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Richard Lester’s 1975 The Four Musketeers (Channel...

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Richard Lester’s 1975 The Four Musketeers (Channel 5 Sunday at 6 p.m.) is more of an anticlimax than a sequel to his delightful 1973 version of “The Three Musketeers,” but still lots of fun. Once again, Oliver Reed, Richard Chamberlain, Frank Finlay and Michael York (as D’Artagnan) are the good guys, while Charlton Heston (as Cardinal Richelieu), Faye Dunaway and Christopher Lee are the villains of the plot.

Robert Conrad stars in the new TV movie Glory Days (CBS Sunday at 9 p.m.), playing a middle-age man who returns to college to play football.

Lame, lazy and defiantly empty-headed, the 1985 Spies Like Us (NBC Sunday at 9 p.m.) stars Chevy Chase and Dan Aykroyd as a pair of wacky spies, lovable incompetents hired as decoys to divert the KGB.

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In the new TV movie Roots: The Gift (ABC Sunday at 9 p.m.) LeVar Burton and Louis Gossett Jr. (on the cover) reprise their Kunta Kinte and Fiddler roles, having played them in 1977 in “Roots,” still the most popular miniseries in TV history. This new installment finds them on a perilous mission guiding slaves to freedom at Christmastime, 1775.

Just the Way You Are (Channel 5 Monday at 8 p.m.), a gentle 1984 comedy with serious underpinnings, stars Kristy McNichol as a young woman left with a slight limp from a childhood bout with polio who exchanges her leg-brace for a knee-high cast. She heads for a ski resort where for the first time her affliction will go unnoticed. The irony is that McNichol is such a convincing charmer it’s hard to accept that she has really heretofore been sidelined from romance by her handicap.

The Night They Saved Christmas (Channel 11 Monday at 8 p.m.) is one of the better yuletide TV movies, a 1984 fantasy in which some youngsters try to save Santa’s toy factory from an oil drilling operation. Jaclyn Smith, Art Carney and Paul LeMat star; Jackie Cooper directed.

I’ll Be Home for Christmas (NBC Monday at 9 p.m.) is a new TV movie in which a New England family waits for a son’s return from overseas action in World War II. Hal Holbrook, Eva Marie Saint, Courteney Cox and Peter Gallagher star.

Tuesday at 8 p.m. brings a choice of two Bing Crosby yuletide perennials. In Leo McCarey’s durably sentimental 1945 The Bells of St. Mary’s (Channel 11), Crosby plays a priest who skirmishes with a doughty Mother Superior (Ingrid Bergman) determined to build a new parish school. In White Christmas (Channel 13), a 1954 remake of the much better 1942 “Holiday Inn,” Crosby and Danny Kaye are Army buddies who liven up a winter resort run by their former commanding officer (Dean Jagger). What’s best are the Irving Berlin tunes.

The Emmy-laden 1986 “Hallmark Hall of Fame” production Promise returns Tuesday at 9 p.m. on CBS. James Garner and James Woods are outstanding as very different brothers--Garner, a carefree bachelor, and Woods a schizophrenic--who have not seen each other more than 10 times in 30 years when at last Garner must take responsibility for his troubled younger brother. Piper Laurie sparkles as Garner’s old flame.

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It’s a tossup as to which of these 1985 releases is worse: Private Resort (Channel 5 Wednesday at 8 p.m.), a numbskull comedy about a couple of guys (Rob Morrow, Johnny Depp) on the make at a resort hotel, or Clue (Channel 13 Wednesday at 8 p.m.), a strained Old Dark House comedy-mystery inspired by the Parker Brothers board game, which was released theatrically with three different endings. Clue has the more substantial cast: Eileen Brennan, Madeline Kahn, Christopher Lloyd, Michael McKean, Martin Mull, Lee Ving and Lesley Ann Warren.

The 1982 film The Border (Channel 13 Thursday at 8 p.m.) doesn’t quite catch fire yet is surely among the more interesting American movies of recent years. In one of his least known major performances, Jack Nicholson plays a corrupt border patrolman who, in an attempt at redemption, tries to help a young Mexican widow make her way across the Rio Grande.

Friday is another poor night for movies (at 8 p.m.). You can take your choice between Ashanti (Channel 5), a tepid adventure yarn with Michael Caine (and many others); the glossy Hans Christian Andersen (Channel 11) with Danny Kaye, or the unfortunate Olivia Newton-John musical Xanadu (Channel 13).

Saturday is not much better. An American Christmas Carol (Channel 9 at 8 p.m.) is an awkward, misguided updating of Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol,” which finds Henry Winkler playing a Depression-era Scrooge. Another unfortunate reworking, The Toy (ABC at 9 p.m.) is a 1982 remake of a popular 1979 French comedy done in by sheer overkill. Richard Pryor, however, is terrific as a too-long out-of-work journalist who signs on for a week’s engagement as a “toy” for Louisiana department store tycoon Jackie Gleason’s snotty kid (Scott Schwartz).

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