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Dr. Cook's Garden
A young doctor returns to his New England home town after a long absence. He visits with the town's kindly old physician, Dr. Cook, a man he has admired since childhood. However, he soon finds out that the old doctor isn't quite what he seems to be, and the young doctor finds his life in danger.
Release : | 1971 |
Rating : | 7.1 |
Studio : | Paramount Television Studios, |
Crew : | Art Direction, Set Decoration, |
Cast : | Bing Crosby Frank Converse Blythe Danner Barnard Hughes Bethel Leslie |
Genre : | Drama Thriller TV Movie |
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Thanks for the memories!
Sick Product of a Sick System
Don't listen to the negative reviews
This story has more twists and turns than a second-rate soap opera.
A country doctor playing God in order to keep his quaint New England town practically perfect becomes an unforgettable late acting role for Bing Crosby who with a very trim figure and an imposing beard seems to be playing a part that might have fit Boris Karloff back in the 1930's or 40's. At times, he even resembles his old singing and dancing partner, Fred Astaire ("Holiday Inn"/"Blue Skies"), but until you hear his speaking voice, it's difficult to even realize that it is Bing Crosby, the all-American great crooner who dominated the pop charts in the 1930's and introduced many classic American songs. There's no singing for Crosby here, but his character better be singing "Nearer My God to Thee" as he deals with his conscience in taking the lives of some of the town's less likable citizens. As mentor to a young medical student (Frank Converse), he is thrilled with Converse returns for a visit, but it will be very difficult for both of them when Converse begins to investigate the sudden deaths of various patient's of Crosby's, including the town's recently deceased wealthy miser who wouldn't lift a finger to do anything to improve their community.A very beautiful Blythe Danner is an old classmate of Converse's, and the daughter of Crosby's latest patient/victim, an old man whose breathing problems lead to an obvious mercy killing. Converse sneaks into Dr. Cook's files and finds out the truth about his one letter reference system, meaning one thing allegedly for the beautiful flowery plants in his gorgeous garden, and another thing for his patients. Crosby utilizes his customary charm to make the character likable, but he holds back in other areas to give the character a little bit of sinister mystery which when it explodes reveals this character to be quite diabolical in a passive/aggressive manipulative way. Little bits of detail show other hypocrisies of small town living, especially a rather absurd church sermon where the preacher utilizes a rather judgmental comparison of other towns to this one, calling it practically perfect. But like Peyton Place, beautiful in the opening credits, all that glitters isn't always gladiolas, and like King's Row (another film where a doctor with a dark secret mentored a younger man), it is not necessarily the best place to raise your children, as the town sign in "King's Row" sign, that is, until a new doctor comes in to treat their patients correctly.
A very popular series of the time was 'Marcus Welby' where the all wise, all knowing doctor educated his patients out of their pride, prejudice, and folly in resisting his counsel. The doctor is wise. The doctor is all knowing. The doctor is only here to help. 1971, and indeed, the era of the Warren Court represented a high water mark of the notion that we can have a perfect society if we just turn loose experts and therapists guided by the social sciences on our problems. The intelligentsia then were absolutely certain of the ability of the social sciences to rehabilitate all criminals, to end poverty, to end racial inequality, to make a perfect land. All we had to do was use the tools of the social sciences to fix the 'root causes'.This film was a marvelous criticism of that zeitgeist. Dr Cook is the ultimate therapist. He is only there to help.
I'm sure that this was not intended to be Bing Crosby's swan song to feature films, but that's what it turned out to be.Crosby is cast against type here. He's the kindly old country doctor in this story who lives and practices in a Norman Rockwell like small town. But Crosby is the town's terrible secret. Unbeknownst to the residents, old Doctor Cook has been euthanizing those he feels have no positive contribution to make. The old mostly, but even younger ones like a crippled child whose medical bills are breaking his parent's finances. A young colleague, Frank Converse, discovers what he's doing and the rest you have to see for yourself.It's an interesting vehicle for a man who was known as THE Catholic entertainer. And it has Bing's one and only screen death in his career. Solid acting by Bing and the cast.
One of the amazing films of the ABC Tuesday Night at the Movies, Bing Crosby starts out as a Kervorkian style doctor but crosses the line as he begins to make judgments on who in his small town must live or die based on their conduct. Chilling and foretelling.