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	<title>The Compu-Poker Blog &#187; Online Movie Resources</title>
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		<title>Film Noir Legends: Bette Davis, Claire Trevor, Eleanor Parker, and John Huston</title>
		<link>http://www.compu-poker.com/archives/2010/01/06/film-noir-legends-bette-davis-claire-trevor-eleanor-parker-and-john-huston/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Jan 2010 16:31:43 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[When it comes to cinema, I love those made during the 40&#8217;s and 50&#8217;s when in my view, films were made not so much for their profitability, but for the art itself and the messages contained within. As a kid I would watch the local version of The Sunday Matinee Movie and became familiar with [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When it comes to cinema, I love those made during the 40&#8217;s and 50&#8217;s when in my view, films were made not so much for their profitability, but for the art itself and the messages contained within. As a kid I would watch the local version of The Sunday Matinee Movie and became familiar with actors such as Humphrey Bogart, Joan Crawford, Bette Davis and others. This was the era of &#8220;film noir&#8221; which is defined as movies that are symbolized by dimly-lit sets, a bleak setting and center on stories about corrupt and cynical characters. The plots of these films often revolve around an anti-hero, a crime (and subsequent moral dilemma), and a romantic interest for the films central character. The films were shot in black and white, with shadow having as much importance as dialogue. These films used unusual angles, silhouetted close-ups and somber tones to create unique and powerful storylines. These films were made during a roughly twenty year period, beginning with 1940&#8217;s &#8220;Stranger on the Third Floor&#8221; (starring Peter Lorre and John McGuire) and the underrated &#8220;Brother Orchid&#8221; (Edward G. Robinson), to Orson Well&#8217;s 1958 classic, &#8220;Touch of Evil.&#8221;</p>
<p>Some other movies opf this era are &#8220;Angels With Dirty Faces&#8221; (James Cagney and Pat O&#8217;Brien), &#8220;Key Largo&#8221; (Bogart, Bacall, Sidney Greenstreet), &#8220;Gaslight&#8221; (Ingrid Bergman and Charles Boyer), &#8220;Double Indemnity&#8221; (Fred MacMurray and Barbara Stanwyck under Billy Wilder&#8217;s direction) and &#8220;Mildred Pierce.&#8221; Hollywood has had some recent success with films of that style including, &#8220;Chinatown&#8221; and &#8220;L.A. Confidential.&#8221; seem to support such a notion, with the latter featuring an Oscar-winning turn by Kim Basinger as femme fatale Lynn Bracken.</p>
<p>Arguably, the biggest actress of this era was the doe-eyed beauty Betty Davis. She was born Ruth Elizabeth Davis, on April 5, 1908 in Lowell, Massachusetts  When she attained stardom at age 26, it was not just for her acting acumen and acidic delivery, but her eyes, which were immortalized in song by Kim Carnes/&#8217; &#8220;Bette Davis Eyes&#8221; hit number one in 1981.</p>
<p>She made her film debut in 1931&#8217;s &#8220;The Bad Sister&#8221; and usually played characters with tough exteriors, but who were vulnerable. Her characters usually were smart-mouthed and many of them smoked cigarettes, behavior which wasn&#8217;t considered very lady-like. According to the Unofficial Bette Davis website, Bette Davis, &#8220;was described by<br />
 one critic as &#8216;a force of nature that could find no ordinary outlet&#8217;.&#8221; Her filmography boasts such classics as, &#8220;Dangerous&#8221; (1935) and &#8220;Jezebel&#8221; (1938), for which she received her first two Best Actress Oscars. However, she wanted the lead in 1939s &#8220;Gone With the Wind,&#8221; but the role went to Vivian Leigh. Davis&#8217; most famous role would come some 11 years later, as that of actress Margo Channing in 1950s &#8220;All About Eve,&#8221; earning her another Best Actress nomination. Ironically, her career waned shortly thereafter.</p>
