Ritmo Presents: Groove Galleria II @ TBA - 21 Feb feat. Ari Kiko, JackID, Midnight Caller
Ritmo Presents: Groove Galleria II @ TBA - 21 Feb feat. Ari Kiko, JackID, Midnight Caller

**John Beck, Sydney Walsh, Sal Viscuso.** Flashbacks to a major earthquake that rocked the city. Beck is terrific as a disingenuous producer who wants to tell Jack’s story on film. His character allows the script to make a valid point about “based on a true story” movies that embellish the facts. _Spring 1990: Tuesdays on NBC after In the Heat of the Night. Against Thirtysomething (ABC); CBS Tuesday Night Movie (CBS)._ 9/10

**Leslie Jordan, Dennis Lipscomb, Reni Santoni.** Just before Christmas, a weeping statue of Jesus is stolen from a church. Can Jack get it back before Christmas Eve mass? Terrific cast and several larger-than-life characters appear in this semi-comedic episode. It successfully walks the line between silly and serious, and pretty much pulls it off. _Fall 1989: NBC aired Midnight Caller in the final hour of Tuesday prime time after In the Heat of the Night. Against it were Thirtysomething on ABC and Island Son on CBS._ 8/10
**Pam Grier.** It’s not perfect, but this episode packs some serious punches. It looks like it’s going to be about gambling addiction–and it is to a large degree–but it soon morphs into a gripping crime drama about forged paintings. Karen Kopins almost steals the episode as a gorgeous widow. It’s a shame we never saw her character again. Her scenes with Jack were fabulous. James Handy is excellent as a very cold gangster. His confrontation scene with Jack is chilling. There’s really menace behind his every word. It feels like Jack is really in danger. The main guest character gets a sudden and shocking death near the end. You’d think the episode couldn’t top that, but you’d be wrong. When Jack revealed the identity of the murderer that started it all, I pretty much gasped out loud. Really was blindsided. The closing monologue–on the subject of friendship–is one of the show’s very best. Such a shame the plot is driven by so many casual coincidences. _Fall 1989: NBC aired Midnight Caller in the final hour of Tuesday prime time after In the Heat of the Night. Against it were Thirtysomething on ABC and Island Son on CBS._ 9/10
**Linda Kelsey, Jack Bannon.** As a spiritual successor to Lou Grant, this is where the show wears its heart on its sleeve: casting Kelsey and Bannon in key roles. Both are excellent. Speaking of excellent, this is the 2nd of 4 episodes for Bonnie Bartlett as Devon’s mother. Loved the way their b-story had parallels with the a-story. Both are about parents and the harms they can inflict on their children. (Some way more serious than others.) Another of my favourites, Steven Keats, has a role as a sleazy private eye. He’s searching for the little girl that Jack is protecting. The episode does a superb job with this tale of child molestation. It manages to raise genuine doubts from the start about who is telling the truth and then deliver a convincing and satisfying conclusion. It helps that Karen Lundy, the actress playing the little girl, is wonderful in the role. A powerful and very emotional episode. _Fall 1989: NBC aired Midnight Caller in the final hour of Tuesday prime time after In the Heat of the Night. Against it were Thirtysomething on ABC and Island Son on CBS._ 10/10
A woman chooses imprisonment versus revealing the location of her daughter to her ex-husband. The young child is supposedly a victim of sexual abuse while her legal eagle parents sort through their own personality flaws. Jack becomes a link in the chain of lies and law-bending for the sake of the child.
Jack Killian retires from the San Francisco Police Department after accidentally shooting his partner, Rusty, in a crossfire situation. He's drawn back to the world of the living by an offer to be a late night talk radio host. A serial killer begins calling Jack, explaining the assassinations and Jack's inadvertently pulled back into the crime fighting world.