As a Hollywood agent in 2000, Ben tries to keep a fading Hollywood actor from dying.As a Hollywood agent in 2000, Ben tries to keep a fading Hollywood actor from dying.As a Hollywood agent in 2000, Ben tries to keep a fading Hollywood actor from dying.
Photos
Lobat Asadi
- KXRP News Staff
- (uncredited)
Joseph Aviel
- Arnold Impersonator
- (uncredited)
Marla Robison
- Summer Walsh
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhen this was first uploaded to NBC's streaming service, roughly 5 and a half minutes were missing, beginning just after the 24 minute mark. The error was corrected by the next morning.
- Goofs(at around 30 mins) Neil maneuvers around Addison to talk to Ben face-to-face. Addison is supposed to be an incorporeal hologram that no one but Ben can see.
- Quotes
Neal Russell: Every day when you wake up, there is an adventure to be had. Some are fun, some are scary, some are flat-out stupid. No matter how you slice it, life is meant to be lived.
Featured review
It is, quite possibly the shortest ever episode at only 36.39 but far from the best but not the best either.
The story is a bit thin but that has been the case throughout with this revamp as we see behind the scenes of the project so much more than in the original series.
Addison is always eye catching and hides the charisma that Ben so lacks.
There are good moments here but no real humour with the show again focusing on relationships and sentimentality rather than a riveting script (apologies to director fellow Brit M. J. Bassett).
Neal Russell seems a credible character and it is good to see older actors taking centre stage.
OK but not edge of the seat stuff.
A heartfelt closing scene.
The story is a bit thin but that has been the case throughout with this revamp as we see behind the scenes of the project so much more than in the original series.
Addison is always eye catching and hides the charisma that Ben so lacks.
There are good moments here but no real humour with the show again focusing on relationships and sentimentality rather than a riveting script (apologies to director fellow Brit M. J. Bassett).
Neal Russell seems a credible character and it is good to see older actors taking centre stage.
OK but not edge of the seat stuff.
A heartfelt closing scene.
- xmasdaybaby1966
- Oct 25, 2023
- Permalink
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