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Don Coscarelli’s 1988 Phantasm II (Channel 5...

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Don Coscarelli’s 1988 Phantasm II (Channel 5 Sunday at 8 p.m.) is a more literal and traditional horror picture than the 1980 original, a scary gem that evoked a small-town America where Norman Rockwell images intersected those of Salvador Dali. Once again Angus Scrimm’s mortician-grave robber turns corpses into ghoulish dwarf killers just for the evil fun of it.

Support Your Local Gunfighter (Channel 13 Sunday at 8 p.m.) is a very broad, amiable Burt Kennedy comedy-western starring James Garner as a con man who tries to pass off Jack Elam as a much-feared gunfighter.

When You Remember Me (ABC Sunday at 9 p.m.), a new TV movie, stars Fred Savage as a teen-ager, stricken with multiple sclerosis, who fights for better conditions for the elderly and disabled; suggested by events in the life of Michael Patrick Smith.

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The 1988 Off Limits (Channel 11 Monday at 8 p.m.) is a slick, standard issue ultra-violent, fast-moving hard-action cop thriller set in Saigon, 1968, but could just as easily have been set anywhere else any time. Willem Dafoe and Gregory Hines star.

Street Smart (Channel 5 Tuesday at 8 p.m., also Saturday at 8 p.m.), in which a magazine reporter (Christopher Reeve) fakes an interview with a Times Square pimp, is uneven. The 1987 film is not especially convincing in its evocation of the world of journalism, but Kathy Baker is brilliant and deliciously sexy as a savvy prostitute and Morgan Freeman is commanding and terrifying as her pimp.

The rousing 1973 police drama Serpico (Channel 11 Tuesday at 8 p.m.) provided Al Pacino with one of his best roles as a New York cop fighting criminals and corruption in his own department.

The 1989 Grievous Bodily Harm (Channel 2 Tuesday at 9 p.m.) offers a riveting tour of Sydney’s (Australia) seamy side but falls apart at the finish. Colin Friels stars.

Whoopi Goldberg might well prefer to forget the 1987 Fatal Beauty (Channel 5 Wednesday at 8 p.m.), in which she plays an undercover cop full of flash and sass. She’s fun but the film self-destructs, socking over a strong anti-drug message while exploiting violence to the hilt. George Cukor directed the Emmy-laden 1975 TV movie Love Among the Ruins (KTTV Saturday at 3:30 a.m.) which paired Katharine Hepburn and Laurence Olivier for the only time. Hepburn plays a rich retired actress faced with a breach of promise suit and Olivier, an eminent barrister, is hired to defend her.

Errol Flynn is a perfect Robin Hood in the 1938 classic version of The Adventures of Robin Hood (KCOP Saturday at noon) and Olivia De Havilland is intelligent and spunky as Maid Marian.

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In the 1983 Doctor Detroit (Channel 13 Saturday at 6 p.m.) Dan Aykroyd is lots of fun as a naive college professor who falls heir to a stable of prostitutes.

With the 1977 High Anxiety (Channel 5 Saturday at 6 p.m.) Mel Brooks has lots of fun spoofing Alfred Hitchcock (very broadly).

Gary Busey stars in “The Buddy Holly Story” (Channel 13 Saturday at 8 p.m.), a tribute to one of rock’s influential forces.

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