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Suits – Season 1 (DVD) – Playing with the law, but being a bit smug about it

30th April 2012 By Tim Isaac


I’m torn between loving and loathing Suits. It’s a legal series that undoubtedly has charm and an easy wit, but the main characters are so smug it’s sometimes almost painful to watch. It’s also true that in an age of austerity, this celebration of wealth and conspicuous consumption feels slightly out of touch. But it’s one of the odd things about American TV – it loves rich people, and smugness is almost treated as the right of those who’ve succeeded. To me Suits is occasionally insufferable, but the strong writing elsewhere and the pairing of Gabriel Macht and Patrick J. Adams just about pull it through.

Adams plays Mike Ross, who ducks into a law office to try and avoid the police and accidentally scores an interview to join the firm. Mike is a prodigy, who may not have a law degree but passed the bar after a bet and has an eidetic memory that ensures he knows far more about the law than the Harvard grads the firm normally hires. Hotshot lawyer Harvey Specter (Macht) decides to take a shot on Mike, becoming the young man’s mentor.

Over the course of the series the duo work on all sort of cases, with Mike proving an astute legal mind, even if he doesn’t actually know the bureaucratic basics of being a lawyer. However the partnership doesn’t please everyone, particularly rival lawyer Louis (Rick Hoffman), who varies between wanting Mike for himself to trying to destroy him.

Mike and Harvey make a great team and genuinely seem to be having fun as they manipulate the law to serve their clients. With smart plots and a breezy style, most of the time it’s a lot of fun, with plenty of humour and a pace that never allows you to stop for breath. It would just be nice if they weren’t so smug and pleased with themselves all the time. To be fair sometimes they have reason to be self-satisfied but a bit of humility never hurt anyone. And I don’t mean the sort of fake humility American TV (including Suits) likes, where every so often we’re reminded they have a heart in the hope that we’ll ignore the smugness they spend 99% of their lives feeling.

I think it depends of your mindset as to how you take the character. Mike and Harvey kind of remind me of the guys in the Pepsi adverts who con their bossing into thinking he’s going mad. Presumably we’re meant to think those guys are cool and funny people we can aspire to be like (by drinking Pepsi of course), but to me they come across like complete assholes. And that’s the problem with Mike and Harvey, if you met them in real life there’s a good chance you’d really dislike them, particularly Harvey, who seems to have modelled himself on Charlie Sheen in Wall Street but without the realisation of the dangers of unbridled capitalism. Macht and Adams just about make it work, but I undoubtedly can’t help but being torn over the show, especially when it heads into ‘It is not enough to succeed, others must fail’ territory.

The four-disc DVD release includes all 12 episodes from season 1, plus the US version of the pilot. There’s also an audio commentary, outtakes and some deleted scenes to round things off. With a very reasonable RRP of £17.99, the show is worth checking out, but just be aware that the main characters are a bit of a love ‘em or loathe ‘em pair.

Overall Verdict: While its celebration of wealth and being pleased with yourself is sometimes a bit much to take, Suits is a funny, pacy and often entertaining legal show.

Special Features:
Audio Commentaries
Deleted Scenes
US Pilot
Outtakes

Reviewer: Tim Isaac

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WIN! Kingdom Of Blood – Legend Of The Red Eagle – Three swahbuckling discs to give away

30th April 2012 By Tim Isaac

The swashbuckling adventure of Kindgom Of Blood – Legend Of The Red Eagle is available to buy now on DVD, and we’ve got three copies of the film to give away in this great comp!

Based on Águila Roja, the most popular Spanish television series to have aired in recent years, the film is set in 17th century Spain and tells the violent and heroic tale of the enigmatic swordsman known only as ‘Red Eagle’.