<p>Davis also gave sterling performances in &#8220;Now, Voyager&#8221; (1942); &#8220;The Bride Came C.O.D.&#8221; (1941, with James Cagney); &#8220;Deception&#8221; (1946); &#8220;The Corn Is Green&#8221; (1945); &#8220;Mr. Skeffington&#8221; (1944) and &#8220;What Ever Happened To Baby Jane&#8221; (1962). In the latter she played alongside her long0time rival, Joan Crawford and won an Oscar for Best Actress. In the film she portrayed an unbalanced, washed-up child star. &#8220;Baby Jane&#8221; was also that year&#8217;s top grossing film.</p>
<p>Davis&#8217; number of Oscar nominations10, is second only to Katherine Hepburn (11). Her other nominations include powerhouse performances in, &#8220;The Star&#8221; (1952) ; &#8220;Mr. Skeffington&#8221; (1944); &#8220;Now, Voyager&#8221; (1942); &#8220;The Little Foxes&#8221; (1941); &#8220;The Letter&#8221; (1940); &#8220;Dark Victory&#8221; (1939) and &#8220;Of Human Bondage&#8221; (1934). In 1977, Davis became the first woman to receive the American Film Institute&#8217;s Lifetime Achievement Award. She was also known as &#8220;The Queen of the Screen.&#8221; Three of her movie quotes are among the American Film Institute&#8217;s 100 greatest. They include, (No. 7, from &#8220;All About Eve&#8221;) &#8220;Fasten your seatbelts. It&#8217;s going to be a bumpy night,&#8221; (No. 60, from &#8220;Beyond the Forest&#8221;) &#8220;What a dump.&#8221; and (No. 45) &#8220;Oh, Jerry, don&#8217;t let&#8217;s ask for the moon. We have the stars. (from, &#8220;Now, Voyager&#8221;5)</p>
<p>Perhaps her most memorable line was from the movie that catapulted her to stardom. In &#8220;Of Human Bondage&#8221; (1934)  she co-starred with Leslie Howard and delivered the line, &#8220;You cad! You dirty swine! I never cared for you&#8211;not once! I was always making up to love ya. Ya bored me stiff. I hated ya. It made me sick when I had to let ya kiss me. I only did it because you begged me&#8211;ya hounded me and drove me crazy! And after you kissed me, I always used to wipe my mouth. Wipe my mouth!&#8221; Along that same tenor, In &#8220;Cabin In The Cotton&#8221; (1932) she uttered the line, &#8220;I&#8217;d like ta kiss ya, but I just washed my hair.&#8221; Then again as Joyce Arden in, &#8220;It&#8217;s Love I&#8217;m After&#8221; (1937), she quipped: &#8220;Dearest, I think you&#8217;re the lowest thing that ever crawled, but as long as I can reach out and get my hands on you, no other man will ever touch me.&#8221;</p>
<p>As for her feud with Joan Crawford, in her 1962 autobiography, &#8220;The Lonely Life,&#8221; Davis wrote, &#8220;I do not regret one professional enemy I have made. Any actor who doesn&#8217;t dare to make an enemy should get out of the business.&#8221;</p>
<p>She made her final film appearance in 1989, playing the role of Miranda Pierpoint in, &#8220;Wicked Stepmother.&#8221; She died that year on October 6, 1989 in Neuilly, France from breast cancer.</p>
<p>One of my favorite films from this era is the underappreciated &#8220;Caged,&#8221; starring Eleanor {Parker in the lead role of Marie Allen. It is the story of a pregnant girl imprisoned for being an accessory to a crime committed by her husband. While imprisoned Marie is mistreated by mean-spirited guard Emma Barber (played with a seemingly fiendish glee by Ellen Corby). Marie is eventually broken psychologically and her bitterness turns her into a hardened, wannabe criminal. Agnes Moorehead, better known for her role as &#8220;Endora&#8221; on TV&#8217;s &#8220;Bewitched&#8221; gives a strong performance as the kindhearted prison warden Ruth Benton.</p>
<p>For Parker it should have been a break out role that put her among the upper echelon of the actresses of that era. But she never reached the level of stardom that Bette Davis, Joan Crawford and Claire Trevor achieved. One critic called the movie, &#8220;One of the most underrated movies of all time. Eleanor Parker really did deserve an Oscar for this performance.&#8221; Parker was nominated that year, but she was bested by Judy Holiday, (&#8220;Born Yesterday&#8221;). Also nominated for an Oscar was her co-star Hope Emerson, who played Marie&#8217;s foil, inmate Evelyn Harper. Emerson lost out to Josephine Hull (&#8220;Harvey&#8221;).</p>
