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Product Description Timothy Olyphant (?Damages? and ?Deadwood?) stars as a modern-day Western hero based on the character created from legendary crime novelist Elmore Leonard from his short story, ?Fire in the Hole.? Deputy Marshall Raylan Givens (Olyphant) is exiled to his hometown of Harlan County, Kentucky after the shooting of a Miami drug cartel hit man raises debate over his renegade style of law enforcement. desertcart.com Prolific and much-respected author Elmore Leonard's novels have fared poorly when they've been adapted to the small screen--remember Maximum Bob? Karen Sisco?--but the Western-cum-police-drama Justified breaks the losing streak thanks to the tightly wound performance of star Timothy Olyphant (Deadwood) and solid scripting and direction. Olyphant's Marshal Raylan Givens, whom readers met in the novels Pronto and Riding the Rap (as well as the short "Fire in the Hole," which serves as the basis for the pilot episode), is a man of few words and deadly aim who is sent back to his hometown of Harlan County, Kentucky, after shooting first and asking questions later with an oily gangster. Once ensconced in the coal belt, Givens runs afoul of childhood friend Boyd Crowder (the terrific Walton Goggins from The Shield), who's gone from mining to white supremacy and murder. Also competing for Givens's attention are local girl Ava (Joelle Carter), whose crush on the marshal doesn't quite obscure the fact that she's just murdered her husband, and his father, Arlo (the always-solid character actor Raymond J. Barry), whose criminal career is a millstone around Givens's neck. Justified is most compelling when it focuses on Crowder, who grows more dangerous as the series unfolds; when it sends Givens to pursue less complex criminals like dentist Roland Pike (Alan Ruck in "Long in the Tooth") or play hostage negotiator ("Blowback"), the results are fine but hew closer to standard TV police drama fare. What keeps the show out of that particular ditch is Olyphant's performance, as tightly wound as his turn on Deadwood but with a hint of grim humor; he's well supported by the cast, including Nick Searcy as his boss and M.C. Gainey (Lost) as Crowder's equally hot-wired father. An array of fine directors, including John Dahl (Red Rock West), actor Tony Goldwyn (Conviction), Rod Holcomb (The Good Wife), and Jon Avnet (Fried Green Tomatoes), also lends a cinematic quality to the episodes. Extras include commentary by the cast and crew on four episodes, including the always-wry Olyphant on "Hatless" and executive producer Graham Yost (The Pacific) and director Michael Dinner on "Fire in the Hole." Leonard's influence on the series is explored in a 20-minute feature called "What Would Elmore Do?," which served as a mantra for the production team whenever they found themselves in a creative bind. Short, EPK-style featurettes covering the show's inception, Kentucky locations, and its marshal advisers round out the set. --Paul Gaita Review: Surprisingly good... - Wow, this show is surprisingly good. I was actually about half way through the first season and I was thinking to myself "How is it possible this show is so well written?" when I noticed, for the first time, in the opening credits that the show is based on works by Elmore Leonard. I do not mean to detract from the fabulous job the screen writer's have done adapting this for television but I am sure it helped a bit to have a solid base to work from. I admit, I have never read any of Leonard's books, though I have heard they are very well written, but I have seen a few of his movies, and there are two things that you can count on from Leonard: great characters and great dialogue. This show has both (more on that in a moment). In a way, the premise of the show sounds kind of silly to me. Essentially it is an attempt to transplant the old Western, with the fast drawing gunslinger, into modern times. The main character, a deputy U.S. Marshal named Raylan, has just been transferred back to his hometown in Kentucky after shooting someone under somewhat suspicious circumstances in Florida. Raylan is a fast draw and he gets himself into quite a few old Western style stand-off situations. Like I said, that sounds a little bit silly on the face of it (do they still train Marshals to draw quickly and shoot without looking?) but it actually works really well. They do not get ridiculous with it. All of the quick draw situations Raylan finds himself in are believable. There are no high noon shootouts on Main Street. The show has a great cast of characters. The first season follows a story arc based around the Crowder family. The Crowder family are a bunch of criminals from Raylan's hometown and they make excellent and really interesting villains. Boyd Crowler, in particular, is a really interesting character, and the actor, Walton Goggins, does a superb job playing him. Raylan's father is also a very interesting character. There is a very strained relationship between Raylan and his father and the show handles it well. Usually shows like this run into problems dealing with strained family relationships. They wind up manufacturing a bunch of repetitive drama (the same arguments over and over) and