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A Walton Thanksgiving Reunion (1993) Online

A Walton Thanksgiving Reunion (1993) Online
Original Title :
A Walton Thanksgiving Reunion
Genre :
Movie / Drama / Family
Year :
1993
Directror :
Harry Harris
Cast :
Richard Thomas,Ralph Waite,Michael Learned
Writer :
Earl Hamner Jr.,Claire Whitaker
Type :
Movie
Time :
2h
Rating :
7.5/10
A Walton Thanksgiving Reunion (1993) Online

Fourth Waltons reunion TV movie is now set in the 1960s which has John-Boy still living in New York, trying to persuade his fiancée to marry him. Meanwhile, Ben and Cindy's daughter, Virginia, has died and Cindy is finding life very lonely without her. She tells Ben that she would dearly love to adopt another baby, but Ben feels that it is not a good idea. Also Ben is arguing with his father about their lumber company for he wants to buy a new truck, but John keeps insisting that they can't afford it. Elsewhere, Erin now has three children and is separated from Paul. Her decision to start seeing another man causes some indignation among the other Walton family members. Ike and Corabeth become grandparents when Aimee has a little baby daughter, while Elizabeth returns from Europe and reunites with Drew, her old beau.
Cast overview, first billed only:
Richard Thomas Richard Thomas - John-Boy Walton
Ralph Waite Ralph Waite - John Walton
Michael Learned Michael Learned - Olivia Walton
Ellen Corby Ellen Corby - Grandma Walton
Jon Walmsley Jon Walmsley - Jason Walton
Judy Norton Judy Norton - Mary Ellen Walton (as Judy Norton-Taylor)
Eric Scott Eric Scott - Ben Walton
David W. Harper David W. Harper - Jim-Bob Walton
Kami Cotler Kami Cotler - Elizabeth Walton
Joe Conley Joe Conley - Ike
Ronnie Claire Edwards Ronnie Claire Edwards - Corabeth Walton
Tony Becker Tony Becker - Drew
Steven Culp Steven Culp - Jeff Dulaney
Lisa Harrison Lisa Harrison - Toni Walton
Kate McNeil Kate McNeil - Janet Gilchrist

After a flashback from the show where John is talking to Grandpa, John states that Grandpa has been gone 15 years. This movie is set in 1963, which would mean that Grandpa died in 1948. However, in the series, Grandpa died in 1941.

This - the 4th Walton reunion TV movie following the series' cancellation - is also the first to feature Richard Thomas recreating his original role of John Boy.

The film takes place in November 1963.

The film was broadcast the day before the 30th anniversary of the assassination of U.S. President John F. Kennedy.

Final directorial effort for Harry Harris.


User reviews

Armin

Armin

This is one of the better TV-movie reunions, and better than most of the 80s "Walton" reunions that were done the year following the original series' cancellation. Unlike the earlier sequels, virtually the entire cast is present here, with a very well-preserved Richard Thomas returning as John-Boy, and Michael Learned back as family matriarch Olivia, who has recovered from the tuberculosis that kept her sidelined during the series' later years. Even a very frail-looking Grandma is present, even though her portrayer, Ellen Corby, suffered a massive stroke in the middle of the series' run.

The storyline, which deals with the Walton family's reaction to JFK's assasination, tends to be a little maudlin, and it's set about eight years too far in the future to jibe with the series' timeline. And a few minor characters are either missing, like Mary Ellen's husband, Jonesy, or altogether unmentioned, like Mary Ellen's son John Curtis. But what makes this fun is the presence of the original cast, plus cameos from all sorts of recurring characters from the series (something most reunions never bother to do). Keep your eyes peeled for appearances by storekeepers Ike and Corabeth, their daughter Aimee, neighbor Verdie Foster, town idiot Yancy Tucker, Aunt Rose, Elizabeth's boyfriend Drew, and, best of all, unwitting moonshiners Emily and Mamie Baldwin.
Jaiarton

Jaiarton

I faithfully watched the Waltons growing up every Thursday night. I was excited when I heard these movies would be airing in the 1990's. I have to say I was very disappointed with the reunion movies. The Thanksgiving movie is not accurate in r/t original series. John Curtis is not mentioned--only other children Mary Ellen had (in one of the post series movies in the 80's--Mary Ellen was told she could not have children). Her husband was not there. Erin was now divorced. Where was Ben's son that was born in post series movies in 80's--named Charlie? It would've been nice if they had picked writers that actually knew what went on in the 9 year series. A big disappointment. The only redeeming quality was the return of the wonderful Richard Thomas to the role of John Boy.
Kale