<p>Parker was born in June 26, 1922, in Cedarville, Ohio. She made her debut in, &#8220;Busses Roar&#8221; (1942), The Film Guild of America says about her, &#8220;Audiences never knew what to expect when they saw her. To Eleanor, creating interesting characters was more important than cultivating a star image. In over 50 films, she would earn the title, &#8216;The Woman of a Thousand Faces&#8217;&#8230;If she had conformed, and simply used her stunning beauty to rise to stardom, she might be canonized today. Thankfully, she did not conform. Eleanor instead became a serious actress who gave her roles a depth and understanding that few stars have ever matched.&#8221;</p>
<p>This was followed by little known films, including five in 1944: &#8220;The Very Thought of You,&#8221; &#8220;The Last Ride,&#8221; &#8220;Crime by Night,&#8221; &#8220;Atlantic City,&#8221; (an uncredited part) and &#8220;Between Two Worlds.&#8221; She had a supporting part as Mildred Rogers in &#8220;Of Human Bondage&#8221; (1946). In 1950 she played Joan &#8220;Jo&#8221; Holloway opposite Humphrey Bogart in the war story &#8220;Chain Lightning.&#8221; Due to the weakness of the script the film is best remembered for its plane flying scenes.</p>
<p>Claire Trevor was born Claire Wemlinger on March 8, 1910, in Brooklyn, New York. Her career began in 1933 in &#8220;Life In The Raw,&#8221; and she also appeared in the John Wayne oater, &#8220;Stagecoach&#8221; (1939).</p>
<p>During her career, which spanned sixty films, she earned the moniker &#8220;Queen of Film Noir.&#8221; She played a plethora of &#8220;bad girl&#8221; roles, but earned three Oscar nominations: &#8220;Dead End&#8221; (1937, which also featured Humphrey Bogart and marked the debut of The Dead End Kids); &#8220;The High and the Mighty&#8221; (1954) and won Best Supporting Actress for her portrayal as the drunken girlfriend of an abusive gangster (Edward G. Robinson), in &#8220;Key Largo&#8221; (1948).</p>
<p>Her other films include, &#8220;Murder, My Sweet&#8221; (1944) where Trevor played Velma, the missing girlfriend of a gangster. Dick Powell played the lead as detective Philip Marlowe. In 1947 she starred in &#8220;Born To Kill&#8221; and in 1948 she made three films&#8211;&#8221;Raw Deal&#8221; playing a gun moll who helps her gangster boyfriend escape from prison; &#8220;The Velvet Touch,&#8221; where she was cast as an actress accused of murdering her husband; and then she played against type in &#8220;The Babe Ruth Story&#8221; (1948). The former two films are considered some of the finest examples of the Noir genre.</p>
<p>Trevor also won an Emmy (1956) for her performance in &#8220;Dodsworth,&#8221; co-starring with Fredric March. She died April 8, 2000.</p>
<p>Director John Houston was born August 5, 1906 in Nevada, Missouri. He went to Hollywood when his father Walter, another producer of note, gave him a job. He assisted with the writing on such hits as &#8220;Jezebel,&#8221; &#8220;High Sierra&#8221; and &#8220;Sergeant York.&#8221; He made his directing debut in 1941, directing Bogart, Lorre and Sidney Greenstreet in &#8220;Tha Maltese Falcon&#8221; for which he won an Oscar for writing. In 1948, Huston directed &#8220;The Treasure of Sierra Madre,&#8221; winning Oscars for writing and directing. His father won The Best Supporting Actor for his role in the movie. Many consider this to be his strongest film.</p>
<p>Huston once called filmmaking, &#8220;a collaborative medium. Rather than being a tyrant, I believe in getting ideas from as many sources as possible.&#8221; He has worked with some of the biggest names of his era, including Humphrey Bogart, Edward G. Robinson, Claire Trevor, Peter Lorre and Katherine Hepburn.</p>