then get very sentimental with it (the emotional blowup and reunion). This show avoids all of that. There were no cringe worthy scenes in this show, the kind that often feel like they come straight out of an introductory psychology textbook. That is surprisingly rare. Even some of my favorite shows have cringe worthy scenes here and there. This show, at least in the first season, which is all I have watched so far, had none. The show also has really well written dialogue. I watch a lot of procedurals and the dialogue on procedurals usually leaves a lot to be desired. A lot of shows, I think, wind up sacrificing quality for quantity. Shows that put out 24 episodes a season always feel a bit like they were made in a factory to me. The same scenes, with minor variations, show up in every episode. The dialogue is extremely repetitive (the same arguments over and over), a lot of the dialogue is just exposition ("so, here we are, at the gangsters hideout"), or filler. I am not sure if it is because they only have 13 episodes a season, or if they are using some of Leonard's original dialogue, or if they just have really talented screenwriter's, but the dialogue in this first season was really good. Another thing I appreciate about the show is that it often goes against cliches. I will just give one example of what I mean. There is a scene in one of the episodes where Raylan is drinking in the bar. We are far enough into the show to know that Raylan knows how to handle himself. There are two guys in the bar talking real loud, making crude remarks about some woman, and Raylan decides to confront them. This is a really familiar trope and most people, including me, immediately have certain expectations about where things are heading. The situation escalates and they decide to take things outside. This is where the two guys realize they picked a fight with the wrong person, right? Wrong. The show totally surprised me by having the two guys win the fight. Raylan gets beat up. That might seem like a really minor thing but very few shows would have been willing to have their hero lose a fight like that. You are never supposed to perceive any weakness in the hero. Not only is that unrealistic but it is boring. I really appreciated that this show was willing to frustrate the viewer's expectations. That was just one scene, and it was not all that important for the overall plot, but it was, to me, a great example of why I think this show is a cut above most of the television shows I watch. The show avoids cliche. The characters are not cliche, the dialogue is not cliche, and the stories are not cliche. I am not sure how this show slipped by me for four seasons, but I am glad I found it eventually. Review: "You can't go home again..." - "Justified" is an altogether outstanding and somewhat offbeat crime drama that aired on the FX network for six seasons, from January 2010 through April 2015. This is a tale about a Deputy United States Marshal who returns to the area of eastern Kentucky where he was born and reared, and finds out the truth of the Thomas Wolfe's admonition: "you can't go home again..." "Justified" is based upon two novels and a short story written by the late novelist Elmore Leonard. The show was originally developed for TV by Graham Yost, who also was one of the executive producers, writers, and directors of "Band of Brothers," "Boomtown," and "The Pacific." "Justified" stars Timothy Olyphant as Raylan Givens, a modern-day Deputy United States Marshal whose behavior is more akin to that of a 19th century Western lawman than that of the 21st century law enforcement officer that he is. Like those legendary Marshals of the Old West, Raylan dispenses his own style of hard-nosed justice that frequently gets him into hot water with his superiors in the U.S. Marshals Service, and puts him into the crosshairs of many of the criminals he is pursuing. I now have added each season of "Justified" to my Blu-ray disc collection. As Season 1 of "Justified" opens, Raylan is working in the Marshals Service Miami office. He gets himself into big trouble after he very publicly shoots and kills a notorious drug cartel "gun thug." The shooting is justified (hence the series title), but it's also an embarrassment to the Marshals Service, which immediately reassigns Raylan to its office in eastern Kentucky. This is where Raylan was born and raised; although he absolutely does not want to go there, he reluctantly takes the assignment anyway. Very soon, Raylan manages to get himself into more trouble in his new assignment. An old friend of his from Harlan, Kentucky is the prime suspect in a series of violent and bloody hate crimes; a young woman he knew from high school days has just shot and killed her abusive husband; and Raylan's estranged father may be once again involved in criminal activities of his own... All this (and much more) makes for a captivating, suspense-filled first season of one of the best and most original series I've seen in a long time. Everything about Justified - the acting by a superb ensemble cast that includes Olyphant, Walton Goggins, Joelle Carter, Nick Searcy, and Natalie Zea, is superb, as is the writing. "Justified" Season 1 is television entertainment at its very best! Don't miss it!
