Charlie Brown and the gang have to come to terms with the fact that Linus and Lucy are moving away.Charlie Brown and the gang have to come to terms with the fact that Linus and Lucy are moving away.Charlie Brown and the gang have to come to terms with the fact that Linus and Lucy are moving away.
- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 nomination total
Photos
Brad Kesten
- Charlie Brown
- (voice)
Angela Lee Sloan
- Lucy van Pelt
- (voice)
- (as Angela Lee)
Michael Dockery
- Marcie
- (voice)
Stacy Heather Tolkin
- Sally Brown
- (voice)
- (as Stacy Tolkin)
Kevin Brando
- Schroeder
- (voice)
- …
Bill Melendez
- Snoopy
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAfter Lucy and Linus leave, Schroeder is shown playing the piano with the music score at the top of the screen. As he's playing Lucy's head appears in between the bass and treble staffs leaving him to pause playing and ask rhetorically, "Don't tell me I've grown accustomed to *that* face." This was used previously in Play It Again, Charlie Brown (1971).
- GoofsSnoopy's Joe Cool sunglasses disappears when he serves lunch to everyone.
- ConnectionsFeatured in It's Your 20th Television Anniversary, Charlie Brown (1985)
Featured review
Everyone knows and watches the same Peanuts specials; Charlie Brown Christmas, It's the Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown, and It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown. Most of the non-holiday specials have kind of disappeared into the void- this being one of them.
One of the more emotional specials (in a field of surprisingly good ones; Why, Charlie Brown, Why? and What Have We Learned, Charlie Brown? are also good, over-looked ones), this is an adaptation of a run of the Peanuts comic strip that appeared in the 60's, concerning Linus and Lucy moving away.
Peanuts specials are best when confronting an adult situation with a child's perspective- something that is lacking in most of the holiday specials; this is a rare episode that deals with a child's situation from a child's perspective. While many adults experience the loss of friends when they move away, rarely is it as traumatic (or as common) as in childhood. Charlie Brown has to learn to deal with the loss of his best friend (and only friend that accepts Charlie Brown the way he is), Linus' security blanket doesn't help with the anxiety of having to make new friends, and Lucy realizes how much she loves what she's leaving behind- what she's complained about her whole life.
The show ends on an up note, of course; the original run of comic strips had Linus and Lucy moving back, due to the protestations of fans...
Satisfying for fans, and a situation almost any child can relate to.
One of the more emotional specials (in a field of surprisingly good ones; Why, Charlie Brown, Why? and What Have We Learned, Charlie Brown? are also good, over-looked ones), this is an adaptation of a run of the Peanuts comic strip that appeared in the 60's, concerning Linus and Lucy moving away.
Peanuts specials are best when confronting an adult situation with a child's perspective- something that is lacking in most of the holiday specials; this is a rare episode that deals with a child's situation from a child's perspective. While many adults experience the loss of friends when they move away, rarely is it as traumatic (or as common) as in childhood. Charlie Brown has to learn to deal with the loss of his best friend (and only friend that accepts Charlie Brown the way he is), Linus' security blanket doesn't help with the anxiety of having to make new friends, and Lucy realizes how much she loves what she's leaving behind- what she's complained about her whole life.
The show ends on an up note, of course; the original run of comic strips had Linus and Lucy moving back, due to the protestations of fans...
Satisfying for fans, and a situation almost any child can relate to.
- StudentDriver
- Sep 25, 1999
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime24 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Is This Goodbye, Charlie Brown? (1983) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer