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I always have a problem with the title of this episode. Starting the second word with a ‘p’ always has me wanting to follow ‘saving’ with ‘private’, but I guess that the title is alluding to the Tom Hanks-lead Word War II movie from 1998. Clever, if a little forced for my tastes.
A combination of the flashbacks including a rookie Detective Rush and the emotional elements around the deaths of a band of brothers (see what I did there?) establishes Saving Private Patrick Bubley as a Cold Case fan-favourite. In the present (as it was in 2005 when this was first broadcast) Lilly and the squad attend a multiple shooting. One of the victims is Luther Bubley, a younger brother of Vaughn or died in a similar shooting back in 1999. That case was one Lilly’s first as a homicide cop, so we get to see her on the case in 1999. Mother Bubley has only one of her five sons left now. Can Lilly & Co. solve all four crimes and save young Patrick from a similar fate? Cue angst.
Spare yourself further heartbreak and checkout this youngest set of 231 HD (720p) Lilly screencaps from Saving Patrick Bubley now in the Gallery.
Somebody’s been naughty! (please let it be Lilly, please let it be Lilly 😉 )
I definitely can’t picture Lilly as a bad girl. No sir-eee Bob. Not me. Never. OK, maybe once… or twice 😮
In this, the second entry in the 2014 edition of KM UK’s Summer Of HD as voted for by you, we find ourselves in Detention.
The year was 1994 and a teenage boy killed himself by jumping off the school roof whilst he was supposed to be in detention with several other students. The discovery of an additional part of his suicide note casts doubt on his reasons. When the CC squad find the naughty four used the old ‘sit still while being recorded and loop the tape’ trick as almost pulled off by Keanu in Speed (and if he can do it, it can’t be that hard) it brings raises even more questions.
Any similarities to the Breakfast Club are purely deliberate.
184 HD (720p) new Lilly screencaps and 5 stills and promo photos are now in the Gallery.
Here we go, kicking off the 2014 edition of KM UK’s Summer Of HD 2014, where we bring you new, bigger screencaps from a specially selected season of Cold Case.
So, where to start? Rather than being all conventional and beginning at the beginning, we’re taking a more random approach this year, with you the reader able to vote for episodes you want to see next as we go along. Our first winner was Willkommen, episode 18 of this year’s chosen season: number 3.
And what most comes to mind when we think of Cold Case? That’s right: amateur actors… Only joking
Willkommen brings up the 2002 murder (the episode aired in May 2006) of an amateur actor who was taking part in a production of Cabaret. The cast list for the episode shows that the actors involved were anything but amateur. Several had previously done Cabaret on Broadway. The lead actor (aka, the victim) Adam Pascal was in Rent with our very own Tracie Thoms.
The episode ends with a funny scene as the squad meet up at a bar and Vera, inspired by the case, breaks into song.
173 Full HD (1080p) Lilly screencaps are now in the the Gallery.
Over the course of the years this website has been going I like to think that we’ve established a few traditions, albeit mostly based around other traditions such as birthdays. The hope is that they are fun things to look forward to.
One of the events we mark is tinged with a little sadness: the end of Cold Case.
May the 2nd in 2010, a Sunday of course, saw the final two episodes of Cold Case season 7 aired in the US. Shattered, the second of the pair, was the last ever episode in the 156 show run.
As I try to cover in the now monthly CCCC-up posts the cast have gone on to a variety of other things. This time last year we were waiting for news on Kathryn’s new show The Surgeon General and Tracie’s Gothica. Sadly, neither of those projects made it beyond the pilot stage. However, we know that they have all gone on to do plenty of other things. Just last year Kathryn produced two little projects of her own, and maybe we’ll see her in a movie or TV show soon too.
I’ve posted several times over the years about this post-series Murder, She Wrote TV movie getting airings in the UK. Up to now all those screenings have been on the sister ITV3 channel. On Saturday it returns to the big leagues on the main ITV1 channel. You’ll have to get up early (for a Saturday) to catch it though as it’s a 9:30 start.
In January there was big Murder news as it was reported that the US TV network NBC had decided not to go ahead with making a pilot of a remake after they’d had a re-think. Isn’t re-imagining the same as re-thinking? Oscar winner Octavia Spencer (The Help) was signed up as the lead in the re-imagining.
Original Murder, She Wrote star Angela Lansbury was said to be “terribly pleased and relieved” at the news of the project’s cancellation. Fans of the show seemed largely to be against the idea as well. A few weeks prior to that, Angela, who in 2014 celebrates 70 years in the business known as “show”, received the Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in the Queen’s New Year’s Honours list for her acting and charity work. She may have lived and worked in the US for much of her life but Angela is British by birth and holds dual citizenship so can use the attached title of Dame. Non-citizens can hold the honorary title and are only allowed put the letters after their name. 20 years ago Dame Angela was awarded the CBE (Commander of the Order of the British Empire), which has no title attached, so getting the DBE is a promotion. The equivalent to the DBE for men is the KBE, or Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire, which gets you a Sir.
A Story To Die For was the second of four TV movies made in the seven years after the series finished its amazing 12 season run of 264 episodes in 1996. (This post is brought to you by the numbers 2, 4, 7, 12, 264 and 1996, and the letters K, M and U ). As we know, earlier in her career Kathryn had a small role in one of the last episodes of the final season of the TV series. The episode title was What You Don’t Know Can Kill You and KM UK covered it HERE. Hopefully that episode will be broadcast on UK television at some point in the not to distant future.
Kathryn’s role in A Story To Die For is quite significant in its air time and importance to the plot. Details of the broadcast can be found on the Radio Times website.
Screencaps (such as the one above) from the film can be found in the Gallery.
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Welcome Welcome to Kathryn Morris UK, a website dedicated to the actress Kathryn Morris. Here you will find news, images, videos and information presented from the perspective of an English fan. This site has become the chief source of information for Kathryn's fans and fansites alike around the world.
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Shout Outs To… Those suffering in war-torn areas
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