| ASIN | B0038M2APA |
| Actors | Erica Tazel, Jacob Pitts, Joelle Carter, Nick Searcy, Timothy Olyphant |
| Aspect Ratio | 1.78:1 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #41,855 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #4,139 in Action & Adventure DVDs #6,455 in Drama DVDs |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (1,913) |
| Dubbed: | Portuguese, Spanish |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | 509984099 |
| MPAA rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| Media Format | DVD |
| Number of discs | 3 |
| Producers | Don Kurt, Gary Lennon |
| Product Dimensions | 0.6 x 5.4 x 7.6 inches; 4.8 ounces |
| Release date | January 18, 2011 |
| Run time | 9 hours and 12 minutes |
| Studio | Sony Pictures Home Entertainment |
| Subtitles: | English, French, Portuguese, Spanish |
B**.
Surprisingly good...
Wow, this show is surprisingly good. I was actually about half way through the first season and I was thinking to myself "How is it possible this show is so well written?" when I noticed, for the first time, in the opening credits that the show is based on works by Elmore Leonard. I do not mean to detract from the fabulous job the screen writer's have done adapting this for television but I am sure it helped a bit to have a solid base to work from. I admit, I have never read any of Leonard's books, though I have heard they are very well written, but I have seen a few of his movies, and there are two things that you can count on from Leonard: great characters and great dialogue. This show has both (more on that in a moment). In a way, the premise of the show sounds kind of silly to me. Essentially it is an attempt to transplant the old Western, with the fast drawing gunslinger, into modern times. The main character, a deputy U.S. Marshal named Raylan, has just been transferred back to his hometown in Kentucky after shooting someone under somewhat suspicious circumstances in Florida. Raylan is a fast draw and he gets himself into quite a few old Western style stand-off situations. Like I said, that sounds a little bit silly on the face of it (do they still train Marshals to draw quickly and shoot without looking?) but it actually works really well. They do not get ridiculous with it. All of the quick draw situations Raylan finds himself in are believable. There are no high noon shootouts on Main Street. The show has a great cast of characters. The first season follows a story arc based around the Crowder family. The Crowder family are a bunch of criminals from Raylan's hometown and they make excellent and really interesting villains. Boyd Crowler, in particular, is a really interesting character, and the actor, Walton Goggins, does a superb job playing him. Raylan's father is also a very interesting character. There is a very strained relationship between Raylan and his father and the show handles it well. Usually shows like this run into problems dealing with strained family relationships. They wind up manufacturing a bunch of repetitive drama (the same arguments over and over) and then get very sentimental with it (the emotional blowup and reunion). This show avoids all of that. There were no cringe worthy scenes in this show, the kind that often feel like they come straight out of an introductory psychology textbook. That is surprisingly rare. Even some of my favorite shows have cringe worthy scenes here and there. This show, at least in the first season, which is all I have watched so far, had none. The show also has really well written dialogue. I watch a lot of procedurals and the dialogue on procedurals usually leaves a lot to be desired. A lot of shows, I think, wind up sacrificing quality for quantity. Shows that put out 24 episodes a season always feel a bit like they were made in a factory to me. The same scenes, with minor variations, show up in every episode. The dialogue is extremely repetitive (the same arguments over and over), a lot of the dialogue is just exposition ("so, here we are, at the gangsters hideout"), or filler. I am not sure if it is because they only have 13 episodes a season, or if they are using some of Leonard's original dialogue, or if they just have really talented screenwriter's, but the dialogue in this first season was really good. Another thing I appreciate about the show is that it often goes against cliches. I will just give one example of what I mean. There is a scene in one of the episodes where Raylan is drinking in the bar. We are far enough into the show to know that Raylan knows how to handle himself. There are two guys in the bar talking real loud, making crude remarks about some woman, and Raylan decides to confront them. This is a really familiar trope and most people, including me, immediately have certain expectations about where things are heading. The situation escalates and they decide to take things outside. This is where the two guys realize they picked a fight with the wrong person, right? Wrong. The show totally surprised me by having the two guys win the fight. Raylan gets beat up. That might seem like a really minor thing but very few shows would have been willing to have their hero lose a fight like that. You are never supposed to perceive any weakness in the hero. Not only is that unrealistic but it is boring. I really appreciated that this show was willing to frustrate the viewer's expectations. That was just one scene, and it was not all that important for the overall plot, but it was, to me, a great example of why I think this show is a cut above most of the television shows I watch. The show avoids cliche. The characters are not cliche, the dialogue is not cliche, and the stories are not cliche. I am not sure how this show slipped by me for four seasons, but I am glad I found it eventually.