<p>His movies are a cornucopia of classics: &#8220;The African Queen,&#8221; &#8220;Key Largo,&#8221; &#8220;Treasure of the Sierra Madre,&#8221; &#8220;The Maltese Falcon&#8221; and &#8220;Prizzi&#8217;s Honor,&#8221; which starred his daughter Angelica and earned her a Best Supporting Actress honor. Many of those films were written by Huston as well. He noted, &#8220;I don&#8217;t make a distinction between  writing and direction. But to write and to direct one&#8217;s own material is certainly the best approach. The directing is kind of an extension of the writing.&#8221; Huston also lensed an interpretation of &#8220;The Bible&#8221; (1966) and &#8220;The Red Badge of Courage&#8221; (1951).</p>
<p>Lauren Bacall called him, &#8220;Daring, unpredictable, maddening, mystifying and probably the most charming man on earth.&#8221; Katherine Hepburn said Huston was the &#8220;best piece of direction I have ever heard.&#8221;</p>
<p>Houston died August 28, 1987 from emphysema.</p>
<p>Sources:</p>
<p>John Huston profile, Wikipedia<br />
 <Br>Claire Trevor profile, Wikipedia<br />
 <Br>Martin Connors and Jim Craddock, &#8220;Videohound&#8217;s Golden Movie Retriever 2000&#8243;<br />
 <Br>Eleanor Parker biography, IMDb.com<br />
 <Br>&#8220;The John Huston interviews,&#8221; edited by Robert Emmet Long<br />
 <Br>Bette Davis, imdb profile<br />
 <Br>Bette Davis profile, Wikipedia<br />
 <Br>The Unofficial Bette Davis Homepage<br />
 <Br>Bette Davis profile, &#8220;Reel Classics&#8221;</p>
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<p>Timothy N. Stelly is the author of two novels, &#8220;Tempest In The Stone&#8221; and &#8220;The Malice of cain.&#8221; He is also an afficionado of film noir and currently writes for several e-zines.</p>
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		<title>The Flintstones (DVD) Review</title>
		<link>http://www.compu-poker.com/archives/2009/01/09/the-flintstones-dvd-review/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Jan 2009 08:18:49 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Turning the television world flat on its head, The Flintstones became the first animated hit series in prime time history. Set in the Stone Age town of Bedrock, the show explored the lives of ancient cave dwellers through the lens of a modern lifestyle, with bird beaks acting as phonograph needles, elephant trunks as vacuum [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Turning the television world flat on its head, The Flintstones became the first animated hit series in prime time history. Set in the Stone Age town of Bedrock, the show explored the lives of ancient cave dwellers through the lens of a modern lifestyle, with bird beaks acting as phonograph needles, elephant trunks as vacuum cleaners, and fireflies as light bulbs. With its measured use of top-grade humor and clever visuals, The Flintstones became an instant smash hit &#8211; spawning decades of syndicated re-runs, spin-offs, and thousands of derivative products&#8230;</p>
<p>Loosely modeled after the hit show The Honeymooners, The Flintstones follows the lives of burly loudmouth Fred Flintstone (who has a heart of gold) and his wife Wilma (who puts up with him). The couple lives next door to best friends Barney and Betty Rubble, and they have a dog (a dinosaur) named Dino to keep them company. Following in the footsteps of shows such as I Love Lucy, the show&#8217;s characters are always inventing hair-brained schemes, attempting to cover up little white lies, or engaging in some other form of behavior bound to get them in trouble. The Flintstones also features numerous cameo appearances parodying famous personalities from the early-sixties&#8230; In the show&#8217;s later years, each couple would add a child to the mix with Fred &#038; Wilma having Pebbles (a little girl) and Barney &#038; Betty adopting Bamm-Bamm (a little boy)&#8230;</p>
<p>The Flintstones DVD features a number of hilarious episodes including the season premiere &#8220;The Flintstone Flyer&#8221; in which Fred pretends to be sick so he and Barney can get out of going to the opera with Wilma and Betty. Escaping in their Stone Age helicopter, the two go bowling, but it isn&#8217;t long before Barney spills the beans on what they really did&#8230; Other notable episodes from Season 1 include &#8220;The Swimming Pool&#8221; in which Fred and Barney build a pool together only to have it strain their friendship, and &#8220;Hollyrock, Here I Come&#8221; in which Betty and Wilma win a trip to Hollyrock as a television game show prize&#8230;</p>
