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Movie
DVDs
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Crime Story Television Series DVDs
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Buy Crime Story - Season One
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0013131377996
Format: Box set, Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, NTSC
Label: Starz / Anchor Bay
Languages: EnglishOriginal Language
Manufacturer: Starz / Anchor Bay
MPN: D13779D
Number Of Items: 5
Publisher: Starz / Anchor Bay
Region Code: 1
Release Date: September 20, 2005
Running Time: 1033 minutes
Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay
Theatrical Release Date: 1986 |
Editorial Review:
Amazon.com:
Conceived as a "22-hour movie for television," the
incendiary first season of Crime Story (1986-87, on
NBC) marked a controversial milestone in TV history,
and its lasting influence can be seen in such
better-known series and films as The Sopranos,
Homicide: Life on the Street, Donnie Brasco, Casino
and elsewhere. The season-long story arc followed
Chicago Police detective Lt. Mike Torello (Dennis
Farina) and his tireless pursuit of fast-rising mob
boss Ray Luca (Anthony Denison) from Chicago to Las
Vegas, circa 1963-64. Heading the Major Crimes Unit
(MCU) with his hand-picked team of detectives
(including fresh-faced Bill Campbell, long before
Once and Again) and passionate public defender David
Abrams (Stephen Lang), Torello moves from city to
federal jurisdiction as Crime Story unfolds its
post-Kennedy scenario with stark, often brutal
authenticity, pausing for stand-alone episodes that
propelled the Torello/Luca rivalry while showcasing
such up-and-coming guest stars as David Caruso (in
the electrifying pilot), Gary Sinise (who also
directed two episodes), Ving Rhames, Lorraine Bracco,
and 19-year-old Julia Roberts, who shows early
promise as a sexually abused teenager in "The
Survivor," a typical example of the show's emphasis
on character depth and gritty, hard-hitting
plotlines.
Riding high on the success of Miami Vice, executive
producer Michael Mann (who helmed the penultimate
episode "Top of the World") had several aces up his
sleeve: Cocreator Chuck Adamson had been a legendary
Chicago detective; Farina was an 18-year veteran of
the Chicago Police before he switched to acting; and
Luca's dim-witted Mafia sidekick, Pauli Taglia, was
played by John Santucci, who had been one of
Chicago's most notorious criminals in the 1960s. All
of this--along with James A. Contner's
color-saturated, mostly nocturnal
cinematography--guaranteed that Crime Story would be
unique for its time, earning controversy (over its
rugged depiction of violent cops) and just enough
ratings against ABC's Moonlighting to win a
second-season reprieve. Unfortunately, Anchor Bay's
budget-conscious DVDs represent a missed
opportunity: Crammed onto four discs with five
episodes each (with the pilot on a separate disc),
the transfers barely rival VHS quality, and costly
music rights resulted in song replacements that
loyal viewers will regret. Lack of chapter indexing
and a perfunctory background essay do little justice
to a landmark TV series that deserved a
full-featured release on DVD. Those caveats aside,
Crime Story can be appreciated as an ambitious
American epic that still packs a wallop. --Jeff
Shannon
Description:
Following the phenomenal success of MIAMI VICE,
Executive Producer Michael Mann returned to
television with a new kind of gritty crime drama,
one that talked tougher and hit harder than anything
the small screen had ever seen before. For two
explosive seasons, CRIME STORY told the hard-boiled
saga of hair-trigger cop Lieutenant Mike Torello
[Dennis Farina] and his obsessive pursuit of
ruthless gangster Ray Luca [Anthony Denison] from
the mean streets of early '60s Chicago to the neon
nights of mob-run Las Vegas. Today, CRIME STORY is
considered a true cult classic as well as one of the
most startling series in television history. THE
COMPLETE FIRST SEASON features a stellar supporting
cast that includes Stephen Lang, Bill Campbell, Ted
Levine, Darlanne Fluegel and Joseph Wiseman, and
such guest stars as David Caruso, Michael Madsen,
Pam Grier,Ving Rhames, Lorraine Bracco, Gary Sinise,
Deborah Harry, Vincent Gallo and Julia Roberts. |
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Buy Crime Story - Season Two
