


Why was he the immoral, arrogant, unrepentant control freak who could twist and shatter the lives of others without a second thought? While we gather a great deal about the compulsively neat Anne Marie’s quirks and frailties, the film’s flaw is never giving us a real feel for what made the cold-hearted Capano click. His unsuspecting target in late 1994 was Anne Marie Fahey (Kathryn Morris), the bright, upbeat and profoundly insecure aide to Delaware’s governor. Nonetheless, Harmon’s believable work as smart, charming master manipulator Thomas Capano, an attorney based in Wilmington, Del., sustains interest.Īs one of his brothers aptly puts it in Wednesday’s conclusion, Capano “likes ‘em needy,” referring to the prominent lawyer’s perpetual pursuit of vulnerable women. At four hours, this absorbing murder yarn based on a true story is not as taut as it would have been at a shorter duration. Harmon’s latest maladjusted miscreant surfaces in “And Never Let Her Go,” a two-part CBS crime drama that begins Sunday. Elsewhere” to “Chicago Hope.” On occasion, however, this clean-cut, enduringly youthful, all-American actor throws us a sneaky curve, taking on the intriguing roles of flat-out wicked men, the most notable being infamous serial killer Ted Bundy in the 1986 NBC movie “The Deliberate Stranger.” A chunk of Mark Harmon’s TV career has been devoted to portrayals of flawed but well-meaning physicians, from “St.
