Is This Goodbye, Charlie Brown? (TV Short 1983) Poster

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7/10
Decent Lesser Peanuts Special
Rainey-Dawn15 December 2021
This particular Peanuts special deals with Lucy and Linus moving away. The pains of not seeing your best friend anymore due to them leaving the area - good lesson for children. Of course Lucy and Linus move back home for a nice reunion due to fans not agreeing with the parting of Lucy and Linus from the beloved gang.

Wroth watching though not the best Peanuts special.

7/10.
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7/10
Familiar Territory
"Is This Goodbye" has the Peanuts gang going through a bit of déjà vu, or at least, the viewer will likely feel that way. Charles Schulz ventures into a lot of familiar territory in this episode.

Plot In a Nutshell: Linus informs Charlie Brown that his dad's job has been transferred, and so their family is moving away. This of course leads to the title, namely, "is this goodbye" for the old friends?

Anyone who has seen "Snoopy Come Home" will recognize this plot element, as that film had the similar story-line of Snoopy moving away to return to a previous owner. In that one the kids held a going-away party for him, and in this one there is a going-away luncheon for Linus and Lucy. Again, very similar to SCH. Snoopy turns out to be the caterer for the luncheon, and so his cooking here brings back memories of his cooking adventure in the Thanksgiving episode.

That's not all. Sally continues her pestering of Linus, calling him her 'sweet baboo,' convincing herself Linus returns her affections and at one point even threatens to sue. All of that is very recognizable. Lucy flirts with Schroeder as usual, and Peppermint Patty continues to live in denial about her feelings for Chuck. There's really very little here that you likely haven't seen in some form already.

However, with the potential disappearance of Linus from Charlie's life, CB actually seems to take it pretty well. Yes at first he's upset and can't believe it's happening. But once it does he gets on with his life rather easily. He even remarks to PP that he's been sleeping just fine since Linus left. This feels like a lost opportunity for Schulz. The situation calls for a lot more anxiety, depression and melancholy than we actually get. Charlie's best friend moves away and really, he just takes it in stride. It does not pack the emotional wallop you might think it would. Kind of odd.

A few others wrote that this was an emotional episode but I don't agree. It SHOULD be, but as I mentioned, it's strangely short of that. There was a lot of crying, rightly so, when Snoopy went away; there isn't one bit of crying here lol. OK. Another reviewer mentions the score and thinks it's noteworthy, but again I disagree. There's nothing memorable about it. Sadly, after Vince Guaraldi died in the mid-1970s, all of the best Peanuts music died with him. Everyone knows the soundtrack to the Christmas special. I'm fairly certain nothing in this one will have you humming once its over.

Overall "Is This Goodbye" is a solid Peanuts entry that feels like it could been a little better with more focus on the rupture of Charlie's friendship with Linus, and the effect it has on each of them. We don't really get that for some reason. Good, not great.

Would I watch again (Y/N)?: Yes.
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8/10
Charming and touching Peanuts TV special
Woodyanders29 December 2010
Warning: Spoilers
One of the more affecting and yet strangely overlooked Peanuts TV specials, this particular outing focuses on Charlie Brown and the rest of the Peanuts gang coming to terms with the fact that Linus and Lucy are moving away after their father gets a job transfer. Director Phil Roman, working from a typically warm and witty script by Charles M. Schulz, relates the simple, but engrossing story at a brisk pace and delivers a pleasing and well balanced mix of humor and pathos. The best segments center on Peppermint Patty grappling with her attraction to Charlie Brown and Schroeder realizing that he actually misses Lucy always flirting with him. Of course, we also get a few amusing gags, with Snoopy posing as a shrink for hire at a stand and working as a caterer who serves dog food to everyone at Linus and Lucy's farewell party rating as the funniest jokes. The voice actors handle their vocal chores quite well, with Brad Keston a stand-out as the phlegmy voice of Charlie Brown. Judy Munsen's catchy'n'jaunty score keeps things bouncing along throughout. Kudos are also in order for the bright and crisp animation which makes nifty occasional use of both dissolves and split screen. The upbeat conclusion likewise hits the satisfying spot. Well worth seeing for Peanuts fans.
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One of the better "lesser" Peanuts specials.
StudentDriver26 September 1999
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.
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