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The Man With Two Brains (Channel 13...

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The Man With Two Brains (Channel 13 Sunday at 8 p.m.) is a very dark 1983 Carl Reiner-Steve Martin comedy in which Martin’s eminent brain surgeon, having succumbed to Kathleen Turner’s hateful tease, falls in love with the living brain extracted from a woman’s corpse. Weird, disturbing yet disarmingly funny.

Guts & Glory: The Rise and Fall of Oliver North (CBS Sunday at 9 p.m., completed Tuesday at 9 p.m.) is a new TV movie based on the book by Ben Bradlee Jr. and starring David Keith in the title role.

Bionic Showdown: The Six Million Dollar Man and Bionic Woman (NBC Sunday at 9 p.m.) finds Lee Majors and Lindsay Wagner trying to foil an assassination attempt at the “Russian/American Unity Games.”

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My Name Is Bill W. (ABC Sunday at 9 p.m.) is a “Hallmark Hall of Fame” presentation, with James Woods starring as Bill Wilson and James Garner as Dr. Bob Smith, the two men who founded Alcoholics Anonymous.

Back to School (Channel 13 Monday at 8 p.m.), the 1986 summer hit, is a big belly laugh of a comedy that casts Rodney Dangerfield as a college freshman.

Dark Holiday (NBC Monday at 9 p.m.) is a new TV movie with Lee Remick as an innocent American tourist arrested in Turkey for smuggling. Norma Aleandro co-stars.

Hitler’s Final Solution: The Wannsee Conference (Channel 28 Monday at 9 p.m.) was known simply as “The Wannsee Conference” in its 1987 theatrical release. This West German film re-creates with a chilling, mesmerizing immediacy the Jan. 20, 1942 meeting at which the Nazi leaders dealt, albeit with cowardly evasiveness, the Final Solution of the Jewish Question; directed by Heinz Schirk from Paul Mommertz’s terse screenplay.

Peter Hyams’ 1986 Running Scared (Channel 5 Tuesday at 8 p.m.) stars Billy Crystal and Gregory Hines as under-cover Chicago cops dreaming of opening a bar in Key West but waylaid by plenty of exploits in the Windy City. It’s a stylish genre film enlivened by the stars’ exceptional rapport.

The 1984 Bachelor Party (Channel 11 Tuesday at 8 p.m.) is similarly a cut above routine raunchy comedy, thanks especially to Tom Hanks, cast as an irrepressible prankster who shocks his pals when he announces he’s marrying.

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Walter Hill’s smart, rambunctious 48 HRS. (Channel 13 Tuesday at 8 p.m.) is the 1982 comedy in which Eddie Murphy made a smash debut as a slick con man on a two-day leave from prison to help San Francisco police detective Nick Nolte nail one of Murphy’s cohorts. Fun, but also pretty violent in its slam-bang way.

Francis Coppola’s 1986 Peggy Sue Got Married (Channel 5 Wednesday at 8 p.m.) is one of his best, an irresistible nostalgic fantasy in which small-town girl Kathleen Turner, on the eve of her 25th high school reunion, is propelled back in time a quarter of a century but with her contemporary awareness intact.

All the Right Moves (Channel 11 Wednesday at 8 p.m.) is a fine, largely overlooked 1983 Tom Cruise movie that casts him as a blue-collar high school senior who sees football as the only way out of his dying hometown.

In its seventh remake, Brewster’s Millions (Channel 5 Thursday at 8 p.m.) stars Richard Pryor as an extremely minor-league pitcher stunned to learn that he’s the beneficiary of a squirrelly bequest requiring that he must spend a fortune in a month’s time or lose untold millions more. Pryor is wonderful, especially in registering pure joy over his good luck, but unfortunately this 1985 film falls flat.

The Outsiders (Channel 13 Thursday at 8 p.m.), Francis Coppola’s 1983 film of the S. E. Hinton novel, is uneven, but nevertheless Ralph Macchio, C. Thomas Howell, Patrick Swayze and Matt Dillon are memorable as mid-’60s, Midwestern small-town teen-agers.

Gregory Nava and Anna Thomas’ El Norte (Channel 28 Friday at 10 p.m.) at times overreaches but succeeds in dramatizing the experience of illegal immigrants on an epic scale.

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The best of the four Neil Simon skits set at the Beverly Hills Hotel that make up the engaging 1978 California Suite (Channel 5 Saturday at 8 p.m.) deals with a British couple (Maggie Smith, Michael Caine) in town for the Oscars. The husband happens to be gay.

The ratings checks on movies in the TV log are provided by the Tribune TV Log listings service.

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