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Three men break into a
young boys home. In a
moment of panic he
shoots and kills two of
them. But the terror
isn't over for the
11-year-old Chris
Holland. Its just
beginning. The life of
an American family is
shattered in this
dramatic true story of a
"home alone" killing
that chronicles a boys
loss of innocence when
he is swept into
adulthood at the squeeze
of a trigger. Forced to
confront emotions that
he is too young to
understand, Chris
Holland becomes torn
between his uneasy
status as a national
hero and the shocking
reality of the killing.
But an even more tense
situation arises as the
surviving burglar
initiates a vengeful
campaign of terror
against Chris's family.
Although a fact-based
drama, "Armed &
Innocent" contains
barely a shred of
credibility. Danielle
Hill's script is fraught
with concocted scenarios
and cookie-cutter
characters. Audiences
are likely to either
tune out after the first
reel or shout
instructions to the
characters, who seem
incapable of making
sensible choices.
When burglars break into
a house located in
idyllic suburbia, the
home's sole occupant,
11-year old Chris
(Andrew Starnes), is
forced to defend his
homestead from the
intruders. He kills two,
but a third bad guy
flees, only to return in
show's final moments,
necessitating the
ubiquitous 11th-hour
arrival of the local calvary.
Stereotypical characters
abound, from
greasy-haired, unshaven
criminals to the
overworked sheriff with
a Southern accent (Jim
Haynie), who can't find
the fugitive despite the
criminal's popping up at
Chris' school and
driving around town in a
beat-up Cutlass.
Reporters are portrayed
as idiotic vultures
incapable of independent
thought who constantly
try to blame the boy for
society's ills. And the
aw-shucks townsfolk
almost hold a parade to
honor Chris for
accelerating the
inevitable demise of the
miscreants.
Fortunately for the town
and the family, Chris'
mom, Patsy (Kate
Jackson), is able to
keep her head when
everyone else is losing
theirs. She's apparently
the only adult sensitive
enough to realize her
son has been traumatized
by the shooting
regardless of outward
appearances to the
contrary.
While suburban Everyman
Bobby Lee (Gerald
McRaney), Chris' blue
collar dad, is touting
his son's good deed,
Patsy turns to neighbor
and coincidentally
Vietnam vet Lonnie
(Cotter Smith) to get
the scoop on
post-traumatic stress
disorder, from which
Lonnie and Patsy
eventually agree that
Chris is suffering. Patsy
sparks a row between the
couple and the family
infighting quickly grows
tiresome, as they
exorcise their own
demons through
meaningless and repeated
confrontations.
The unsatisfying ending
only serves to highlight
program's numerous
shortcomings.
Director Jack Bender can
do little to help Hill's
characters, apparently
preferring to let the
leads fall back on
previous incarnations as
series regulars: McRaney
is little more than a
Southern Rick Simon, and
Jackson reprises her
Angel-era always-knowing
stance.
Armed and Innocent
is
available only on VHS.
It hasn't been yet
released on
DVD. You can order it
online or easily track
it on Ebay.
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