Quincy gets involved with a woman who may have killed her husband, as a tenacious insurance investigator pursues her.Quincy gets involved with a woman who may have killed her husband, as a tenacious insurance investigator pursues her.Quincy gets involved with a woman who may have killed her husband, as a tenacious insurance investigator pursues her.
Photos
John C. Garrett
- Alex
- (as John Garrett)
Nathaniel Brian Wine
- Hood
- (credit only)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe title is a reference to a quote by American Quaker poet John Greenleaf Whittier from his work entitled Maud Muller - Pamphlet ......."of all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest are these, it might have been."
- GoofsAt the club fire, the Battalion Chief is wearing a turnout coat and a dress uniform cap. He should be wearing a white fire helmet instead. This is inappropriate fire scene dress for the Los Angeles County FD and nearly all other departments.
Featured review
Quincy becomes uncharacteristically unprofessional.
Darleen Carr Quincy goes a bit too gaga a bit too quickly too
While I enjoyed "Of All Sad Words", I must admit that it's a very inconsistent episode. Up until this episode, Dr. Quincy was VERY professional and determined to discover the truth. However, here he behaves like a love-sick teenager and his professionalism is out the window.
The film begins with a fire. A mobster dies in this fire and there's evidence that it was not an accident. An insurance investigator insists that it's the dead man's wife--especially since there appears to be a pattern and at least one other might have been killed by her. However, Dr. Quincy is very easily taken in by the lady--she seems very sweet and innocent. So, instead of being his usually determined investigator, he's a goof-ball...and, potentially a dead one!
I think this is a good episode but could have been a great one. Had Quincy not fallen so hard and so fast, then this one would have seemed plausible. But the dead husband's body had barely stopped smoldering when Quincy and the widow started dating!! A slower and more believable story would have made this one work great, as is it's good but inconsistent and a bit hard to believe.
While I enjoyed "Of All Sad Words", I must admit that it's a very inconsistent episode. Up until this episode, Dr. Quincy was VERY professional and determined to discover the truth. However, here he behaves like a love-sick teenager and his professionalism is out the window.
The film begins with a fire. A mobster dies in this fire and there's evidence that it was not an accident. An insurance investigator insists that it's the dead man's wife--especially since there appears to be a pattern and at least one other might have been killed by her. However, Dr. Quincy is very easily taken in by the lady--she seems very sweet and innocent. So, instead of being his usually determined investigator, he's a goof-ball...and, potentially a dead one!
I think this is a good episode but could have been a great one. Had Quincy not fallen so hard and so fast, then this one would have seemed plausible. But the dead husband's body had barely stopped smoldering when Quincy and the widow started dating!! A slower and more believable story would have made this one work great, as is it's good but inconsistent and a bit hard to believe.
helpful•91
- planktonrules
- May 17, 2013
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content