Lights: On Off
On CHOW: Are five meats enough for pizza?
ER
NBC (Ended 2009)

Episode Score

 
9.0 Superb
311 votes

Your Score

Air Date

Thursday May 9, 2002

Production Code

227271

Episode Summary

Mark decides to use his remaining time to help "fix" Rachel; he takes her to Hawaii to show her where he grew up; he teaches her how to surf and how to drive a stick shift. He catches her chasing one of his Percocet with a shot of vodka and confronts her about wasting her life. One day after surfing he has a seizure, and Rachel contacts Elizabeth, who soon arrives with little Ella. Elizabeth wants to take Mark home, but he refuses. Very early one morning, he dies. At his funeral stateside, old friends and colleagues pay their respects.

  •  
    10 Perfect

    See Review hide show

    This is the best ER episode that they ever made. It shows the struggle with death and the struggle to try to do all the things that the main character of the show, Mark Greene, wanted to do, especially "fix Rachel". You become intimate with the main character in a way that you never have and really mourn the ending when he succumbs to the tumor. This episode will bring out every emotion in you.

    The acting is great, the story is great, the direction is great. And the song that Mark's daugghter plays for him on the casette player is just icing on the cake.

    Do you agree?
      1 0
    Report Abuse
  •  
    10 Perfect

    One of the best episodes. hide show

    I am a huge fan of ER! This episode takes the cake though. I cry every time I watch it, however there was one huge dissapointment, why didn't they bring Doug and Carol back for Mark's funeral??? They brough Peter and Cleo back, you would think with Doug and Carol being his closest friends, they would have been there. Besides that, it was great. The writers did a fantastic job with this episode. It was great closure on different levels. Thank you for doing a great job. I only can hope that the writers get their edge back for the upcoming shows...

    Do you agree?
      0 0
    Report Abuse
  •  
    10 Perfect

    The first show I ever watched that totally brought me to tears...what a way to begin! hide show

    There is not much more to say about this episode than has already been written. I never really watched ER when it aired on primetime at the time, but once it began to be shown in syndication on TNT every morning, I watched a few episodes & kinda got sucked in. As it turned out, right when I began to watch it, it was near the beginning of of season 1... so I really kind of got in right at the start (I believe the primetime airings were about at season 8 at the time).

    I work 5 days a week so I would record both episodes every morning & watch them that night. At 2 showings every morning, 5 days a week, the series moved along at a pretty good clip, and it wasn't long till the episodes concerning Mark's brain tumor began (a few months I guess). By then I was very sucked into the show & cared about the characters (I should mention that I am a 44 year old male with a wife & 9-year-old daughter).

    When the "Orion" episode aired, I knew things were going to get sad, as Mark's last day sorta choked me up a bit. When the episode "The Letter" aired, which ended with Carter reading the letter about Mark's death, I was a bit confused, as in "did I miss something?". However, the very next episode, "On the Beach", made me realize that we were seeing the events that led up to the letter written by Corday.

    I do not think I ever cried so hard over a TV show as I did during the entire last half of this episode. Mark's gradual deterioration, memories in my mind of how he used to be in earlier episodes & thinking "how did it ever get to this point?" Also, the sadness of his sticky relationship with his rebellious daughter, who, on the surface, didn't seem fazed at all about Mark's impending death or his attempts to bond with her & point her in the right direction in life once he is gone. How heartbreaking it must have been for Mark to tell Rachael about how she used to love "Over the Rainbow" as a little girl, and she didn't even remember. Part of the reason it hit ME so hard is that my daughter does not live with me, but with her mom, my ex-wife, in a neighboring state and although I see her fairly often (every 5 weeks or so for 4-5 days at a time), I've always felt that I was not as big an influence in her life as I should be, and seeing how much bigger & grown up she is every time I see her, and (coincidently) how she had this little music box as a young girl of about 3 years old that played "Over the Rainbow" and she was never without it (and now does not even remember having the toy or loving the song) really hit kind of close to home.
    Anyway, watching this episode one evening, alone in my den (my wife never really got into the show), I just lost it and a combination of the sadness of the episode itself & it's correlation to my own circumstances with my own child really pushed me over the edge...especially when Rachael admitted on Mark's deathbed she DID remember the song, and put the headphones on Mark's ears so he could listen to it (and once I found out it was "Over the Rainbow", the waterworks began in earnest!) As a guy, I usually do not get sad at shows but I literally cried my eyes out for nearly an hour afterward, enought that my wife had to comfort me!