Following a failed assassination attempt in which his only son is blinded, ‘Red Eagle’ seeks to avenge his child by taking up arms against the corrupt Cardinal Mendoza, the man responsible for the attack. The Cardinal, bolstered by the powers of England, Portugal and France, is plotting to overthrow the King and bring the country to its knees. In an ancient world where castles and villages are being razed to the ground, and persecution and conspiracies run rife, only one man can stand in their way. There is no alternative. To save the people, ‘Red Eagle’ must take the fight to the enemy, and he must bring the war to them.

If you’d like to try and win one of copies of Kingdom of Bloos that we’ve got to give away, sign in to the site below (or click here to register) and answer the multiple choice question (see below for more details on how to enter). The competition closes on May 13th, 2012, so get answering and good luck!

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100 Years Of Universal Logos – It’s the studio’s centenary today!

30th April 2012 By Tim Isaac

April 30th, 2012 is the day Universal is celebrating its centenary. Throughout the year it’s continuing the fiesta by releasing restored version of movies like Jaws on Blu-ray, as well as showing off its brand new 100th Anniversary logo in all its new release. However Universal has had quite a few logos over the years, all based around looking at earth from space. Take a look below for a short tour of Universal’s logo as we congratulate the studio on its landmark birthday!

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Steve Kloves Takes On The Jungle Book – The Harry Potter writer directing a Kipling adaptation

29th April 2012 By Tim Isaac

Now that Harry Potter is over, Warner is keen to stay in business with the team that brought the franchise to life, which includes Steve Kloves, who wrote seven of the eight screenplays for the magical movies. Now Deadline reports that the studio is backing Kloves to write and direct a live action adaptation of Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle Book.

Kipling’s 1894 book has been the subject of numerous adaptations, most famously Disney’s animated 1967 version, along with a 1994 live-action rendition, which starred Jason Scott Lee. The novel follows the adventures of Mowgli, who is brought up by wolves and has various interactions with jungle animals, both good and bad.

As well as Harry Potter, Kloves also had a hand in writing The Amazing Spider-Man, as well as Warner’s now-delayed Akira. It won’t be his first directorial outing, as Kloves has previously made The Fabulous Baker Boys and Flesh and Bone, but hasn’t helmed a movie since 1993.

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David Koepp Writing Snow White and the Huntsman Sequel – With Universal hoping Rupert Sanders will direct

29th April 2012 By Tim Isaac

Universal must have confidence that its action fairytale flick, Snow White And The Huntsman, will be a success, as while the movie isn’t released until June 1st, Deadline reports that the studio is already in talks with screenwriter David Koepp (Jurassic Park) to write a sequel to the revisionist tale. The word is that Universal wants to fast-track the sequel, and is trying to secure director Rupert Sanders to make it his next project.

In Snow White And The Huntsman, Kristen Stewart stars as Snow, who teams up with the Huntsman (Chris Hemsworth) who was originally sent to kill her, so they can take down the Evil Queen (Charlize Theron) stepmother. While the film retains many elements of the original fairytale, the action and scale has been amped up significantly. The three primary actors are believed to have deals in place already to return for a follow-up.

It isn’t known when the sequel might shoot, but presuming the first film is a success, Universal wants to the sequel as soon as possible.

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Henry Selick Directing The Graveyard Book – He takes on Neil Gaiman’s novel

29th April 2012 By Tim Isaac

It seems stop-motion master Henry Selick (Coraline, Nightmare Before Christmas) has a new movie, as Disney has secured the rights to Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book for Selick to direct, according to Deadline.

We just reported that Steve Kloves was writing and directing a live-action version of The Jungle Book for Warner Bros, and The Graveyard book gives a spooky take on the same story. However rather than being about a boy raised by wolves, this take follows a young lad who is raised by ghosts in a graveyard after his family is murdered.

A while ago, Neil Jordan was to direct a live action version of the Newberry Award-winning novel, but now Disney and Selick have taken over the rights, with the film presumably planned as a stop-motion flick.

It may be a while until the director gets around to The Graveyard Book, as he won’t start making it until he finishes work on a top-secret movie with Pixar, which he’s currently putting together.

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