Dr. Carter reads a letter from terminally ill Dr. Green to the ER staff. Dr. Weaver lashes out at a mentally challenged patient. A terminal, homeless man continues asking for Dr. Green.Dr. Carter reads a letter from terminally ill Dr. Green to the ER staff. Dr. Weaver lashes out at a mentally challenged patient. A terminal, homeless man continues asking for Dr. Green.Dr. Carter reads a letter from terminally ill Dr. Green to the ER staff. Dr. Weaver lashes out at a mentally challenged patient. A terminal, homeless man continues asking for Dr. Green.
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Anthony Edwards
- Dr. Mark Greene
- (credit only)
Alex Kingston
- Elizabeth Corday
- (credit only)
Ming-Na Wen
- Jing-Mei Chen
- (as Ming-Na)
Montae Russell
- Dwight Zadro
- (as Monté Russell)
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10spasek
Never mind that the reading of Greene's letter--and then Corday's--is tribute to the classic Henry Fonda/Jack Lemmon film, "Mister Roberts" in which Ensign Pulver (Lemmon) reads a letter from the beloved Mister Roberts (Fonda) before reading the notification that Roberts was killed in the line of duty. We get something similar with Greene's letter followed by Corday's.
And yet, as powerful as the first five minutes of the episode was, it's the last five that transcends even that one. We come full circle as Carter clearly remembers one of the most important pieces of advice that he received on his first day; advice from Dr. Greene himself as he repeats it nearly verbatim to a shaken Gallant after a particularly gruesome trauma.
A farewell letter is powerful but taking something---a lesson--and applying it, is an even greater tribute because you're telling that person, "You taught me something valuable."
I also found it clever that, despite their constant battling, Weaver still valued Mark and considered him a friend as we see her visibly shaken after learning of his passing. As we find from the classic film, "It's a Wonderful Life"...one life touches so many. And sometimes, we are unaware of the hole that an absence leaves until it's brought to reality.
As good as John Carter is, Mark Greene was always the heart and soul of ER, and that was a void that was never able to be filled after he left. In short, ER was never the same again, which only tells you how valuable and beloved the character of Mark Greene was.
And yet, as powerful as the first five minutes of the episode was, it's the last five that transcends even that one. We come full circle as Carter clearly remembers one of the most important pieces of advice that he received on his first day; advice from Dr. Greene himself as he repeats it nearly verbatim to a shaken Gallant after a particularly gruesome trauma.
A farewell letter is powerful but taking something---a lesson--and applying it, is an even greater tribute because you're telling that person, "You taught me something valuable."
I also found it clever that, despite their constant battling, Weaver still valued Mark and considered him a friend as we see her visibly shaken after learning of his passing. As we find from the classic film, "It's a Wonderful Life"...one life touches so many. And sometimes, we are unaware of the hole that an absence leaves until it's brought to reality.
As good as John Carter is, Mark Greene was always the heart and soul of ER, and that was a void that was never able to be filled after he left. In short, ER was never the same again, which only tells you how valuable and beloved the character of Mark Greene was.
Sheesh.... What an emotional opening scene, throw out classic dramatic structure, the first 5 minutes was brutal. The rest of the episode was members of the ER remembering Mark, coping and recovering from the news in the letter. It's Carters ER...
Anthony Edwards was the heart and soul and flesh and blood of this show. I love how they wrote him out in Hawaii. I cry every single time I watch it.
Carter and Abby became the characters to carry the show forward. For a while.
Carrie never made us really care about her, and Romano's exit is insane.
Also isn't the medical examiner the same one on SVU? With the bad hatched up haircut?
Why do you have to do a 300 word count review to be able to post?
This is old school technology.
Carter and Abby became the characters to carry the show forward. For a while.
Carrie never made us really care about her, and Romano's exit is insane.
Also isn't the medical examiner the same one on SVU? With the bad hatched up haircut?
Why do you have to do a 300 word count review to be able to post?
This is old school technology.
Did you know
- TriviaThe speech that Carter gives to Gallant in this episode is the same as the one that Dr. Greene gave to him in the Pilot.
- GoofsWhen Carter goes to clean out Greene's locker, the door swings open to the right. However, when Greene left the ER for good, his locker opened to the left.
- Quotes
Dr. Kerry Weaver: Mark's gone. That means you've been here longer than any other doctor. People will look to you to step in and fill the void.
Dr. John Carter: Big void.
- ConnectionsReferences ER: Orion in the Sky (2002)
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