"Ironside" Bubble, Bubble, Toil and Murder (TV Episode 1972) Poster

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9/10
Jodie Foster and Rod Serling share a scene. Very cool.
TopekaBob13 February 2022
Warning: Spoilers
The plot of this episode is interesting but you can spot the murderer pretty easily. That's irrelevant as we get to see a preteen Jodie Foster show what an fantastic actor she was at such a young age.

There's also the treat of Rod Serling in an acting role, only the second one he ever did. I don't know the backstory of why or how he took this role, but it's such a shame that he's on the screen for only a couple of minutes. It's Rod Serling, just his presence is riveting (like Foster) and you have to wonder why the role is so small. And he's good!! What a neat memory for Foster to have to have worked with Serling in that scene.

The Ironside/Star Trek connection continues: John Schuck, later of Star Trek VI and other Trek series, is the murdere (not hard to guess) and Paul Carr, Lt. Lee Kelso from the original series, appears.

The Ironside producers loved Carr: He was on six Ironsides (along with one Perry Mason).

A cool episode given all the neat actors in it.
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9/10
OK storyline, amazing cast!
pnolname3 July 2023
Ironside and company have to sort out the murder of an apartment building superintendent. A girl, Pip Barker, played by Jodie Foster, who thinks she's a witch, also thinks she killed the superintendent by wishing death upon him, but an autistic man, Billy Mahan, who pushed said superintendent shortly before his murder, quickly becomes the main suspect. Gleaning enough information to solve the case involves considerable interaction with Pip, who is driven by superstitions and phobias, and Billy, who can be temperamental. At one point, Don and Pip get into a priceless exchange in which she describes the superiority of white magic over black magic to his amusement and dismay, with the implications of his reaction going right over Pip's head. The scene takes place in a magic shop in which the salesman is played by a thinly disguised Rod Serling. In the end, the case is solved and the killer is appropriately processed, but along the way, we are treated to a convincing performance by Serling, as well as the regular cast, and amazing performances by both Foster and Lee Paul as Billy. Foster and Paul both have challenging roles and Paul's performance was so convincing that I looked up his biography to see if he was autistic himself (he wasn't). No doubt, the viewers in 1972 had little idea of what a prized combination of past and future greats they were about to behold, but it's obvious now.
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