This film is no exception, though the chief protagonist himself manages to elude all sense of apprehension. Blissful, in a home to die for, Christmas, doglike, has no idea of endings; unlike the humans around him he's innocent of grim possibilities. He's come to his happy home on a Kansas farm because the McCray family's 20-year-old son, Todd (Noel Fisher), has heard that the local shelter is looking for families to take dogs home for the Christmas holiday. The idea—to give them some respite from their cages and, with any luck, entice their hosts to give them a permanent home. The developmentally challenged Todd, devoted to animals, has his heart set on the project—on a dog, that is: the one presence his otherwise understanding father, George (Bruce Greenwood), has always banned from the household.
Still, with the help of his mother, Mary Ann (Linda Emond), Todd prevails—on the strict condition, laid down by his father, that the dog named Christmas be returned to the shelter the day after the holiday. Thereby hangs the bare-bones plot of a far more complicated story of pain and remembrance. Todd's father is a Vietnam War veteran, scarred by shrapnel, who found love and a sustaining marriage with Mary Ann—a role of startling power in Ms. Emond's eloquent portrayal. Middle aged and maternal, but still with a glow about her, she's the family force of reason, affection and, for a second or two, pure fury—at George's intransigent rationalizing about his attitudes regarding the dog. She knows the reasons go deeper than he'll allow, and so, soon enough, do we.
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None of that detracts from the impact of this enchanting film, or from the sterling performances of Messrs. Greenwood and Fisher. Not to mention that of the 10-year-old yellow Lab, Johnny, a hero incapable of a false note, here in his first starring role.
***
In ABC's "Castle" (Mondays, 10-11 p.m. EST), there are no heart-stirring characters to speak of and also no end of false notes—the kind churned out incessantly, in the form of dialogue intended to be bracing fun between competitors of the opposite sex, on too many TV series to count. Nevertheless, "Castle," now in its second season, has proved a reliable diversion—not for its wit, but for the enlivening crackle of electricity between the two chief actors in this fanciful police procedural. Mystery novelist Rick Castle (Nathan Fillion) has taken happily to the role of adviser-sleuth to New York homicide detectives, and particularly to the opportunity for connection with conspicuously beautiful Detective Kate Beckett (Stana Katic).The role came his way, it was explained in season one, when it became clear that Rick's works had inspired a copycat serial killer. "It's like a badge of honor," one of his buddies enthusiastically notes, "to have copycat killers follow your novel." That should give a sense of the tone. It can be said of "Castle"—a series with echoes of "Murder, She Wrote" and "Moonlighting"—that, at minimum, it goes down easily, with its faintly weird antic air and at least moderately unpredictable secondary characters, notably Rick's mother, Martha Rodgers (Susan Sullivan), a still-seductive Broadway has-been, and his daughter, Alexis (Molly C. Quinn)—one of the few under-20 TV offspring who don't appear to need institutionalizing.
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