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Surviving: A Family in Crisis (also known simply as Surviving, and later released on VHS as Tragedy) is a 1985 ABC television film.Directed by Warris Hussein and starring Zach Galligan, Molly Ringwald, and River Phoenix, the film is described as a modern-day Romeo & Juliet story that examines the tragedy of teen suicide, and the loved ones left behind to pick up the pieces.
Don, now suspicious of Tyler's behavior, takes him camping. To explain the evidence Tyler had uncovered, Don says that the Clovehitch Killer was Tyler's vegetative uncle Rudy, who became paralyzed after the guilt drove him to a suicide attempt. Don says he kept the evidence in hopes of one day giving it to the victims' families.
P-Dog is eventually killed in the Season 1 finale by Michigan National Guardsmen. Aidan Gillen as Milo Sunter (seasons 1–3), a Russian mobster who is spending life in prison after killing guards during an armored car robbery. Kyle Chandler as Mitchell "Mitch" McLusky (season 1), the oldest of the McLusky brothers. Mitch took over the role of ...
The disturbing true story of a North Carolina man who impregnated his biological daughter and then killed her, her adoptive father and his own infant son in a triple-murder-suicide is being ...
However, this plan backfires: Waheed's father, Saeed Ahmed Abdullah, a billionaire Saudi businessman and a jihadist himself, learns that Rapp has "killed" his son. Saeed beseeches Saudi Prince Muhammed bin Rashid for help.
A former Playboy model killed herself and her 7-year-old son after jumping from a hotel in Midtown New York City on Friday morning. The New York Post reports that 47-year-old Stephanie Adams ...
Prosecutors claim that Clancy planned the murders of her three children — daughter, Cora, 5, and sons Dawson, 3 and Callan, 8 — when she strangled them with exercise bands in the basement of ...
Far from being luridly entertaining, the movie repulses with oppressive details of the father’s acts, shown in flashback." [2] John J. O'Connor of The New York Times wrote, "While powerful in its best moments, "Ultimate Betrayal" is a touch too schematic in construction. If one of the sisters gets a "big scene," the three others are certain ...