I've seen a few dozen. Most good, some excellent, some crap.
The good:
"The Face on the Milk Carton" (1995 TV movie)
Janie has a good life. A nice school, friends, well-off parents who love her, nothing to really complain about.
Then one day while in school she sees a little girl's face on a milk carton and the nagging feelings and distant memories lead her to believe she may be that little girl.
When her mother seems to refuse to produce her birth certificate, so she can get her driver's license, things finally lead to her having to find out if it's true.
I think this was based on a true story.
Rosenman's score has not been released.
It's not been released on VHS or DVD, so Youtube's your only bet to see it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzqtwIQYnzM
"Scattered Dreams" (1993)
Based on a true story.
A simple family is trying to get by when a financial trouble lands the wife in jail, tearing the family apart and sending their kids to a foster care facility.
What happened to this family is terrible. What's worse is that if we take what happened in the film as any indication, the people who abused them, all got away with it.
The wonderful score by
Mark Snow, remains unreleased.
This has not been released on VHS or DVD, so this is the only way you can see it currently:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LSH9UB0mJFY
"The Alpha Caper" (1973 TV movie)
Remember the dramas you could get back in the 1970's? Well, this is one of them.
A parole officer [Henry Fonda] is forced into retirement early. While in his last days of duty there is a shootout at an arms dump. The guy, on parole, is dying from being shot during the standoff. He tells Fonda's character about the caper he and his men were going to do. Fonda's character, Mark finds the men at the guy's funeral and starts talking to them, and finds himself involved in a ballsy caper even by today's standards.
Five armored trucks. Gold bars, police cars around it everywhere, police motorcycles running around. Helicopters flying overhead, officers with rifles walking around. Surely it can't be done, can it?
The movie is well done and the acting always good, sometimes very strong. Of the three men MArk aligns himself with, one is played by
Leonard Nimoy, simply named "Mitch", and Mitch never hints at being Spock; Nemoy had range.
The score is by
Oliver Nelson. It's got what you'd want in a 1970's score, so if you enjoy the hell out of scores from that era, here you go. It's got some standard moments though, so if it got released on CD, it would need to be paired with something (especially since it's not a long score).
It's an ABC movie of the week, so it's probably not been released (I didn't check), so here you go:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_H8RQGFexf0
"Never Forget" (1991)
TV movie based on the real life family, the Mermelstein's and their father Mel, a Jewish Holocaust survivor. One day he gets a letter in the mail from a Holocaust denier group, shoving in his face a large reward for anybody who can prove the Holocaust actually happened.
Everybody tells him, from lawyers to the Anti Defamation League, that it's nothing more than for the evil group to make fun of him, ridicule him in their kangaroo mock court. But he wants to respond as he gives talks on the Holocaust, in which his family died, and cannot let it go. Then, he finds a lawyer witha plan.
This really happened.
Mel is played by Leonard Nemoy. He is quite convincing and displays some ncie range.
The film is moving, but unfortunately it doesn't go into enough detail. The ending court case just shows the beginning, then the judge speaking after it, igoring all the witness testimony and other dramatic moments that could have given some serious weight to the end.
The orchestral score by
Henry Mancini is unremarkable and very short. The film needed a better score than it got.