Kale

This was a reunion movie of the Walton's Mountain television show of the 70's. It was great to see Richard Thomas return to his role of John Boy. I thoroughly enjoyed the series as a child in the 70's. However, the movie is not the series. The writers have changed the show to make it fit into the politically correct world of today. It has Erin separated/divorced from her husband and other modern day overtures. There is no mention of John Curtis or of the youngest child of Ben. They seem to have forgotten them for this movie. However, loyal viewers of the original series will pick up on it. If you're looking for the same great television experience as was present in the series, you will be disappointed.
Malogamand

Malogamand

Recently, I watched the 1995 reunion special that followed this one, "A Walton Wedding." It was quite bad, so I had little hope for this one. Originally, I had taped this special when it aired in 1993, but at that time, I had not seen the original series for ten years. Now, in 2004, I am avidly watching the old re-runs on TVLand, so the comparison is immediate.

They got the mood right here, even if the set design and costuming left a lot to be desired. And, of course, there's the time-table debacle. Choosing 1963 is ludicrous, especially when John Walton (the father) comments that Grandpa has been dead for fifteen years. Since he died in 1940/41, the year would be 1955/56. (The reason it's uncertain...between seasons six and seven of the original series, they jumped forward a year, from Spring 1940 to Fall 1941, so Grandpa's death is not exact.) Regardless, for a series that held so close to a distinct time-line, this variance is annoying. As a previous poster stated, the grandchildren should be much older, as of course, should the original kids.

It is great to see the cameos, though Aimee Godsey's character is short-changed. Plus, where's Mary Ellen's 22 year-old son, John Curtis? Obviously, everyone should be ten years older than they are portrayed.

The house interior should be more updated. The exterior is not as authentic as the original, which burned down prior to this special. It is my understanding that they rebuilt it on the same spot.

The women's costuming is fairly accurate, but the men's hairstyles are way off. I didn't get a 1963 vibe.

Storywise, I'm disappointed with John-Boy's position, and you'd have expected the Walton lumber mill to have grown in 20 years. In the old series, Elizabeth was preoccupied with detectives, so I expected a different career for her. And what's up with Walton girls and marriage? Plus, why do Walton boys marry such shrews??

But, again, this is far better than the 1995 sequel, and the final 1997 special. Maybe they'll do one more, but I bet they'll set it in 1976, or some such crazy year, and further distort the reality.

I tried to contact the guy who runs the official Walton's web site, but he wasn't very hospitable. Two years ago, there was a rumor of another special being made, but it proved false.

Again, it is great to watch the original series on TVLand. It is my memory that season eight and nine left a lot to be desired, especially after "Olivia" left, and they replaced John-Boy.
blodrayne

blodrayne

I appreciated this movie very much. I enjoyed how they showed how much everyone had changed from the season. First they showed what they looked like in the series then what they looked like after the series. I was pleasantly surprised to see how much John Walton had changed since the series. He had such white hair and I think takes after his father Zeb Walton. I didn't know he made a mistake when he said "oh Pa. It's been 15 years and I miss you like it was yesterday." Then he says " I remember you once told me there's no pain like the one your kids can give you." I really took that to heart. I have to say I put my self in his place and could see where he was coming from. The mother look like she was getting tired of doing her role as Olivia Walton. Anyways, I really do hope they do a reunion movie again real soon. Thank you.
Bralore

Bralore

This had to be the worst "reunion of an old series" movie I have ever seen in my life. I was an avid watcher of the original series when I was a child, in the 1970s, and I kept with it until the series ended in the early 1980s. At the time, the farthest the series went was around the mid-1940s. I don't recall the series following through to the end of WWII, but it might have.

At that time, the older Walton kids were starting to marry and have families.

Now, here comes the reunion movie. It's 1963. And the Waltons are dragging their KIDS, YOUNG kids, home for the holidays. Hello? Are these kids made out of some material that only ages one year for every three?

Finally, dragging Ellen Corby out of the nursing home for this one was a mistake. I'd rather remember "Grandma" as she was, than to have her staggering, unable to speak, onto the set for this turkey.