    I felt a bit embarrassed afterward, laughing & crying at the same time, but that single viewing (I have not been able to bring myself to watch it again!) of this episode, which has been probably 2 years ago now, has always stuck with me. A brilliantly written episode, that did exactly what it was intended to do...make you sad, make you think, and help you say goodbye to one of the most beloved characters in ER's history.

    Do you agree?
      0 0
    Report Abuse
  •  
    10 Perfect

    The best episode ever... hide show

    When I try to remember any episode from the time I first see ER, I think the only one I had strong memory or clear memory at all was this - it just moved me then to the bottom of my soul, left something so.. unsayable that even many years later.. so many years later I remembered what it will be like. That's why I took really many napkins with me when I started to rewatch it and it was nothing less than I remembered.. even more. As on the first time, I started to watch the serie irregularly somewhere on fifth season and it was irregular after that too.. so I did not expected it to happen.. but I knew the problems with Rachel.. now.. when I have watched it from season 1.. every episode after another.. going with the story, living along and sympathized with characters. In that light, this episode has totally new content, totally new feelings, and even more tears. There have never been episode like this and there never will be. Totally the best episode ever!

    Do you agree?
      0 0
    Report Abuse
  •  
    10 Perfect

    One of the very best episodes of the series, total tearjerker! hide show

    No matter how many times I watch this episode, I always cry like a baby at the end. Watching Mark say goodbye to his daughters and live out his last days in Hawaii is bittersweet and then the scene at the cemetery and all of the cast members and former cast members have gathered, it was so sad and poignant. The only thing missing was Carol and Doug. Too bad they couldn't lure them back for a cameo. Even the music that plays during the funeral brings a tear and I will watch this episode every time that it comes on. What a great episode!

    Do you agree?
      1 0
    Report Abuse
 
See All Reviews

Episode Cast and Crew

View All
  • This episode received an Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series (John Wells). []
  • This episode features a Strong Language disclaimer for Dr. Greene's use of the word shit. []
  • Although Eriq La Salle and Michael Michele both left as series regulars earlier in the season, they are still credited with the main cast in this episode (rather than being credited as making a special appearance or as a special or regular guest star). []
More Notes
  • (telling Elizabeth about what he put in his list of things he would like to do before he died)
    Mark: ...take the kids to Disneyworld; teach Ella how to ice skate at Rockefeller Center at Christmas time' teach Rachel how to drive; be there to give them both away at their weddings... I told you I was sitting here feeling sorry for myself.
    Elizabeth: We could go to Disneyworld. I'd like that.
    Mark: I haven't been a very good father.
    Elizabeth: Yes, you have.
    Mark: No, I haven't. I wasn't there when she needed me. I was four hundred miles away. Called on Saturdays. Couple of weeks in the summer. You know what the last thing on my list is? Fix Rachel. []
  • (Elizabeth wakes up and finds Mark in the kitchen, writing something)
    Elizabeth: What are you doing?
    Mark: Making a list; things I've always wanted to do but never found time for. What? Too morbid? Wanna hear it?
    Elizabeth: Sure. []
  • (after falling down half-paralyzed when trying to get out of bed)
    Greene: (pounds his hand on the floor) SHIT!!! []
More Quotes
  • The minister is reading bible passage John 11:25 during Mark's burial. []
  • Mark tells Rachel that he used to be a surfer and that he smoked weed. This is an oblique reference to his portrayal of "Stoner Bud," a surfer and stoner, in the 1982 movie Fast Times at Ridgemont High. []
  • Title: "On the Beach"
    This episode shares a title with Nevil Shute's 1957 post-apocalyptic novel, set primarily in Australia, about survivors of a nuclear war that has devastated the northern hemisphere. Those not killed in the initial conflict do what they can to fulfill their lives as they face an inevitable death from lethal radiation slowly creeping down from the north. A screen adaptation of the book, starring Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner, Fred Astaire and Anthony Perkins, was released in 1959. []
More Allusions
Click Here
advertisement

Top Contributors

  • ravenswood13 Editor
    User Score 5083 , Last Online 4 hrs, 43 mins ago
  • welleg Retired
    User Score 7132 , Last Online Sep 23, 2009
  • jcs420x365 Retired
    User Score 1692 , Last Online Dec 31, 1969
  • allish Retired
    User Score 675 , Last Online Dec 23, 2009
  • speddoc
    User Score 6766 , Last Online Jul 19, 2009
  • emmbee1
    User Score 1228 , Last Online Dec 31, 1969
  • tvfa
    User Score 1218 , Last Online 1 hr, 52 mins ago
What is a TV.com Contributor?