The Rockford Files: Punishment and Crime (TV Movie 1996) Poster

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8/10
Megan Dougherty is back
blanche-218 March 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Kathryn Harrold - who hadn't changed since she was on the show 15+ years previously - is back again as the blind psychiatrist Megan with whom Jim was involved at one time. She later married - someone else. When Jim sees her while he's out, he calls her. She's now divorced with two children. She's having a party for her dad (Richard Kiley) and invites him.

The big attraction here is a wonderful performance by Bryan Cranston as Megan's loser cousin. He is a talent agent who has taken on a Russian actress, failed with her career, and is now sought after by Russian mobsters. Megan is devoted to her cousin, and she at last finds out the reason.

A review I read complained bitterly about the presence of Megan, whom the reviewer felt led Jim on when she appeared on the show before. She did.

Megan is back to her old back and forth with Jim, having sex with him in a cabin and then talking about reconciling with her ex in Atlanta. At the end, we believe she's going to Atlanta and breaks up with Jim. Later, she calls and leaves a message that she's not going to Atlanta after all.

We don't know what happens, but he probably had learned his lesson. Like a lot of psychiatrists, she has issues.
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8/10
My favorite Rockford movie so far
hmoika11 November 2020
As I've said in reviews for later TV movies of Rockford, I'm watching these in reverse order.

Punishment and Crime is my favorite so far. I was always a fan of Rockford's relationship with Meghan Dougherty. Granted, it wasn't as warm as his friendship (and more) with Beth Davenport.

This is the TV movie that feels to be an honest-to-goodness version of the series itself. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
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8/10
One of the best Rockford movies
chlump26 May 2022
If there was ever a character that really undid Jim Rockford, it was Megan. This is an excellent installment in their complex relationship. It is anything but cut and dry. Megan is a mess and Rockford is a mess when she's around. But she is still a genuine heroine even given her all too understandable flaws.

I appreciate the well played complexities of her and her family's lives, the tie back to the tragedy that redefined her life and the very complex dynamics that resulted from that accident.

It is a sad and sobering story about good people that bad things have happened to and the human emotions that we are all subject to, whether we like it or not. We see an unconditional love side of Jim, and of Megan for her cousin, and the sacrifices people make for others, the yo-yoing between selfishness and selflessness we all go through.

This show really does some excellent character development, it doesn't have too much of the forced and slapstick relationship with Angel that was a little too prevalent in the movies, and it shows the hopeless lovesick puppy side of Jim Rockford. It really forced me to think about how I might handle such difficulties in life and be so grateful I haven't had to (knock on wood.)

Not perfect and there are some timing issues and slow moments, and Angel seems shoehorned in, but overall definitely worth a watch!
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10/10
Outstanding
educatingben23 August 2018
This Rockford come back is the best of the eight. It plays like a motion picture with a beginning, a middle, and an ending. You don't need to have been a Rockford fan or to have seen an episode of the original series to enjoy this teleplay.
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1/10
And the character of Megan continues and ends in her downturn
Thoraxe-the-Impaler5 September 2012
Warning: Spoilers
I"m sure the episode might have been fine if they didn't continue the blind girl's penchant for leading Rockford on.

I liked her in the two part episode that she debuted in. She wasn't irritating and I was glad of that because I've never been a fan of Beth Davenport.

In her second episode that she starred in, I really started to dislike her. She and Rockford kept their relationship open but she never tells him that she's going to get married to someone else until after she got engaged. Now there's just something that doesn't sit right with me.

And now here comes this movie. I'm guessing her fiancé or whoever she married realized what an emotionally manipulative cow she was before he finally divorced her. And so she screws Rockford in the cabin, knowing he had lingering feelings and then a few scenes later tells him that she's going to remarry the poor sap that she married in the first place.

Of all the characters I wanted to see an ending for, this brat wasn't it.
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3/10
Not the best of the TV movies...
NellsFlickers11 June 2019
I never liked any of the Rockford episodes involving a love interest of any kind for Rockford. The same goes for the later TV movies. Less than stellar acting by the leading lady, weak plot, slow going. If you decide to skip any of the TV movies, skip this one.
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2/10
Unlikeable
feindlicheubernahme12 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I've been very disappointed with the Rockford films so far. Of course, I didn't expect the quality of the original series - you never get that when they come back years later - but I did expect a certain basic standard, which I don't think has been reached. Punishment and Crime definitely does nothing to change that opinion.

I'm one of those who already didn't appreciate Megan after the way she behaved in the original series. Now she comes back and does it all over again. It's just a tired rehash. By the way, I only saw that episode recently so I still remember how surprised I was when, after she'd scolded Jeffrey for coming by without first phoning her and then basically thrown him out to be alone with Jim, we found out that she was going to marry him! Honestly? If I were Jeffrey I would have demanded to know why I had to make an appointment to see the woman I was going to wed in a month's time. And then she went on to sleep with Jim later on in the same episode. Again, a month before her wedding! Not a likeable character.

Speaking of unlikeable characters, thank God Angel only has a short amount of screen time. I couldn't stand him in the series, but in the films they've taken his antics to ridiculous heights. Remember the one where he was a fake preacher, conning scores of believers out of their cash and giving sick and disabled people false hope he could cure them? It was all, as ever, treated as a joke, with the usual gentle telling-offs from Jim. Sorry, I have a sense of humour but I just don't find that funny. Not in real life, not on TV.

Even Dennis acts like a jerk in two scenes. In the first, in the hospital after Molly's rape, he speaks exclusively to Rockford about her condition and what's happened to her, totally ignoring Patrick, her boyfriend, who's standing right there and is obviously the person he should talk to first. In the second, he calls Jim into his office to tell him that Patrick has been murdered, leaving Megan, Patrick's cousin who, again, should be the first to know, waiting outside. I know Jim is the lead character and the story revolves around him, but come on. No policeman - in fact, no one with an ounce of empathy or common sense - would shut out victims' nearest and dearest in that way and give all their information to a private detective.

As for the main storyline, the basic idea is good but it's spoiled by a level of nastiness and brutality that I wouldn't expect from a Rockford episode or film. The rape of Molly is a totally unnecessary element - we understand already that the Russian mafia is evil. Likewise, the torture scene in the music studio, where Megan risks ending up deaf-blind. Ditto for the golf-club-to-the-feet interrogation. The standard Rockford beatings would have fully sufficed for plot needs and would have been in keeping with the show's normal violence levels.
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