<p>Below is a list of episodes included on The Flintstones (Season 1) DVD:</p>
<p>Episode 1 (The Flintstone Flyer) Air Date: 09-30-1960<br />
 Episode 2 (Hot Lips Hannigan) Air Date: 10-07-1960<br />
 Episode 3 (The Swimming Pool) Air Date: 10-14-1960<br />
 Episode 4 (No Help Wanted) Air Date: 10-21-1960<br />
 Episode 5 (The Split Personality) Air Date: 10-28-1960<br />
 Episode 6 (The Monster from the Tar Pits) Air Date: 11-04-1960<br />
 Episode 7 (The Babysitters) Air Date: 11-11-1960<br />
 Episode 8 (At the Races) Air Date: 11-18-1960<br />
 Episode 9 (The Engagement Ring) Air Date: 11-25-1960<br />
 Episode 10 (Hollyrock, Here I Come) Air Date: 12-02-1960<br />
 Episode 11 (The Golf Champion) Air Date: 12-09-1960<br />
 Episode 12 (The Sweepstakes Ticket) Air Date: 12-16-1960<br />
 Episode 13 (The Drive-in) Air Date: 12-23-1960<br />
 Episode 14 (The Prowler) Air Date: 12-30-1960<br />
 Episode 15 (The Girls Night Out) Air Date: 01-06-1961<br />
 Episode 16 (Arthur Quarry&#8217;s Dance Class) Air Date: 01-13-1961<br />
 Episode 17 (The Big Bank Robbery) Air Date: 01-20-1961<br />
 Episode 18 (The Snorkasaurus Hunter) Air Date: 01-27-1961<br />
 Episode 19 (The Hot Piano) Air Date: 02-03-1961<br />
 Episode 20 (The Hypnotist) Air Date: 02-10-1961<br />
 Episode 21 (Love Letters on the Rocks) Air Date: 02-17-1961<br />
 Episode 22 (The Tycoon) Air Date: 02-24-1961<br />
 Episode 23 (The Astra&#8217; Nuts) Air Date: 03-04-1961<br />
 Episode 24 (The Long, Long Weekend) Air Date: 03-10-1961<br />
 Episode 25 (In the Dough) Air Date: 03-17-1961<br />
 Episode 26 (The Good Scout) Air Date: 03-24-1961<br />
 Episode 27 (Rooms for Rent) Air Date: 03-31-1961<br />
 Episode 28 (Fred Flintstone: Before and After) Air Date: 04-07-1961</p>
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<p><b>About the Author</b></p>
<p>Britt Gillette is author of The DVD Report, a blog where you can find more reviews like this one of The Flintstones (DVD).</p>
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		<title>Star Trek: The Next Generation (Season 5) DVD Review</title>
		<link>http://www.compu-poker.com/archives/2008/12/23/star-trek-the-next-generation-season-5-dvd-review/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Dec 2008 04:43:31 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Nominated for 58 Emmys, including one for Outstanding Drama Series, Star Trek: The Next Generation fulfilled all the potential and promise anticipated of a long-awaited successor to the original 1960s series: Star Trek. Created by a former L.A. police officer, Gene Roddenberry, the Star Trek TV series morphed into a franchise famous for the unprecedented [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Nominated for 58 Emmys, including one for Outstanding Drama Series, Star Trek: The Next Generation fulfilled all the potential and promise anticipated of a long-awaited successor to the original 1960s series: Star Trek. Created by a former L.A. police officer, Gene Roddenberry, the Star Trek TV series morphed into a franchise famous for the unprecedented fanatical devotion of its audience. Lasting only three seasons during its original network run, Star Trek struck gold with its syndicated reruns, launching a number of motion pictures featuring the original cast as well as novels, comic books, collectibles, and reams of Star Trek-related memorabilia. Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987) became the first TV series to follow on the heels of the original, and its success would spark the creation of three additional series &#8211; Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (1993), Star Trek: Voyager (1995), and Star Trek: Enterprise (2001). But The Next Generation remained the most popular spin-off. Despite new characters and new episodes, the mission remained the same as before &#8211; &#8220;to boldly go where no man has gone before&#8230;&#8221; And to continue the rich tradition of the Star Trek name &#8211; a mission Star Trek: The Next Generation accomplishes with relative ease&#8230;</p>