M**S
"You can't go home again..."
"Justified" is an altogether outstanding and somewhat offbeat crime drama that aired on the FX network for six seasons, from January 2010 through April 2015. This is a tale about a Deputy United States Marshal who returns to the area of eastern Kentucky where he was born and reared, and finds out the truth of the Thomas Wolfe's admonition: "you can't go home again..." "Justified" is based upon two novels and a short story written by the late novelist Elmore Leonard. The show was originally developed for TV by Graham Yost, who also was one of the executive producers, writers, and directors of "Band of Brothers," "Boomtown," and "The Pacific." "Justified" stars Timothy Olyphant as Raylan Givens, a modern-day Deputy United States Marshal whose behavior is more akin to that of a 19th century Western lawman than that of the 21st century law enforcement officer that he is. Like those legendary Marshals of the Old West, Raylan dispenses his own style of hard-nosed justice that frequently gets him into hot water with his superiors in the U.S. Marshals Service, and puts him into the crosshairs of many of the criminals he is pursuing. I now have added each season of "Justified" to my Blu-ray disc collection. As Season 1 of "Justified" opens, Raylan is working in the Marshals Service Miami office. He gets himself into big trouble after he very publicly shoots and kills a notorious drug cartel "gun thug." The shooting is justified (hence the series title), but it's also an embarrassment to the Marshals Service, which immediately reassigns Raylan to its office in eastern Kentucky. This is where Raylan was born and raised; although he absolutely does not want to go there, he reluctantly takes the assignment anyway. Very soon, Raylan manages to get himself into more trouble in his new assignment. An old friend of his from Harlan, Kentucky is the prime suspect in a series of violent and bloody hate crimes; a young woman he knew from high school days has just shot and killed her abusive husband; and Raylan's estranged father may be once again involved in criminal activities of his own... All this (and much more) makes for a captivating, suspense-filled first season of one of the best and most original series I've seen in a long time. Everything about Justified - the acting by a superb ensemble cast that includes Olyphant, Walton Goggins, Joelle Carter, Nick Searcy, and Natalie Zea, is superb, as is the writing. "Justified" Season 1 is television entertainment at its very best! Don't miss it!
B**S
This TV series is brilliant. Tis based on an Elmore Leonard story, so you know the hero is going to be super cool. Timothy Olyphant looks astonishingly cool (with hat) and plays the part of the Law Man rather well. The camera work is first class; it has a large budget (they paid Hollywood legend Timothy olyphant to play Law Man Raylan Givens and Walter Goggins from the brilliant TV series 'The Shield') and the storyline is interesting. Timothy Olyphant returns to his home in Kentucky to work as a law Man, and he gets involved with good people, bad people, drug dealers, an ex-girlfriend and an ex-wife. Oh and the dialogue is hilarious - Karl: Next time you're in Cincinnati, come by the gallery. I'll show you my collection. I think you'll be quite surprised. Raylan Givens: Honestly, I'd rather stick my d**k in a blender. Chief Art Mullen: Well, that would solve a few problems. - Boyd Crowder: What brings you to my house? Raylan Givens: Oh, this is your house now? Boyd Crowder: Why, yes, prison is my home. --- Chief Art Mullen: "I tell you to do one simple thing - refrain from screwing the witness in your own shooting - and you can't even do that Raylan Givens" I'm off to watch season 2 now. And please keep `Justified' on your radar. I don't watch TV anymore (it seems to broadcast nothing more then dumb reality shows), but am so enthused by Justified, that I cannot wait for season 3. Raylan is a 2D hero similar to David Carradine's `Qwai Chan Kane'. He cleans up rural Kentucky and manages to dispatch any number of bad guys per episode. Splendid. According to the Information super highway Season 3 will be here soon.
