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62 of 65 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
After school with Melissa Sue Anderson, among others..., November 6, 2004
The mid 70's...that wondrous time between Vietnam and Reaganomics...if you were growing up during that period, like me, you're probably familiar with these shows. Many families needed two incomes to survive (so much more so now), so generally once school let out for the day, you were pretty much on your own until Mom or Dad got home (usually Mom). What to do? There was no MTV (or cable, for that matter) and no Playstation 2...no, if you weren't off messing around with your friends poking dead animals with sticks, you were probably at home, watching After School Specials, dramatic programs designed especially entertain and teach pre-teens about life and issues they could have very well faced, in terms they could understand in an hour-long format (approximately 45 minutes, without the commercials). Each set comes with two DVDs, each containing 2 episodes, or 4 episodes per set. The series (I believe there were something like 26 episodes) was created and produced by Martin Tahse, and won a slew of awards, was really unique in that it was programming for young people that wasn't created to tie into products or sell merchandise, but to speak to them about situations difficult to understand or comprehend, treating its' audience with the respect and intelligence not often seen, not talking down to them but talking to them, and basically relating to them on a level they deserved.
Francesca, Baby (Originally aired 6/10/76) deals with the issue of an alcoholic parent. Francesca (Carol Jones) and her little sister, Kate (Tara Talboy) deals with the burden (in the words of Lost in Space's Dr. Smith, "The shame, the shame...") of a mother who's struggling with a booze monkey on her back. Their father, unable to deal with his alkie-wife, tends to go on a lot of business trips, leaving the girls to fend pretty much for themselves (nice guy, hunh?). Francesca's boyfriend, Bix (Dennis Bowden) tries to get her to go to Ala-Teen, a program for kids with alcoholic parents, but she's too embarrassed, that is until her drunken stumblebum mother nearly kills them all by falling into a boozy sleep with a lit coffin nail (cigarette). Francesca sees her own embarrassment is a rather paltry, trifling matter when weighed against the lives of her, her sister, and her mother.
In Beat the Turtle Drum (Originally aired 4/6/77), Kate (Melissa Sue Anderson) must deal with the accidental death, caused by the rapid deceleration of hitting the ground after falling from a tree (you canna change the laws of physics, captain) of her younger sister Joss (Katy Kurtzman). Could Kate have prevented the accident? Is she to blame for death of the more popular of the two sisters? (everyone knows in families with multiple children, there's always a favorite, despite what the parents say) She searches for answers and, I guess, a sense of closure to the tragedy, by involving a number of different people (more like bothering), gaining insight she didn't have before. Ultimately she learns sometimes things just happen, and while it's easy enough to take the blame and burden one's own soul, it may not always be hers to take (although I think it was).
The Pinballs (Originally aired 10/26/77) deals with three kids who develop a friendship in a foster home. There's Carlie (Kristy McNichol), a voracious liar, constantly making up stuff about her past, Thomas J. (Sparky Marcus) who was sent to the home after his guardians (his two twin aunts) get sick and can't care for him anymore, and finally Harvey (Johnny Doran), who suffers from a pair of broken legs (ouch) after his rummy father confused the boy for the driveway (double ouch). Basically the three learn that while their lives may suck (and they do), there's value to be had in friendship and a positive outlook, rather than focusing on the negatives (like being a `pinball', bouncing around from place to place).
The fourth and final episode in this collection is set in the olden times, and by that I mean covered wagons, log cabins, outhouses and such, titled Trouble River (Originally aired 11/12/77). Dewey (Michael LeClair) is stuck at the homestead with his old granny (Nora Denny) when his parents leave for a nearby settlement as his mother is about to give birth (procreation was a big thing before the invention of the TV). Things get hairy when news of renegades are in the area causing all kinds of trouble, so Dewey builds a raft and does a Tom Sawyer bit with his grandmother hoping to reach the settlement where his parents went to have the baby. The trip is a difficult one, as not only must Dewey face the trials and tribulations of navigating the raft through treacherous waters, but he must also deal with his pain in the behind grandmother who's stubbornness seems to know no bounds (I probably would have pushed her and her precious rocker into the river and say she fell in). In the end, Dewey learns old people can serve a useful function, rather than be a cumbersome weight dragging you into the abyss.
The quality of the pictures on these DVDs is not the best, but it is as how it was when originally presented, and given these were teleplays made to be presented on television in the 70's, you really can't compare it to today's standards. The packaging is amazing, as the DVDs, enclosed in a regular DVD case, come in a surprisingly detailed reproduction of a Trapper Keeper (oh how we all lusted for organizational capabilities of Trapper Keepers back in the day). Printed inside is a brief synopsis and airdate for each episode, along with the key talent, and the name of the original author for each story. If you liked these, also look for After School Specials 1974-76, available here.
Cookieman108
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