<p>Star Trek: The Next Generation takes place in the 24th Century, almost one-hundred years after Captain Kirk&#8217;s crew set out to explore strange new worlds. Capt. Jean-Luc Picard (Patrick Stewart &#8211; I Claudius) commands the USS Enterprise-D and its diverse crew of humans, cyborgs, and varying life forms. Accompanying him on his voyage is an entirely new cast of passengers and crew including Commander William T. Riker (Jonathan Frakes &#8211; North &#038; South), Lt. Commander Data (Brent Spiner), Lt. Commander Geordi La Forge (LeVar Burton), Lt. Tasha Yar (Denise Crosby), Lt. Worf (Michael Dorn), Dr. Beverly Crusher (Gates McFadden), and her son Ensign Wesley Crusher (Wil Wheaton)&#8230; Together, they struggle against numerous obstacles to carry out the mission of the USS Enterprise: &#8220;To explore strange new worlds&#8230; To seek out new life; new civilizations&#8230; To boldly go where no one has gone before!&#8221; This pioneering attitude, coupled with imaginative and brilliantly-produced alien worlds, provides Star Trek with its unique allure and special place within American pop culture &#8211; especially those episodes from the original series, widely regarded as the most popular of the Star Trek franchise&#8230;</p>
<p>The Star Trek: The Next Generation (Season 5) DVD features a number of exciting episodes including the season premiere &#8220;Redemption&#8221; in which Capt. Picard postulates that the Romulans are behind the recent outbreak of civil war within the Klingon Empire, and he must persuade the Federation to intervene before the war annihilates the Klingon Empire and cripples their ally&#8230; Other notable episodes from Season 5 include &#8220;A Matter of Time&#8221; in which a man who claims to be from the future visits the USS Enterprise, and &#8220;The First Duty&#8221; in which the performance of an outlawed and dangerous maneuver by Starfleet Academy cadets leads to a scandal, with Wesley caught in the middle&#8230;</p>
<p>Below is a list of episodes included on the Star Trek: The Next Generation (Season 5) DVD:</p>
<p>Episode 101 (Redemption) Air Date: 09-23-1991<br />
 Episode 102 (Darmok) Air Date: 09-30-1991<br />
 Episode 103 (Ensign Ro) Air Date: 10-07-1991<br />
 Episode 104 (Silicon Avatar) Air Date: 10-14-1991<br />
 Episode 105 (Disaster) Air Date: 10-21-1991<br />
 Episode 106 (The Game) Air Date: 10-28-1991<br />
 Episode 107 (Unification: Part 1) Air Date: 11-04-1991<br />
 Episode 108 (Unification: Part 2) Air Date: 11-11-1991<br />
 Episode 109 (A Matter of Time) Air Date: 11-18-1991<br />
 Episode 110 (New Ground) Air Date: 01-06-1992<br />
 Episode 111 (Hero Worship) Air Date: 01-27-1992<br />
 Episode 112 (Violations) Air Date: 02-03-1992<br />
 Episode 113 (The Masterpiece Society) Air Date: 02-10-1992<br />
 Episode 114 (Conundrum) Air Date: 02-17-1992<br />
 Episode 115 (Power Play) Air Date: 02-24-1992<br />
 Episode 116 (Ethics) Air Date: 03-02-1992<br />
 Episode 117 (The Outcast) Air Date: 03-16-1992<br />
 Episode 118 (Cause and Effect) Air Date: 03-23-1992<br />
 Episode 119 (The First Duty) Air Date: 03-30-1992<br />
 Episode 120 (Cost of Living) Air Date: 04-20-1992<br />
 Episode 121 (The Perfect Mate) Air Date: 04-27-1992<br />
 Episode 122 (Imaginary Friend) Air Date: 05-04-1992<br />
 Episode 123 (I, Borg) Air Date: 05-11-1992<br />
 Episode 124 (The Next Phase) Air Date: 05-18-1992<br />
 Episode 125 (The Inner Light) Air Date: 06-01-1992<br />
 Episode 126 (Time&#8217;s Arrow) Air Date: 06-15-1992</p>
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<p><b>About the Author</b></p>
<p>Britt Gillette is author of The DVD Report, a blog where you can find more reviews like this one of the Star Trek: The Next Generation (Season 5) DVD.</p>
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