Entrepreneur Elliott Gould feels old at turning 50: he's concerned about his blood pressure and eating habits, he's suffocating and suddenly feels unhappy in his long-time marriage to Valerie Harper, who put her life on hold to help build his career. She suspects another woman in the picture (there is, of course) and plots rather juvenile, 'feminist' revenge. TV-movie is meant to be the stuff of high comedy--jilted wife gets back at cheating husband--but this oft-used scenario has molded over. The upshot of the whole thing is that Harper "finds herself" post-divorce, but couldn't she have reached the same conclusions without trashing his car?