GentlemanJim
11-28-2022, 11:39 AM
With MeTV's showing last night, of Season 2 Episode 2....I can now say that I've seen the complete series, cover to cover. Something that even 20 years ago I'm not sure I even knew I would ever want. But,thank you MTV for making it possible. Now I won't have to stay up for that dreadful timeslot once a week just to "collect" each episode.
My assessment overall: Very good TV. David Janssen succeeded in putting a pleasant face on one of life's ugly realities (the system gone wrong) I commend in particular the way the series portrays the reality of how once one is on the "outside"... you lose the basic protections of the law in your other, every day affairs. I also thought it was pretty realistic how it is shown that once one is on the run, every siren you hear, every cop on the beat, or squad car rolling down the street...is a threat.
They did a really good job on that aspect.
I also enjoyed the portrayals of how no matter how big a mess your own life is, you are bound to bump into people suffering even bigger demons than your own.
One plot device that I grew weary of over the course of the show, is the repeated entertwining with "mentally challenged" youth and/or adults where Kimble inserted himself in the role of protector, placing his own freedom at risk. I just don't see someone having so much to lose putting themselves in that risk...time and again.
The guest stars were a treat throughout the entire series, I believe many of them only grew into stars after their performance on this series, so there was a "oh boy, here so-and-so is before they were anybody" opportunity.
I think my favorite episodes were the one that had the moonshiners who took a personal dislike to Lt. Gerard, the one called "A Clean and Quiet Town" with it's mysterious evil puppeteer pulling the strings that actually ran the town, the ones featuring Jacqueline Scott (because Kimble was usually in his home woods, intensifying the danger), and "No one Loses All the Time" (Joanna Moore)
Those are the eps I'm gonna be sure to catch the next time through the rotation.
My assessment overall: Very good TV. David Janssen succeeded in putting a pleasant face on one of life's ugly realities (the system gone wrong) I commend in particular the way the series portrays the reality of how once one is on the "outside"... you lose the basic protections of the law in your other, every day affairs. I also thought it was pretty realistic how it is shown that once one is on the run, every siren you hear, every cop on the beat, or squad car rolling down the street...is a threat.
They did a really good job on that aspect.
I also enjoyed the portrayals of how no matter how big a mess your own life is, you are bound to bump into people suffering even bigger demons than your own.
One plot device that I grew weary of over the course of the show, is the repeated entertwining with "mentally challenged" youth and/or adults where Kimble inserted himself in the role of protector, placing his own freedom at risk. I just don't see someone having so much to lose putting themselves in that risk...time and again.
The guest stars were a treat throughout the entire series, I believe many of them only grew into stars after their performance on this series, so there was a "oh boy, here so-and-so is before they were anybody" opportunity.
I think my favorite episodes were the one that had the moonshiners who took a personal dislike to Lt. Gerard, the one called "A Clean and Quiet Town" with it's mysterious evil puppeteer pulling the strings that actually ran the town, the ones featuring Jacqueline Scott (because Kimble was usually in his home woods, intensifying the danger), and "No one Loses All the Time" (Joanna Moore)
Those are the eps I'm gonna be sure to catch the next time through the rotation.