Oz : Complete Season 1
RRP: £24.99
Our Price: £11.20 (subject to change)
Editorial
Amazon.co.uk Review
HBO's violent men-behind-bars drama is an addictive, testosterone-driven soap opera for guys. The eight episodes of the first season set the style for the show: a massive cast of a vivid characters on both sides of the bars, four or five stories unleashed at a breakneck pace and framed by angry, oddball introductions, and a soaring casualty rate. Created by Homicide producer Tom Fontana, this drama quickly earned its rightful reputation as the most brutal show on TV. It's simple chemistry: combine volatile ingredients in a confined space, shut tight, and shake. The yellow brick road of the Oswald Correctional Facility (affectionately known as "Oz" among the inmates) leads to "Emerald City," an antiseptic cellblock of cement and glass overseen by prison-reform advocate Tim McManus (Terry Kinney). The first episode introduces its two most compelling inmates: meek lawyer Beecher (Lee Terguson), who transforms from a vulnerable lamb to a fearless, drug-addicted wildcat, and Muslim activist Kareem Said (Eamonn Walker), a fiercely non-violent leader whose campaign for reform explodes in a season-climaxing riot. The stunning first-season cast also features Ernie Hudson (the warden), Rita Moreno (a worldly drug-counseling nun), and Edie Falco (who jumped from her role as a single-mother prison guard to mob wife in The Sopranos). It carries no rating, but the drug use, nudity, and brutal violence make this highly inappropriate for young viewers and unsuited to the squeamish. Oz pulls no punches in its portrayal of prison violence and predatory abuse. --Sean Axmaker
Gripping Stuff
Review date: 2008-05-25 Rating: 8 out of 10
An engrossing show that is hard hitting. The narration is a bit annoying and on the whole unnescessary, although occasionally it doesn add a thought provoking point or commentary.
I don't usually watch prison drmams, but decided to give this a go having read positive reviews- and I'm glad I did. It is dark and offers an antidote to syrupy sentimental drama, to implausible dramas, or to those relying on thinly drawn characters.
Each episode develops the characters further, and the storylines are high quality allowing tensions and dynamics to be explored. In fact this is quite an intersting study in psychology.
Worth a look.
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Reviews
Brutality and humanity in OZReview date: 2008-04-02 Rating: 6 out of 10OZ - rough letter tattooed on an arm in Oswald Penitentiary and the prison drama about the inmates and staff in the section of OZ call Emerald City. Any connotation to Dorothy and Toto stops here. OZ is serious, tough, uncompromising, real, stripped to the bone and still manages to show the characters as people, good or bad. There are no one dimensional characters here, and all the actors step up to the challenge.
I still haven't decided whether I like the show or not, but I recommend it for its brutality and humanity. No, the two are not conflicting here. This is the kind of show that like it or not, it stays with you.
Louise.OZ season 1 Review date: 2008-04-01 Rating: 10 out of 10This series was offered to me from a friend saying it was amazing
so i gave it a watch and ever since then ive been glued to the telly for weeks i have just ordered the 3rd and 4th season.
The characters the story everything about this is superb.the prisoners range from black gangs memeber,latinos,neo-nazis,gays,mafia,muslims,biker gangs,rapests then there is the couple nearly OK guys such as tobius beecher and agustus hill(who will be the host of each episode)
Anybody thinking of buying this think no longer this is one of the best things i have ever seen in my life being an 18 year old. if it was ever held as ransom buy one of the thugs in it i would pay them £100s of £s for it back!! Good but let down a bit with commentaryReview date: 2008-02-08 Rating: 8 out of 10I had previously watched the series on a random basis when it was shown on TV so I purchased the box sets for seasons 1 and 2. I now wish I'd looked a bit more and bought the complete series box set. Superb acting and a cast that runs through all my favourites, The Wire, Special Victims Unit, Law and Order, The Sopranos etc. Brutal, but not in a glorified way, and realistic. The only thing that annoyed me about the show was the commentary provided in the form of a wheelchair bound convict with various views on the world. Totally unnecessary. When expanding on another character it fulfilled a function, otherwise it appeared a bit arty farty in my opinion. However this aside another HBO gem.could try harderReview date: 2007-09-02 Rating: 6 out of 10I was also disappointed with this series as I was hoping for a gritty prison drama set in a realistic setting. Unfortunately stereotyping is the order of the day; from the black crack smokers to the muslim radicals to the mafioso wiseguys - none of the characters seem convincing or real. Then there is the real problem of the pretentious cut scenes of a disabled inmate spouting profound wisdom about life which really do break the action up and annoy you with its cod philosophy. Up to ep. 8 and will probably stick with it but i would rent rather than buy.
Product Details/Specifications
Actor(s):
J.K. Simmons
Ernie Hudson
Eamonn Walker
Rita Moreno
Harold Perrineau
Creators:
Ernie Hudson (Primary Contributor)
Rita Moreno (Primary Contributor)
Luke Perry (Cast Member)
Simon Jones (Cast Member)
Method Man (Cast Member)
Tom Fontana (Producer)
Barry Levinson (Producer)
Director(s):
Recording label: Paramount Home Entertainment (UK) Manufacturer: Paramount Home Entertainment (UK)EAN: 5014437872937Binding: DVDNumber of items: 2Format: Colour, PAL, Release date: 2007-02-05Audience rating: Suitable for 15 years and overRegion code: 2Running time: 432 minutesLanguage: English (Original Language)