Customer Service - Phone: +852 2989-9147 or Email: sales@shopinhk.com
Search:
Login: Password:  OR 
Hong Kong Online Shopping :: DVDs :: Westerns :: 0976157306 :: Deadwood - The Complete Second Season

  Categories

  Manufacturers

  Special

  Help
We accept American Express, Visa, Master Card and Diners.

  

Deadwood - The Complete Second Season :: 0976157306

Deadwood - The Complete Second Season
Click to enlarge Click To View Detailed Image(s)
Product ID: 108260

Release Date: 2006-05-23
Publisher: Hbo Home Video
Directed By: Davis Guggenheim
ISBN: 0976157306
ISBN13: 0026359277924
UPC: 026359277924

Details
 
SKU 026359277924
Weight 0.59 Kgs
Price: HK$480.00

  0%

Stock Details and Delivery
 
WarehouseStockEstimated Delivery Date
Hong KongNo item(s) available
US Warehouse 125 item(s) available16th September 2008 (Tue)
US Warehouse 2No item(s) available
On Order31 item(s) on order** 2 to 8 weeks **
 
When will you get your order:
  • Products in our Hong Kong warehouse are delivered within 2 business days. Click here to list items in stock, or consider sending a gift certficate if you're looking for last minute gifts.
  • Items in stock in our US warehouses will be delivered around the displayed dates.
  • Items on order will be delivered as soon as they arrive in one of our warehouses. This can take 2-8 weeks or longer for unpublished titles. Please contact us if you need more information.
Options
 
Quantity

        


Customers Also Bought

Munich (Widescreen Edition)

Deadwood - The Complete First Season

Six Feet Under - The Complete Fifth Season

Description

Product Description
Deadwood: The Complete Second Season continues the Shakespearean brilliance of the landmark first season, created by NYPD Blue head writer David Milch. Milch either wrote or supervised the writing of each of the 12 episodes in this stunning follow-up, which contains more than a few surprises for anyone who thought they knew the myriad characters in the late 19th century town of Deadwood--a mucky, ungoverned, exceptionally violent development in South Dakota. As with the first season, Deadwood continues to be about many things--survival, loyalty, alliances, duty--but all of them are happening against a titanic battle between several parties to consolidate power and real wealth in the territory. Despite his cutthroat ethics, astonishing profanity, and bursts of cruelty, it's hard not to side in this bid for a piece of America's future with saloon owner Al Swearengen (a magnificent performance by Ian McShane), a visionary monster who is nevertheless more recognizably human than his rivals.

Entering an uneasy partnership with Al is Seth Bullock (Timothy Olyphant). Seth begins the second season by teaching Al a few lessons in chivalry, and their brief but bloody feud commences physical ailments for Al that become increasingly shocking to behold. Yet Al's difficulties have the practical effect of sidelining him for a couple of episodes while the story sets up more complex power struggles. Al takes on Deadwood's other saloon-brothel owner, the unstable Cy Tolliver (Powers Boothe), as well as an off-screen millionaire who is intent on owning all the gold-mining interests by buying out weary prospectors' claims. Meanwhile, Seth's wife and son (actually, his late brother's widow and child) arrive, an unsettling development for Seth's lover, the widow Alma Garret (Molly Parker), who soon reveals herself to be a more complicated person than in the first season. The prostitute Trixie (Paula Malcomson) begins thinking about her future and asserts independence from Al by having sex with Seth's friend, Sol Star (John Hawkes). Best of all, Calamity Jane (Robin Weigert) is back and more endearingly uncivilized than ever. Special features include actor commentaries on select episodes, the best of which finds Olyphant and McShane cracking each other up while watching the season premiere. --Tom Keogh

Editorial Descriptions are usually submitted by the manufacturers, publishers and authors. Contact us if you are one of them, and wish to change the above description.

Reviews

  

Customer feedback

Product rating


Voting

Rate It!


Customer Reviews


Author: Guest
HBO store says there are eight. What's up with this?????


Author: Guest
I have to admit I was an off again on again viewer of the first season. I was a little put off by the profanity. Not that I am a prude it just seemed forced, like they were cussing just to be different. But by secound season I was past that and in love with the show. I hope they are planning a show for next year? If you like westerns with a twist, I highly recommend "Across the High Lonesome!"


Author: Guest
As exciting as the first season. The characters have grown and the camp is as turbulent as ever. Can't wait to see the third season.


Author: Guest
This is a great show that only improved with the second season. Anyone who appreciates a good western, soap opera, or Shakespearean play will love this series. This show is definitely not for children. Just don't let the language offend you. If you need explanation the website for the show does a great job of explaining it as does the 6th disk of the First Season set.


Author: Guest
In season two, "Deadwood" gains the courage of its own convictions and starts to explore the world it's created with even greater power and subtlety than it did in season one. Truly magnificent TV, downright Shakespearean. In fact, Swearingen's growing habit in this season of addressing his privatemost thoughts to a box with the Injun chief's head in it reminds one of Iago's or Macbeth's soliloquies. Cy Tolliver also shows how mesmerizing a truly vicious man can be. Both Ian McShane as Swearingen and Powers Booth as Tolliver are snarlingly brilliant. And Molly Parker really grows into the role of the widow Alma Garrett, as she perfectly balances innocence, passion, playfulness, and restraint.



Other actors who deserve special mention are Brad Dourif as the cranky, principled Doc Cochran, and William Sanderson, whose portrayal of E.B. Farnum is deliciously histrionic.



The language in "Deadwood" is one of its great achievements. The over-the-top profanity conceals other purposes. It makes the characters seem gritty and almost primitive. At the same time, they can handle the elaborate periodic sentence along with the quickest witted of Shakespeare's characters or those of the other classic author I'm put in mind of: Dickens. What a seductive, baroque smorgasbord of effects creator and executive producer David Milch serves up here! I'm awestruck and eagerly awaiting the DVD of season three.



I'm also devastated and mystified that HBO has canceled this fabulous show. My vote's with the "savedeadwood" movement, but I fear it has little chance of success.

Send to Friend

  

Send to friend

Your name: *
Your e-mail: *
Recipient's email: *

Send to friend
 

  Your cart

  Gift Registry

  In Association With




  Offers & Ads








Users online:  89 unregistered customer(s)
Copyright © 2004-2008 GeoClicks - Unit 715, Tower B, Southmark, 11 Yip Hing Street, Wong Chuk Hang, Hong Kong