Quincy helps a cancer patient who is dying.Quincy helps a cancer patient who is dying.Quincy helps a cancer patient who is dying.
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Angela Lee Sloan
- Jenny Silver
- (as Angela Lee)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe title is from the poem "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night," by Dylan Thomas, which begins, "Do not go gentle into that good night, / Old age should burn and rave at close of day; / Rage, rage against the dying of the light."
- GoofsThe station wagon Brian is driving is a 1969 Chevy...but when it goes over the cliff, it has become a "clamshell" body style, meaning it's a 1971-76 era Chevy wagon.
Featured review
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I'm reviewing the reviewers here.
To preface the content, I must disclose that I'm a 30 year critical care nurse and have almost, "seen it all." I'm also extremely critical of on-air medical mistakes. But remember, this is "theatre" with artistic license. I have also done 15 years of live performance theatre myself.
The fact that Quincy took over as a patient counselor is perfectly fine with me. Indeed in my critical care units I was the one, deemed the easiest to talk to, to tell the family and/or patient that they were going to die. I watched death on an almost daily basis. It was strangely comfortable to me.
But yes, there were too many times that I'd completely fall apart. Usually at home, but occasionally in the patients room or hallway.
I have wonderful and horrible stories.
I understand that the TV reviewers here have both sides to tell. And they are all correct.
Both sides.
To preface the content, I must disclose that I'm a 30 year critical care nurse and have almost, "seen it all." I'm also extremely critical of on-air medical mistakes. But remember, this is "theatre" with artistic license. I have also done 15 years of live performance theatre myself.
The fact that Quincy took over as a patient counselor is perfectly fine with me. Indeed in my critical care units I was the one, deemed the easiest to talk to, to tell the family and/or patient that they were going to die. I watched death on an almost daily basis. It was strangely comfortable to me.
But yes, there were too many times that I'd completely fall apart. Usually at home, but occasionally in the patients room or hallway.
I have wonderful and horrible stories.
I understand that the TV reviewers here have both sides to tell. And they are all correct.
Both sides.
helpful•30
- trainjustleft
- Sep 10, 2022
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