Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaIn 2035-36, 85-year-old ex-journalist Ben Miller sits in his rocking chair at Briars Retirement Retreat, sharing memories that unfold as dramatized stories.In 2035-36, 85-year-old ex-journalist Ben Miller sits in his rocking chair at Briars Retirement Retreat, sharing memories that unfold as dramatized stories.In 2035-36, 85-year-old ex-journalist Ben Miller sits in his rocking chair at Briars Retirement Retreat, sharing memories that unfold as dramatized stories.
- Indicado para 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 indicação no total
Avaliações em destaque
Maybe what ended up making this show so great, fresh and well-written was the fact that it didn't have a chance to become redundant or stale. The show which stated that the only constant in life is change was, in fact, a victim of itself. In this day and age when shows are just thrown together it was so well written that every event was tied together - nothing was left hanging. I just wish I had taped the show so I could relive those shining moments of true literature on TV.
I loved the way that, no matter how sad the events in Ben's life would be, you knew that as an old man he would be able to look back at it with peace. Hopefully, we all will be able to share what we've learned in life with our grandchildren.
It was really able to put life's events in perspective. Like one of the previous comments said: It was just too good for TV. I can only hope that the series will be made available to view again through some means.
That episode was the first thing I saw Claudia Christian in, and have been a fan of hers ever since. Met her once (lucky me!) and got to tell her that also! She said she really enjoyed working on that and was quite proud of it.
Ditto for Helen Hunt, that's where she first came to my awareness too, and I followed her happily to "Mad About You".
My second favorite episode (close behind "Jessie") is "Fare on Park Avenue" -- SO well done. Like too many exceptional quality shows that don't fit a preconceived formula, it didn't get a chance to build an audience.
Why was it canceled? The 30-min drama format has never been successful, except for daily soaps . . . before 1980. Sports Night did better but that was a witty drama. This show was a straight half-hour drama. And at the end of each episode I was frustrated it was over. For me, I couldn't wait for the next episode, but most viewers were just frustrated, I guess.
Tom Irwin was just on 24. Dead in one episode--this guy's such a good actor; will we ever really see him in something again?
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[opening narration]
Ben Miller: I can't say that I've seen everything but I've seen a lot. I've seen footsteps on the moon and seen myself stumble. I've seen fear and did my darndest not to be afraid. I've survived the nineties and braved the millennium. I've loved and lost and learned to love again. And I've learned that life is an adventure. You have to hold on and let it carry you away. I've let in carry me to me to the year 2035 and I'm here to tell the tale. I'm Ben Miller and this is my life and times.