File this under: Kid, You'll Never Work in this Town, Again. From October 2015 to September 2016, Jonathon McClendon briefly played a Soras-ed version of Chase Jennings on Days of Our Lives. Hyrum Hansen and Connor Kalopsis previously filled the role. Despite his short time on the NBC soap opera, this fledgling actor is speaking up about his former employer. McClendon says NBC should cancel Days of Our Lives, noting, "52 years is too long," and "I'm watching General Hospital from now on." The irony of those sentiments is, of course, April 1st will mark Gh's 54th anniversary on ABC.In his time at Days of Our Lives, McClendon's character raped Ciara Alice Brady (Vivian Jovanni). Ciara was not only Chase's potential love-interest and temporary step-sister (yes, yuck), she is also the daughter of Dool super couple Bo and...
- 1/26/2017
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Dead teenagers, terrible dads, and reuniting long lost siblings – Code Black Season 2 Episode 2 didn't pull any punches. The interns are still settling into the rhythm at Angels, but even veterans of the busiest ER can learn something new.
With Mike still in a coma, Angus is seeing everything in a different light. Mario may end up having a similar experience now that his father is a patient – but maybe not. Mr. Savetti isn't exactly a warm fuzzy presence like Mike is after all.
The bus crash got things off to a strong start, and my only regret is that the energy faded out after the first round of patients. This case could easily dominated the hour, without any side cases. There probably still could have been a way to work in something about brothers to parallel Angus' situation instead of Noa's schizophrenic.
Focusing more on the crash would also have...
With Mike still in a coma, Angus is seeing everything in a different light. Mario may end up having a similar experience now that his father is a patient – but maybe not. Mr. Savetti isn't exactly a warm fuzzy presence like Mike is after all.
The bus crash got things off to a strong start, and my only regret is that the energy faded out after the first round of patients. This case could easily dominated the hour, without any side cases. There probably still could have been a way to work in something about brothers to parallel Angus' situation instead of Noa's schizophrenic.
Focusing more on the crash would also have...
- 10/6/2016
- by Elizabeth Harlow
- TVfanatic
Title: The Playroom Director: Julia Dyer Starring: John Hawkes, Molly Parker, Olivia Harris, Jonathan Brooks, Lydia McKay, Alexandra Doke, Ian Veteto, Jonathon McClendon, Cody Linley Lovingly captured but rather dramatically inert, “The Playroom” is a slice of 1970s-era familial portraiture, with a special focus on wandering eyes and the secret lives of adults. If “The Ice Storm” was a band, think of this as its minor-chord, B-feature opening act, a boxed-in, presumably autobiographical tale in which a quartet of kids manage their mother’s alcoholism and nice-guy father’s enabling… With Imagination! Set in 1975, “The Playroom” centers on the home life of lawyer Martin Cantwell (John Hawkes) and his scotch-dependent, emotionally distant wife, Donna (Molly Parker). The couple has [ Read More ]
The post The Playroom Movie Review appeared first on Shockya.com.
The post The Playroom Movie Review appeared first on Shockya.com.
- 2/8/2013
- by bsimon
- ShockYa
We’ve all seen stories about the effects alcoholism has on children — for better, worse, and often somewhere in that underwhelming middle ground. And while I’m not averse to this mold, so long as it’s crafted with care, one of the main pleasures to be found in The Playroom is director Julia Dyer‘s tendency to — sometimes in a literal, visual sense — put the perfunctory conflicts and confrontations that would typically stem from this in the background, opting to place the children of a troubled husband and wife at the center of things.
Set almost exclusively in a suburban home in the fall of 1975, The Playroom revolves around four children (Olivia Harris, Ian Veteto, Jonathon McClendon, and Alexandra Doke) living in a household run by two parents (John Hawkes and Molly Parker) who, though not dysfunctional on the surface, are slowly pulling themselves apart with the trappings of alcohol.
Set almost exclusively in a suburban home in the fall of 1975, The Playroom revolves around four children (Olivia Harris, Ian Veteto, Jonathon McClendon, and Alexandra Doke) living in a household run by two parents (John Hawkes and Molly Parker) who, though not dysfunctional on the surface, are slowly pulling themselves apart with the trappings of alcohol.
- 4/26/2012
- by jpraup@gmail.com (thefilmstage.com)
- The Film Stage
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