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Damages: The Complete First Season
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Editorial Reviews:
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Hot new legal thriller on FX! Set in New York's world of high stakes litigation, Damages follows the lives of Patty Hewes, the nation's most revered and most reviled litigator, and her bright, ambitious protégée Ellen Parsons as they become embroiled in a class action lawsuit targeting Arthur Frobisher, one of the country's wealthiest CEOs. As Patty battles Frobisher and his attorney, Ellen learns what it takes to win at all costs, and that lives, not just fortunes, are at stake.
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Smart, sleek, and more than a little wicked, the Golden Globe-winning series Damages proves that legal programs don't have to follow a well-worn formula in order to prove completely addictive. In fact, the show (from Todd and Glenn Kessler and Daniel Zelman, whose credits include The Sopranos) steers clear from nearly all courtroom drama clichés over the course of its 13 episodes, and hews closer to classic film noir with the slowly-spun web of deceit that is woven around fresh-scrubbed lawyer Ellen Parsons (Rose Byrne). After joining the legal firm headed by uber-powerful litigator Patty Hewes (Glenn Close, who won a Golden Globe for her performance), Parsons lands a career-making case--a class-action lawsuit against millionaire Arthur Frobisher (Golden Globe nominee Ted Danson)--but discovers that digging deeply into the case not only reveals layers of corruption, cover-up, and potential scandal, but places her own life in jeopardy as well. Smart, mature writing and note-perfect performances, most notably by Danson as the perverse and complex Frobisher, but also by Tate Donovan, Zeliko Ivanek, Peter Facinelli, Philip Bosco and Peter Reigert, make Damages a genuine pleasure for law and mystery show fans, but also those craving a challenging series that delivers water cooler chat material in every episode. The three-disc set includes all 13 episodes as well as deleted scenes; among the featured extras are two choice commentaries, one with Close, the Kesslers and Zelman, and the other with Ivanek and the creators, both of which are chock-full of production and technical insights. A 30-minute making-of featurette, discussions about the characters by the creators, and a guide to class-action lawsuits rounds out the fine supplemental features. --Paul Gaita
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Damages: The Complete First Season
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User Comments About Damages: The Complete First Season
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The show that makes every other show on TV look pathetic....
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And Zeljko Ivanek deserves his Emmy too. Ted Danson also is utterly watchable the way he was when he was back on CHEERS - and watching DAMAGES I would smile and remember, "That's right. If you're still on the fence, BUY THIS SHOW. The blu-ray version is well worth the investment.
Gorgeous as she is brilliant. If you have no interest in legal thrillers whatsoever I still say, BUY THIS SHOW. My only gripe was that the first season had to end (even though it's cliffhanger made me stand up on my couch and WHOOP with glee). I remember, Ted Danson is cool.". Amazing.
The structure is so tight and emotional that I think this is not only the best "legal thriller" TV show but it's the best legal thriller ever made. If you're reading this you may already be leaning toward buying this show, if you are, BUY THIS SHOW. I mean, to be this up-"close" and personal to such a genius at work is an honor - she earned that Emmy three times over. I'm serious.
In contrast, PRISON BREAK'S season 1 was captivating but gets messy and long-winded, this first season is shorter (13 episodes) sleeker, and it's quality after all not quantity that matters. You have no idea who is a good guy or bad guy, or who is in control or not. Some of the other supporting performances are weaker than the ENORMOUS Emmy performances you'll get on the show, but, hey.it's all good. A show like this takes a lot of planning and doesn't come off as fly-by storytelling. The writing is sharp, agressive and the dialogue is performed with power rarely found in TV. The image and sound are miraculous.and it NEVER TAKES PLACE IN A COURTROOM. And I have to say it's nice to finally have a show that seems to play with the viewer's expectations in the same loving way that the Sopranos did - it will keep you guessing constantly.
Glen Close's face pops off the screen and cuts you deep. DAMAGES show blows all the other shows on TV now (cable or network) out of the water. I was a huge fan of THE WIRE, THE SOPRANOS, SIX FEET UNDER, BATTLESTAR, and this is like those others is top shelf calibre entertainment. Watching this show on blu-ray makes me want to run out and buy every Blu-ray TV show available.but I have to control myself because I'm sure the Sarah Conner Chronicals doesn't even come close. Rose Byrne is a hot new talent.
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Damages Keeps Us On The Edge Of Our Seats
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We can't wait for the new season of Damages. The acting is excellent. It has plenty of plot twists and turns to keep you guessing. Everything about it is first class.
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Great to see all of them at once to prepare for the new season in January.
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You will not be disappointed. Prompt delivery. Perfect packaging. All DVDs were in excellent (new) condition. I recommend that everyone purchasing Damages via Amazon.
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Four Stars for Zeljko Ivanek
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A world this corrupt would not be like this. Grudges. It would be armed militias of young men, riding around in trucks with torches. He is working for the bad guy, for starters, not that there are any good guys in this litigation. The acting is very good, but the characters are wildly overdrawn. Even at the end it is not crystal clear.
The semi-heroic character is, in the end, left with what. The Fiske character comes off as apart, unable to share in the corruption. The other employees had money in the stock, lost it all, and Glenn Close as Karen Hewes is trying to get it back. The Ivanek character, southern lawyer Ray Fiske, sort of shines for his glimmers of humanity. Watch what happens to the main hit man. Mitchum used to get paid to let people beat him up in boxing matches. But this is layered on top of buried sexual issues, a culture of murder, and twists that aren't entirely plausible. The Close character is interesting, even if it suggests that gender equality is a race to the bottom of morality.
The company was all accounting tricks, and Frobisher, the baddy, cashed his stock moments before the collapse. Beyond that, Ivanek can create a character who is deeply troubled, sad, or, relating to the title, damaged. I don't think this show has enough of a soul to win five stars. I guess it's a little sad that the story underneath this, of corporate corruption, is lost in the mix. I guess this is a vision of America if it were as corrupt as parts of Africa, if it could maintain 4% GDP growth.
There's no redemption, in this series. On the surface the Close character is the knight in shining armor. Even Bogart. Well, that lasts about 20 minutes into the first episode.
Don't take it too seriously, it's fine, if dark, television. So, it's interesting, but a little light on credibility. There are two many layers of corruption in the scripts. Ted Danson plays a man who is in the Enron mold. They all had a grim quality.
From this first revelation the question becomes "how bad is she". I think the standout role is Zeljko Ivanek. This is the most tortured lawyer I have run across. There were great noir actors like Robert Ryan, Mitchum. Really, is that plausible.
And, in the end, he is not able to cope.
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