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Criminal Minds DVDs
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Criminal Minds - Season 1
Viewers who feel they
may have been C.S.I.'d, S.V.U.'d, or NCIS'd to
death, should really keep an open mind concerning
Criminal Minds, because this compelling procedural
crime series brings fascinating new facets to this
crowded genre. The always galvanizing Mandy Patinkin
(Chicago Hope) makes a welcome return to the small
screen as Jason Gideon, head of the FBI's Behavioral
Analysis Unit, and sage mentor to his elite team of
profilers, including compassionate Aaron Hotchner
(Thomas Gibson, of Dharma & Greg), Lola Gladini as
sex-crimes expert Elle Greenway (since departed from
the series), live-wire hunk Derek Morgan (Shemar
Moore), and genius-geek Spencer Reid (Matthew Gray
Gubler), who actually looks creepier than many of
the perpetrators that the team races against time to
apprehend. |

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Criminal Minds - Season 2 "It's been a
hard year for us," Aaron Hotchner (Thomas Gibson),
leader of the FBI's Behavioral Analysis Unit, tells
his mentor, profiler extraordinaire Jason Gideon
(Mandy Patinkin) in the season finale. No kidding!
Just when you think Criminal Minds has shown
you the worst that humanity has to offer, the show
unleashes an Emmy-worthy episode like "No Way Out,"
featuring Keith Carradine in a chilling performance
as Frank, who just may be the most prolific serial
killer in history, and whose capture in a desert
diner is only the beginning of a battle of wits
between himself and Gideon. From serial killers and
a mad bomber to sadistic kidnappers and rapists,
these are truly the cases that try men's (and
women's) souls. In this second season, the writers
have taken great care to flesh out the BAU team. In
"The Aftermath," Elle Greenaway (Lola Glaudini), who
still has not fully come to grips with being shot,
steps over the line in stopping a serial rapist. In
"Revelations," we see flashbacks to resident genius
Reid's (Matthew Gray Gubler) painful childhood after
a religious zealot (a scarily convincing James
"Dawson" Van Der Beek), kidnaps, tortures, and drugs
him (a later episode deals with Reid's addiction).
In "Profiler, Profiled," devastating secrets about
Derek Morgan (Shemar Moore) are revealed after he is
arrested during a visit home on suspicion of being a
serial killer. |

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Criminal Minds - Season 3 Find the
fetish, find the fiend." This is the queasily
compelling Criminal Minds' version of "Save
the cheerleader, save the world," and it drives each
dark and disturbing episode. Before this pivotal
season can really get down to cases, it must deal
with some unfinished business. Mandy Patinkin, who
announced he would be leaving the series, was given
a graceful exit, but not before his character, ace
FBI profiler Gideon begins to doubt his abilities
and sanity in the aftermath of the murder of his
girlfriend at the end of last season. Meanwhile, his
protégé, Hotch (Thomas Gibson) is under pressure
from Section Chief Erin Strauss (Jayne Atkinson) to
resign the Behavioral Analysis Unit (BAU), and
Prentiss (Paget Brewster) submits her resignation
rather than get dirt on him for Erin. All it takes
to keep the team intact is for Strauss to join them
at work on a particularly disturbing case involving
a man using his son to lure unsuspecting women
("He's going to kill you, you know"). And speaking
of unfinished business, enter Gideon's replacement,
David Rossi (Joe Mantegna, an inspired choice), a
BAU legend who returns to the unit he helped found.
He claims he just wants to help with the BAU "an
agent down," but his true motivation will become
clear as the season unfolds Suffice to say it
involves an extremely cold case that continues to
haunt him. Rossi's introduction is the accessible
entry for viewers new to the series, as they, along
with Rossi, get to meet the other team members,
including hunky Derek (Shemar Moore), bookish genius
Reid (Matthew Gray Gubler), and colorful computer
whiz Penelope Garcia (Kristen Vangsness). This
season, the team is confronted with nightmarish
cases, involving all manner of killers (including
one cannibal). Working together to catch these "unsubs"
before they can claim another victim offers further
opportunities for what Rossi calls "personal
growth." In a two-part episode, Shemar must confront
his crisis of faith. In another episode, Reid
attends a support group for his addiction (another
development from last season). Two cases hit
particularly close to home. In one, a team member is
shot, and in the explosive season finale, another is
targeted by terrorists. Considering Criminal
Minds's intensity level, even the bonus gag
reel, comprised of pratfalls, tension-breaking
clowning, and even a birthday cake break for
Mantegna, can be unsettling! There is something to
be said for having a week to unwind between new
episodes. A Criminal Minds marathon can
seriously creep you out. And we mean that in a good
way. --Donald Liebenson |

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Criminal Minds - Season 4 |
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