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  1. Dorothy Salisbury Davis. Novel. James Costigan. Writer. When Father Joseph Hennessey visits the home of one of his parishioners to offer last rights,he becomes embroiled in a plot which ultimately shakes his faith to its very foundation. Intrigued by the dying man's mention of "Nim," and fascinated by the man's saintly demeanor, Father Joseph's ...

  2. Production. The script is based on the novel Where the Dark Streets Go by Dorothy Salisbury Davis. [3] Reception. Mike Duffy from the Detroit Free Press praised the movie as "an impressive cut above the average TV movie", describing it as an "arresting drama" and giving it 3 stars, believing that it was a lot better than how it was portrayed in commercials. [2]

  3. Broken Vows: Regia di Jud Taylor. Con Tommy Lee Jones, Annette O'Toole, M. Emmet Walsh, Milo O'Shea. A ghetto priest has doubts about his calling and when he gives the last rites to a murder victim, he decides to help the man's girlfriend find his killers.

  4. Jud Taylor. Director. Dorothy Salisbury Davis. Novel. James Costigan. Writer. When Father Joseph Hennessey visits the home of one of his parishioners to offer last rights,he becomes embroiled in a plot which ultimately shakes his faith to its very foundation. Intrigued by the dying man's mention of "Nim," and fascinated by the man's saintly ...

  5. The Dead is a 1987 drama film directed by John Huston, written by his son Tony Huston, and starring his daughter Anjelica Huston. It is an adaptation of the short story of the same name by James Joyce, which was first published in 1914 as the last story in Dubliners. An international co-production between the United Kingdom, the United States ...

  6. The film moves quietly, the tension provided by Jones' questing intelligence and the sense he gives that Joe is awake and aware for the first time in years. Jones is supported by a fine cast, especially Annette O'Toole as the good-humored and decent, if slightly kooky, artist, and also M. Emmett Walsh, Frances Fisher, Milo O'Shea, David Groh, and Jean de Baer.