C**E
Je me suis fiée aux commentaires car je ne connaissais pas du tout cette série et vraiment je la recommande très bon scénario, acteurs pour certains inoubliables enfin bref nous sommes devenus accros de Justified,,la bande son est aussi excellente
F**E
Hier stimmt einfach alles: Story, Charaktere, Locations, Dialoge, Darsteller und die wohldosierte Action. Die Serie lebt von den überaus gut ausgearbeiteten Charakteren, den hier zu meisternden Situationen, den spritzig-ironischen Dialogen und den allesamt passenden Darstellern. Besonders Timothy Olyphant mit seinem großen Hut - wer "Deadwood" kennt, der weiß was dieser Kerl kann...einfach sympathisch. Aber auch sein "Gegenspieler" Walton Goggins (hier zu sehen als Boyd Crowder) sammelt ordentlich Punkte. Anstatt mit Effekten und Nonstop-Action um sich zu werfen, bleibt "Justified" auf dem Teppich und fesselt den Zuschauer durch klassisches, hochkarätiges Erzählkino. Geschickt entwickelt sich die Serie Stück für Stück und spielt ironisch-lässig mit den Lone Ranger-, Kleinstadt- und Redneck/Hillbilly-Klischees. Man wird von der ersten Folge an süchtig...Hut ab! Die DVD von Sony (ärgerlich, dass es bis dato keine Blu-ray für Deutschland gibt) kann qualitativ ebenfalls überzeugen: Bild und Ton sind einwandfrei - als Bonusmaterial werden diverse Audiokommentare, Feauturetten und ein Musikvideo geboten. Not Justified empfinde ich allerdings die Freigabe: FSK:18 ist für mich absolut schwachsinnig - zumal diese Freigabe nur für eine Episode (13.) vergeben wurde; letzten Endes aber die gesamte Season-Box betrifft. Eine Freigabe ab 16 wäre hier absolut ausreichend. Des weiteren nervt die Veröffentlichungspolitik von Sony: Während ab Januar 2013 die 4. Staffel im US-TV läuft, liegt bis dato bei uns noch kein Termin für die 2. Staffel (DVD/Blu-ray) vor!
D**K
Having bought all 6 seasons of this riveting show my comments apply to the whole series, not just season one. Jonathon Swift once observed that he "held the masses in utter contempt, but found hope in his heart for the individual", a sentiment that could well be applied to the characters of this award-winning TV series. Indeed, as the plot proceeds with the relentless progress of a Shakespearean tragedy, the interplay of the characters impacts them in profound ways that are often also influenced for better or for ill by their personal motivations, goals, and environment. Some characters strive with varying degrees of success or frustrating failure to rise above their Fate, which, of course, propels the plot along with mesmerizing suspense. All in all, Justify is one of the best shows ever produced, and well worth the price of admission!
C**Y
Supercool, deputy US marshall, Raylan Givens, returns to his home, Harlan County, Kentucky, where he grew up. I won't give the story away, in case you haven't seen this series yet. Olyphant is great in the lead and so are the list of supporting characters (and I mean, characters), the script is razor sharp and the action not over done, with some real tension. I've seen and bought all the series. In retrospect, this one just gets Justified into its stride. It gets even better in future series, but judged on its own, it's still a great dvd. Elmore Leonard was a script advisor and it feels Leonard-esque in tone, with its stripped down, sparky, dialogue and no nonesense characters. Top class and a bit of a treat. The box set contains 3 DVDs, in two plastic boxes. Box 1 contains 2DVDs and episodes 1-9 Box 2 contians 1DVD and episodes 10-13 In addition, you get a commentary from Elmore Leonard himself on how the series went from page to screen, as well as meeting the cast, all of whom come across as smart, likeable and funny.
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