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Category:    Home > Reviews > Drama > TV > Brothers & Sisters – The Complete First Season

Brothers & Sisters – The Complete First Season

 

Picture: B-     Sound: B-     Extras: C     Episodes: C+

 

 

I expected another lame, tired, clichéd, predictable melodrama when Disney/ABC delivered Brothers & Sisters as a new series, especially with a cast that included Calista Flockhart, Sally Field, Patricia Wettig and knowing how bad dramas have been since they started going into decline in the 1980s.  Note that nighttime soap operas were far from the primary reason this happened.  Instead, the show turns out to be a series with something to offer.  It has several generations of the Walker family under one roof and goes on from there.  The first 23 episodes of The Complete First Season turn out to be more watchable than expected.

 

Of course, this is nothing extraordinarily original, yet it is more intelligent than much of what we have suffered through in prime time TV and that is not even considering so-called “reality TV” that has made TV reach new lows.  Simply put, it is ambitious enough to be intelligent and somewhat honest about the same old storylines, though it helps that they have at least some money.  That is not a cop out, but it would have been bolder if they had economic strife for a change.

 

Predictably, some of the characters do not get along, so they have to come to terms with each other.  That would be tired, but the show tries to keep it real and moving.  That is half the battle won.  Though not a great show, the cast that additionally includes Ron Rifkin, Balthazar Getty and Rachel Griffiths has some chemistry.  Now that the show has survived, will it coast or try to build up and take some risks?  We’ll see.

 

The anamorphically enhanced 1.78 X 1 image has some of the usual depth, detail and color limits we see in such series, but it is more on than off and much more watchable than the terrible quality we have seen with similar recent shows.  The Dolby Digital 5.1 mix is not bad, with nicely recorded dialogue and good ambience, even when the surrounds are not too active.  The combination surpasses analog broadcasts of the show.

 

Extras include a bonus episode, audio commentary tracks on select shows, bloopers, deleted scenes, Walker Family Tree and two featurettes: The Family Business and Behind The Scenes with The Brothers.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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