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The Closer DVDs
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The Closer - Season 1
Deputy Police Chief Brenda
Johnson (Kyra Sedgwick, Personal Velocity) isn't
about making friends, she's about getting results.
Days after her transfer from Atlanta, the LAPD's
Priority Homicide Division decides they can't work
with the blunt-talking Southern belle. Fortunately,
she has former CIA colleague, Assistant Police Chief
Will Pope (J.K. Simmons, Spider-Man), on her side.
As he explains to Captain Taylor (Robert Gossett),
who she has just replaced, "She is not miss
congeniality...but she's a closer." Set to the sound
of urban blues, TNT's The Closer is Columbo by way
of Prime Suspect. In other words, Johnson may be as
messy as Oscar Madison, but she's as sharp as
Sherlock Holmes. Throughout the first season, she'll
solve 13 murders, including those of a reclusive
mathematician, a Russian prostitute, and a British
butler. She won't get much support from her
colleagues, except for Sergeant David Gabriel (Corey
Reynolds, Broadway’s Hairspray)--to the
consternation of his co-workers, like Detective
Lieutenants Provenza (G.W. Bailey, M*A*S*H) and
Flynn (Tony Denison, Melrose Place). Johnson also
has a friend in FBI Special Agent Fritz Howard (Jon
Tenney, You Can Count on Me). With his help, she'll
eventually settle into her new environment,
especially when she lands a house and a cat on the
same day (conveniently left behind by a victim).
Just as it takes awhile for the chief to grow on her
squad--and to get used to driving in LA--Sedgwick's
Golden Globe-nominated performance follows a similar
trajectory. Fortunately, "Scarlett O'Hara," as the
droll Provenza dubs her, becomes more fully-rounded
as the season progresses, aided by a superb SAG
Award-nominated ensemble cast. Consulting producer
on The Closer is former LA District Attorney Gil
Garcetti of O.J. infamy. --Kathleen C. Fennessy |

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The Closer - Season 2 Deputy Police
Chief Brenda Johnson may have put in a year already
with the Los Angeles police department, but that
doesn't mean the transplanted Southerner fits in
yet. In the second season of the TNT drama The
Closer, Brenda is less a fish out of water, but
she's still not completely at home with her brash
colleagues--some of whom resent her potent mixture
of brains and beauty. All 15 episodes from the
2006-2007 are included in this four-disc box set.
And aside from a couple episodes where viewers are
able to correctly guess the ending about 20 minutes
into the show, the cases are taut, provocative, and
highly watchable. Much of the show's success is due
to Kyra Sedgwick (The Woodsman, Something to Talk
About), an actress who seemed poised for movie
stardom before she took time off to raise a family
with husband Kevin Bacon. As bull-headed as she is
soft-hearted, Brenda has a wry sense of humor and
delivers her punch lines with a gentle drawl. But
don't mistake gentility for gullibility: Cross her
and you've made an enemy for life. Even when she's
stuck in sitcom-like situations--such as trying to
hide from her mother that she's living with her
boyfriend--Brenda brings believability to her
situation. From the first episode (dealing with the
investigation of a brutally murdered police officer)
to the last (Brenda's attempt to bring down a
terrorist organization), Sedgwick is riveting; no
wonder, then, that the Golden Globes honored her in
2007 as best actress in a TV drama. Rounding out the
cast are J.K. Simmons (The Spider-Man franchise) as
Assistant Chief Will Pope, Jon Tenney (Fools Rush
In) as her boyfriend Fritz, and Anthony John Denison
(Wild Things) as hard-nosed Detective Andy Flynn. --Jae-Ha
Kim |

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The Closer - Season 3 Deputy Chief
Brenda Johnson (Kyra Sedgwick) is back in season
three of TNT's crime procedural The Closer. With a
couple years at the Los Angeles police department
already under her belt, Brenda has proven that her
eccentric method works at getting confessions from
even the most hardened criminals. But even she's not
quite sure how to handle the season opener, where a
slaughtered family's sole survivor is the stunned,
stoned teenage son. Bleak, dark and wonderfully
scripted, the opener sets the tone for the 14
episodes that follow it. With an exaggerated
Southern drawl that belies her hard edged attitude,
Brenda is at her best in the field. But when dropped
into personal situations, she often flounders. For
instance, though she commands a team of officers
underneath her, she still doesn't know how to tell
her parents she lives with her boyfriend, FBI
special agent Fritz Howard (Jon Tenney, Fools Rush
In). The awkward (and sometimes poignant) moments
between Johnson and her folks humanize her, giving
her added dimension. Sedgwick is adept at comedy,
and a couple of the episodes take advantage of her
skills. Jostling with an over zealous bridezilla at
a crime scene, Johnson becomes the subject of a
popular Youtube video. "You've become the most
downloaded fully-clothed woman on the Internet,"
announces her boss, Will Pope (J.K. Simmons). There
is some internal drama when Brenda is ordered to
make budget cuts by firing someone in her group. But
the best moments occur when Brenda--calm as a
cucumber--does what she does best: closes cases.
Aside from a couple episodes that allude to past
years, this third season (which originally aired in
2007), is easy to follow even for new viewers who
haven't seen previous episodes. --Jae-Ha Kim |

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The Closer - Season 4
Oh, for heaven's sake,
it is a head!" The Southern drawl and mild
exasperation are by now familiar to TV crime buffs:
Kyra Sedgwick's steel-magnolia-with-a-badge, Deputy
Chief Brenda Leigh Johnson. The fourth season of The
Closer finds Sedgwick in super form, as the
scattered, ditzy mama's girl with a weakness for
junk food and a singular focus when it comes to
getting perps to talk. Yet the strength of The
Closer goes far beyond just Sedgwick, as formidable
as she is. The ensemble cast is also stellar, and
very human and believable. Johnson's fellow cops
(among whom Johnson is, finally, one of the boys,
albeit in frilly skirts) are fleshed-out and battle
their own demons. And this season viewers get to
know Johnson's fiancé, the FBI agent Fritz Howard
(Jon Tenney), much better, along with his "psychic"
sister (the unforgettable Amy Sedaris), and Brenda's
doting parents, as both families prepare for the
happy couple's impending nuptials--if serial killers
and terrorist plots will only give them a little
break. The boxed set includes the full season, along
with delicious extras, including an unforgettable
blooper reel (the cast really does seem to have a
blast shooting this series, as viewers have long
suspected; and don't miss guest star Jennifer
Coolidge's R-rated ad lib café scene). There's also
an informative featurette with Corey Reynolds (the
hunky Sgt. Gabriel) and LAPD Det. Mike Berchem, an
adviser to the series; deleted scenes, and more.
Thank you--thank you so much! --A.T. Hurley
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