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The Bargain Nexus - Rescue Me - The Complete Fourth Season

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List Price: $49.95
Our Price: $29.89
Your Save: $ 20.06 ( 40% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures Starring: Rescue Me
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: DVD Brand: Sony EAN: 0043396212633 Format: AC-3 Label: Sony Pictures Manufacturer: Sony Pictures Number Of Items: 4 Publisher: Sony Pictures Region Code: 99 Release Date: 2008-06-03 Running Time: 560 Studio: Sony Pictures
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: It's getting boring! Comment: Unless you're a die hard fan of this series - then save your money and don't buy Season 4. it's become the Tommy Gavin show - there's hardly any focus on the other great characters. It's one long boring scene featuring T.G after another. The first few seasons were great - but it just hasn't maintained it's momentum.
Customer Rating:      Summary: What a great Series. The best so far from Rescue Me Comment: This is a great TV Series, with a really low price compared to other TV series. BUY IT
Customer Rating:      Summary: Rescue Me Season 4 Comment: This is a easy review as I'm a huge fan of the show. Local boy Denis Leary is a great writer and puts out some great episodes. Another local Lenny Clark is just a lunatic in real life & I like that too! Great actors, great script, I can't wait for season 5!
Customer Rating:      Summary: The one season you can't do without Comment: Just buy the season; it's so far the most emotionally-charged of the series, and if you aren't moved by the story lines, just plunge that wooden stake into your heart and get it over with!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Entertaining, But Not As Strong as Prior Seasons Comment: I found Rescue Me season 4 to be entertaining. I enjoyed watching it and, like prior seasons, often sat at the edge of my seat wondering what would happen next (but only at then end of an episode).
However, unlike prior seasons, I found that the story, and to a lesser extent, the acting, was not as strong as prior seasons. I often found seasons 1-3 very compelling, and I could not wait to watch the next show. After several episodes of season 4, I did not mind the break.
I wondered how much more crazy stuff could happen to Tommy Gavin. Season four answered that question, not a whole lot.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Is firefighter and "heroic S.O.B." Tommy Gavin (Denis Leary) becoming, as one character so delicately puts it, "pussified?" As the fourth season begins, Tommy is listening to Dr. Laura and watching Oprah. He awkwardly and clumsily avoids the aggressive crazy-hot volunteer woman firefighter (Jennifer Esposito) who saved his life in the beach-house fire of which he has no memory; an act that has left him, shall we say, with a limp hose. In time, he will proclaim to be "back to the old me," but this season, he engages in behavior that would give even the old Tommy pause, and puts audience empathy for this deeply flawed character to the supreme test. In one of this season's most wrenching developments, Tommy and his estranged wife, Janet (Andrea Roth), are living together platonically to care for her new baby, whose paternity is in question. But, failing to bond with the infant, Janet sinks to the depths of post-partum depression, driving Tommy to think the unthinkable, and to do the unforgivable. Elsewhere, dim, but good-hearted Sean (Steven Pasquale) struggles to make a go of his rocky marriage to the unstable Maggie (Tatum O'Neal), Chief Jerry (Jack McGee) fails his post heart attack stress test and is relegated to a desk job, the firehouse makes a play for a new probie (Larenz Tate) who might change the basketball team's fortunes, and Tommy finds himself even further alienated from his rebellious and contemptuous daughter (Natalie Distler), who is living with a rock musician. Along with Esposito, Gina Gershon joins the ranks of series hotties as a bar pickup with some sexual kinks. But the one who really lights our fire is Amy Sedaris as the bipolar daughter of the new chief (Jerry Adler), who insists Tommy take her out. Rescue Me doesn't just tear the basic cable envelope, it incinerates it. Unlike other long-running shows, Rescue Me stays true to its gritty muse, with no attempt to make difficult characters more likeable. The edges remain sharp and the humor charred black (the series is not above--or beneath--cheap Anna Nicole Smith jokes in the wake of a shocking tragedy that rocks the firehouse). While perhaps not as consistent or compelling as previous seasons, No. 4 contains indelible moments, such as Tommy and Janet's visit to a marriage counselor, who, after hearing their tortured history, thinks he's being punk'd, and a Gavin family intervention ("We got enough drunks here to start our own AA meeting," Maggie observes). The bountiful bonus features, including nearly a half hour's worth of deleted scenes, a season overview and a featurette about real firefighters, add extra spark to this set. --Donald Liebenson
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