"The Waltons" The Portrait (TV Episode 1978) Poster

(TV Series)

(1978)

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6/10
Interesting because it's unusual, but not one of the best,
fentress21 June 2021
I am a viewer who appreciates the Waltons highly, but I fully admit that there are some weak episodes. This episode is somewhat interesting because it is unusual compared to other Waltons episodes. It deals with a one-shot character, an artist who is a complex and disturbing man. He might well be a tortured artist in the usual sense. But he is also traumatized by war ... and ultimately a bit dangerous. The episode has an eerie foreboding tone.

There's no reason such a character couldn't appear in the Waltons' Mountains community. I can respect that the creative team was stretching to do something innovative. But they didn't quite pull it off successfully. This episode lacks the authenticity of the more down-to-earth drama that characterized most earlier seasons.

It is at least somewhat interesting to have an episode that spotlights Erin. Erin's distinguishing mark (at least in later episodes) of being "the pretty one" figures greatly in this episode. She is indeed attractive, in a refreshingly wholesome way. But I never could quite buy into her supposedly being a standout beauty. It always seemed to me like a weak attempt by the writers to give Erin some distinguishing characteristic, as all the other siblings had theirs.

But there is one thing I will praise this episode for. We see several examples of the paintings created by the artist character. I thought they were quite striking, especially the final wall mural that contained Erin. I might even play selected parts of the episode on DVD some time just to see those again. I would be curious as to what the story might be as to who actually painted them, and how the crew obtained them.

Nine seasons of The Waltons were produced, and most of it was excellent. Season 7 has some very good episodes. It also had weak ones (like this one) that mark the start of a gradual descent of quality into the unfortunately very mediocre seasons 8 and 9.

My final take: this episode has some good points. But if you're up watching some good episodes of The Waltons, you can do a lot better than this.
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7/10
An intense episode
barlowralph18 July 2018
I must disagree with the writer of the one other review for this episode. I see it as an intensely vivid portrait of a very troubled man, obviously suffering from what we now call PTSD. Perhaps it's true that none of the regular characters were "advanced" as the other reviewer put it, but this episode wasn't really about them; it was about Derek, and the horrors of war. Jared Martin gave a strong performance and Mary McDonough was excellent in support of his storyline. As for the secondary story about Grandma's bird, well, there needed to be some occasional relief in the episode, and that was as good as anything else might have been.
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2/10
Definitely one to skip
FlushingCaps9 December 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Erin and Jason, returning home one evening, see that someone is at the abandoned Pembroke house—a large old home. The next morning, Erin is at Ike's when a strange young man enters, and we all learn that he is Derek Pembroke, an artist, who has been in Paris for a long time, back living at his family's old home. He sets up a charge account at Ike's and pays for his purchases with a check.

Erin bumps into him while in the woods a bit later, and he again acts rather oddly. Later he asks her to pose for him. Later, Elizabeth and Jim-Bob peek into his window, seeing a large ugly war-time mural he is painting, and seeing Derek suddenly become furious and knocking everything off his painting table.

Then we see Derek coming into Ike's again, where Corabeth informs him that his check bounced. She agrees to give him more credit in exchange for three of his paintings that she thinks she can sell. All are well-painted images of the horrors of war, full of blood.

Eventually we learn that he is truly troubled by the war he has experienced and is in need of psychological help. He keeps calling Erin by another name, and seems annoyed that she insists she isn't this other woman he knew.

The minor plot deals with Jim-Bob buying a songbird for Grandma, to keep in an old cage. Only through a lot of effort over time do they succeed in getting the songbird to make any sound at all.

If my description of that minor plot makes it sound boring, it is because it seemed boring to me. The entire major plot about the disturbed artist also was boring. Right from the start, he seemed disturbed, and having heard he recently came from Paris—the setting was stated as the "fall of 1941"--it seemed obvious that the war was a huge part of his problem.

Nothing was advanced in the lives of any of the series regulars. There was, as far as I can remember from an hour ago when I watched this on UP, nothing that made me so much as chuckle. If you love the series and desire to watch 95% of the episodes, I urge you to put this one in your 5%--the ones not worth watching.
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8/10
Very powerful and moving
brueggemanntami12 May 2022
This was not as much about the Walton family but a young man who has seen and experienced things too intense to forget or to live with. They haunt him no matter where he goes. Erin is a reminder and he pulls her into his pain. She helps him begin finding a way out.
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1/10
Writers On Vacation
janet-conant7 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This episode was not worthy to be called The Waltons. It was nothing like the episodes we're used to seeing. Right from the beginning it was dark and disturbing. Erin never once smiled through the whole episode and was moody and beguiling with this strange artist but that kiss was foreign to us all. I guess all you need is a hunky guy playing crazy and you got a plot. MaryEllen should have had a butterfly net when she and John came to rescue Erin at the end as the artist was deranged. I never did know what exactly his past was because I wasn't interested. Not what we're used to seeing on Waltons Mountain. The plots with John Boy like The Fire Storm and The Journey we're brilliantly written and acted. I think it was time to end the series now that Thomas and Geer were gone, Waite and Learned were still adept, Ellen Corby is a trooper coming back after a stroke but the other members just can't carry this show including Corabeth.
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