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0013131232691
Format: Box set, Color, Full Screen, Surround
Sound
Label: Starz / Anchor Bay
Languages:
EnglishOriginal LanguageDolby
Digital 2.0
Manufacturer: Starz / Anchor Bay
MPN: ANBD12326D
Number Of Items: 4
Publisher: Starz / Anchor Bay
Region Code: 1
Release Date: September 20, 2005
Running Time: 1280 minutes
Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay
Theatrical Release Date: September 18, 1986 |
Product Description:
Studio: Starz/sphe
Release Date: 09/20/2005 Rating: Nr
Amazon.com:
When the first season of Crime Story ended spectacularly in the Nevada desert,
it was anyone's guess what season 2 would do for an encore. With low
first-season ratings and conservative watchdogs complaining about its violence,
the show received a surprise renewal that necessitated the "miraculous" return
of mob-boss Ray Luca (Anthony Denison) and his dimwit sidekick Pauli Taglia
(played by former Chicago burglar John Santucci). Moving from 10:00 p.m. Fridays
to a new 10:00 p.m. Tuesday-night timeslot on NBC, the Michael Mann-produced
series continued its ratings decline, and this lent the series a giddy,
go-for-broke quality that held plenty of surprises. The year is 1966, and
Chicago Police Lt. Mike Torello (Dennis Farina) and his close-knit Major Crimes
Unit continues to track Luca's criminal activities in Las Vegas, where
additional complications fueled a number of dynamic, stand-alone episodes,
beginning with season opener "The Senator, the Movie Star and the Mob,"
guest-starring Kevin Spacey (in his first major TV role) and Jenny Wright (Near
Dark) in a sordid, mob-connected plot with obvious parallels to Bobby Kennedy
and Marilyn Monroe. This established the neon-lit, casino-and-nightclub milieu
of the season, and Luca's reappearance set the season in volatile motion.
The series' daring, pulp-fictional style attracted an impressive array of guests
stars and newcomers, some of whom (like 24's Dennis Haysbert) would later appear
in Michael Mann's films. Ted Levine (The Silence of the Lambs) reprises his role
as burglar-turned-rocker Frank Holman; Margaret Avery (The Color Purple) and
NYPD Blue's James McDaniel are superb in the racial-tension plot of "Seize the
Time"; Laura San Giacomo (sex, lies, and videotape) aces her role as Luca's
former flame in "Protected Witness"; and Elias Koteas delivers a fine
performance in "Roadrunner," an exciting road-thriller episode that showcases
Farina's skill with hardboiled comedy. (For the record, other noteworthy guest
stars include Pam Grier, David Hyde Pierce, Billy Zane, David Soul, Steven
Weber, Michael Jeter, and recurring performances by Andrew Dice Clay and Rolling
Stone editor Jann S. Wenner.) "Pauli Taglia's Dream" is an outrageous experiment
in all-out delirium, focusing on Santucci's scene-stealing character and
providing a wacky lead-up to the season's climactic story arc, which leads Luca
and Torello to their ultimate showdown in an unspecified Latin American country
full of corruptible drug-trade politicians.
Of course, any innovative series has a few drawbacks: The violent shootouts turn
somewhat redundant as the season progresses, and while Torello's gun-toting crew
is brought to life by a perfect supporting cast (Bill Smitrovich, Ray Butler,
Steve Ryan, and a young Bill Campbell), there was never enough time (or
episodes) to properly develop their characters. The turncoat betrayal of lawyer
David Abrams (superbly played by Stephen Lang) is never fully convincing (you
just know he's not a bad guy), and when Crime Story's cancellation inevitably
came to pass, the final-episode cliffhanger of "Going Home" (broadcast May 10,
1988) left frustrated fans with unanswered questions and nowhere else to go.
It's especially regrettable, then, that this four-DVD set offers no extras
whatsoever. The fact that Farina, Denison, Mann, and series cocreators Chuck
Adamson and Gustave Reininger were not invited to do audio commentaries
represents a missed opportunity of epic proportions. We can be grateful,
however, that the series' pop-music soundtrack (chosen by the great Al Kooper,
credited as "Guy Who Picks Music for the Show") remains intact and unchanged as
an essential ingredient to one of the best TV shows of the 1980s. --Jeff Shannon |
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