Archie: To Riverdale and Back Again
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Archie: To Riverdale and Back Again | |
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Genre | Comedy |
Running time | 96 minutes (approx.) |
Director(s) | Dick Lowry |
Producer(s) | Graham Cottle |
Writer(s) | Evan Katz |
Starring | Christopher Rich Lauren Holly Karen Kopins Sam Whipple Gary Kroeger |
Music by | Mark Snow |
Country of origin | United States |
Language(s) | English |
Original channel | NBC |
Release date(s) | May 6, 1990 |
IMDb profile | |
All Movie Guide profile |
Archie: To Riverdale and Back Again (released on video as Archie: Return to Riverdale) was a live-action television movie produced by DiC which premiered on NBC in 1990.
The concept behind the movie was to combine the long-standing familiarity of Archie and the gang from the comics with adult issues. In this sense, it can be seen as being similar to other "updates" of family-friendly concepts for television such as The Bradys.
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[edit] Plot
Archie Andrews, fifteen years after graduating from Riverdale High, has become a successful lawyer and is getting ready to marry his fiancée, Pam, and move to "the big city." Before doing that, however, he returns home to Riverdale for his high school reunion.
Archie and company are all now in their early thirties, with the trials and tribulations one might expect to have happened to such a group over the years:
- Betty, a grade school teacher, is constantly bossed around by her crummy boyfriend, Robert.
- Veronica, having lived in France since graduation, has been married (and divorced) four times.
- Jughead, now a psychiatrist, is also a divorcé with a son, Jordan. Jughead carries emotional baggage that manifests itself in a terrible fear of women. (A running gag in the movie is Jughead's desperation to avoid seeing Big Ethel during his visit to Riverdale.)
- Moose and Midge have gotten married and become chiropractors. They also have a son, Max, who hits it off with Jordan.
When Archie sees Betty and Veronica for the first time in fifteen years, all his old feelings for them come flooding back, threatening his engagement--and it doesn't help that the girls renew their pursuit of Archie, heedless of the fact that he has a fiancée. Meanwhile, Archie also tries to keep gym owner Reggie, helped along by an uncharacteristically menacing Mr. Lodge, from evicting Pop Tate from his soda shop. Archie ultimately saves the Chock'lit Shoppe, though he loses Pam in the bargain, and decides to stay in Riverdale.
[edit] Cast
Almost all of the characters in the movie are regular or recurring characters in the originating comics:
- Christopher Rich as Archie Andrews
- Lauren Holly as Betty Cooper
- Karen Kopins as Veronica Lodge
- Sam Whipple as Forsythe "Jughead" Jones
- Gary Kroeger as Reggie Mantle
- Jeff Hochendoner as Moose Mason
- Debi Derryberry as Midge Mason (née Klump)
- Cindy Ambuehl as "Big" Ethel Muggs
- Mike Nussbaum as Pop Tate
- Fran Ryan as Miss Grundy
- David Doyle as Mr. Weatherbee
- J.D. Hall as Coach Clayton
- James Noble as Hiram Lodge
Additional characters were mostly created for the movie to indicate the passage of time, such as the regulars' children or new romantic partners:
- Billy Corben as Jordan "Jughead Junior" Jones
- Aeryk Egan as Max Mason
- Matt McCoy as Robert Miller
- Christina Haag as Pam
[edit] Reaction
The NBC movie, broadcast during the May sweeps period, was seen as a pilot for a possible series. Despite well-received performances from the actors and actresses portraying the Archie characters, however, the movie finished a disappointing 51st in the Nielsen Ratings, having been thrashed by the primetime premiere of the Kevin Costner/Sean Connery remake of The Untouchables on CBS and the powerful combination of Married… with Children and In Living Color on FOX.
[edit] Trivia
- Archie Comics published a one-shot comic book adaptation of the TV movie which coincided with its premiere. Stan Goldberg and Mike Esposito drew the sections of the book featuring the characters in flashback as teens, while Gene Colan drew characters as adults, in a less cartoony style.