine piece of film making, i must say, definitely 
one of the last great miniseries. Outstanding performances from Tommy Lee 
Jones, Robert Duvall, Danny Glover, Dianne Lane, D.B. Sweeney, Robert 
Urich, Angelica Houston, Chris Cooper, Rick Schroeder, and a host of 
others. Sweeping in scope, amazing vistas and cinematography (note to 
music-video-directors-turned-film-makers: this is how to shoot a film!) The 
thing drew me in, and by the end i was very sad. My wife kept saying "my 
gosh: what else can happen in this series? Who else is going to die or end 
up sad and broken?" Powerful, stuff.
>
>Remember way back in the day, when everyone used to stay home and watch 
the great miniseries? From "Roots" (which started it all) to "Rich Man, 
Poor Man", from "Masada" to "North and South"? Even the ones that weren't 
that good, that were over the top, got audiences. Back before VCRs, DVDs, 
and cable, this was one whole families still grouped around the television 
to share the event. Fun times, those...
>
>-------------- Original message --------------
>From: Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>I admit to crying at the ending.
>
>[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: odd movie, made me kind of sad at the 
ending. Definitely has that late '60s/early '70s feel....
>
>-------------- Original message --------------
>From: Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Works for me, too. Wish that someone would air "Silent Running", for me. 
TCM had it on awhile back, but I missed it.
>
>Mike Street <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: I kept it kinda old school and 
watched "Close Encounters of the Third Kind"
>still one of the best sci fi movies ever created.
>
>On Nov 26, 2007 3:56 PM, Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Keith, I recall seeing on a 1999 web site that an Eagle's max speed was
>> just short of lightspeed. If so, then the issue of range is kind of 
moot. On
>> another site, the show was referred to as a "science fantasy", which 
would
>> cover a lot of the glaring science goofs, such as the notion of nuclear
>> waste exploding with enough force to hurl the Moon clear of Earth orbit.
>> After seeing the pilot, I sat down and did the math necessary for that to
>> happen. Not in the realm of a conventional clean-nuke blast, let me tell
>> you.
>>
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] <KeithBJohnson%40comcast.net> wrote: Love one 
of
>> the early "Space: 1999" eps where they're still in the Solar System. I 
think
>> they're out near Neptune. There's an abandoned spaceship that has some 
kind
>> of flesheating monster on it. The creature's like a giant squid or
>> something, with

 

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