Erin meets a painter who wants to paint her portrait. He is troubled by events he saw in Paris.Erin meets a painter who wants to paint her portrait. He is troubled by events he saw in Paris.Erin meets a painter who wants to paint her portrait. He is troubled by events he saw in Paris.
Photos
Judy Norton
- Mary Ellen Walton
- (as Judy Norton-Taylor)
Earl Hamner Jr.
- The Narrator
- (voice)
- (as Earl Hamner)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- GoofsWonder how Derek's house didn't burn down after everyone walked out at the end leaving 75 candles still burning.
- Quotes
Narrator: [narration as John 'John Boy' Walton, Jr. reading from his journal] In the fall of 1941 the war raging in Europe still seemed remote to most people on Waltons Mountain. But its horrors were growing every day. Occasionally someone would bring the war home to our family by touching our lives in a personal and disturbing way.
- SoundtracksPlaisir d'Amour
Music by Jean-Paul-Égide Martini
Lyrics by Jean-Pierre Claris de Florian
Performed by Jon Walmsley and Jared Martin
Featured review
Interesting because it's unusual, but not one of the best,
I am a viewer who appreciates the Waltons highly, but I fully admit that there are some weak episodes. This episode is somewhat interesting because it is unusual compared to other Waltons episodes. It deals with a one-shot character, an artist who is a complex and disturbing man. He might well be a tortured artist in the usual sense. But he is also traumatized by war ... and ultimately a bit dangerous. The episode has an eerie foreboding tone.
There's no reason such a character couldn't appear in the Waltons' Mountains community. I can respect that the creative team was stretching to do something innovative. But they didn't quite pull it off successfully. This episode lacks the authenticity of the more down-to-earth drama that characterized most earlier seasons.
It is at least somewhat interesting to have an episode that spotlights Erin. Erin's distinguishing mark (at least in later episodes) of being "the pretty one" figures greatly in this episode. She is indeed attractive, in a refreshingly wholesome way. But I never could quite buy into her supposedly being a standout beauty. It always seemed to me like a weak attempt by the writers to give Erin some distinguishing characteristic, as all the other siblings had theirs.
But there is one thing I will praise this episode for. We see several examples of the paintings created by the artist character. I thought they were quite striking, especially the final wall mural that contained Erin. I might even play selected parts of the episode on DVD some time just to see those again. I would be curious as to what the story might be as to who actually painted them, and how the crew obtained them.
Nine seasons of The Waltons were produced, and most of it was excellent. Season 7 has some very good episodes. It also had weak ones (like this one) that mark the start of a gradual descent of quality into the unfortunately very mediocre seasons 8 and 9.
My final take: this episode has some good points. But if you're up watching some good episodes of The Waltons, you can do a lot better than this.
There's no reason such a character couldn't appear in the Waltons' Mountains community. I can respect that the creative team was stretching to do something innovative. But they didn't quite pull it off successfully. This episode lacks the authenticity of the more down-to-earth drama that characterized most earlier seasons.
It is at least somewhat interesting to have an episode that spotlights Erin. Erin's distinguishing mark (at least in later episodes) of being "the pretty one" figures greatly in this episode. She is indeed attractive, in a refreshingly wholesome way. But I never could quite buy into her supposedly being a standout beauty. It always seemed to me like a weak attempt by the writers to give Erin some distinguishing characteristic, as all the other siblings had theirs.
But there is one thing I will praise this episode for. We see several examples of the paintings created by the artist character. I thought they were quite striking, especially the final wall mural that contained Erin. I might even play selected parts of the episode on DVD some time just to see those again. I would be curious as to what the story might be as to who actually painted them, and how the crew obtained them.
Nine seasons of The Waltons were produced, and most of it was excellent. Season 7 has some very good episodes. It also had weak ones (like this one) that mark the start of a gradual descent of quality into the unfortunately very mediocre seasons 8 and 9.
My final take: this episode has some good points. But if you're up watching some good episodes of The Waltons, you can do a lot better than this.
helpful•60
- fentress
- Jun 21, 2021
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content