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All three networks are offering new TV...

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All three networks are offering new TV movies at 9 p.m. Sunday. Caroline? (CBS) stars Stephanie Zimbalist as a woman, presumed dead for 15 years, who returns to her family just in time for a large inheritance.

NBC offers Kevin Spacey and Bernadette Peters (on the cover) as Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker in Fall From Grace, while ABC’s true-story entry is The Story of the Beach Boys: Summer Dreams.

In the 1974 Godfather II (Channel 13 Monday at 8 p.m., completed Tuesday at 8 p.m.), which was directed by Francis Coppola and co-written by Mario Puzo, Robert De Niro plays the young Don Corleone and Al Pacino, as the don’s son Michael, moves from the cool and unemotional master of all he surveys to prisoner of his own paranoia. Diane Keaton is again Michael’s proper New England wife, now increasingly unhappy.

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The new TV movie Child in the Night (CBS Tuesday at 9 p.m.) stars JoBeth Williams as a psychologist facing her own past while she and a detective (Tom Skerritt) work with a boy who has witnessed his father’s murder.

Despite a terrific performance from Steve Martin and a generous one from Lily Tomlin, the 1984 All of Me (Channel 11 Wednesday at 8 p.m.) fulfills only about half of its amusing premise. It centers on Martin’s jazz-loving lawyer who, due to a mystical mishap, is forced to share half his body with the spirit of a deceased client (Tomlin), a rich and selfish prude.

The Outlaw Josey Wales (Channel 13 Wednesday at 8 p.m.) remains one of Clint Eastwood’s best, both as a star and as a director. One of the last truly successful Westerns, this handsome 1976 film develops into a full-scale frontier saga. Eastwood plays a farmer living along the Kansas-Missouri border who turns avenging outlaw when his family is massacred by a band of Northern guerrillas during the Civil War.

Although Linda Bassett and Linda Hunt are excellent as Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas, 1987’s Waiting for the Moon (Channel 28 Wednesday at 9 p.m.), which details their daily life, is awfully precious.

Joan Churchill and Nicolas Broomfield’s 1987 documentary Lily Tomlin: The Film Behind the Show (Channel 28 Wednesday at 10:30 p.m.) is entertaining simply because Tomlin is entertaining, but do not expect to discover the woman behind the performer as Tomlin prepares her latest show, “The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe.”

Surely the 1986 film The Hitcher (Channel 5 Thursday at 8 p.m.) has been toned down for TV. It’s a stylish, relentless and ultra-violent fable about a crazed hitchhiker (Rutger Hauer) mysteriously pursuing a young man (C. Thomas Howell).

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The Philadelphia Experiment (Channel 9 Saturday at 8 p.m.) takes its title from an attempt by the Navy in 1943 to render U.S. ships invisible to radar. This fast-moving, action-filled 1984 sci-fi film imagines that the experiment succeeds only too well, with sailor Michael Pare, after a spin through a shining vortex, landing in the desert 40 years later.

KCET is offering a strong Saturday double bill dealing with contrasting views of World War I: Stanley Kubrick’s 1957 anti-war classic Paths of Glory (at 10 p.m.) and the romantic 1932 version of Hemingway’s A Farewell to Arms (11:30 p.m.) with Gary Cooper and Helen Hayes.

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