Product Description
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Deadwood: The Complete First Season (DVD)
The year is 1876. The location: the Black Hills of South Dakota.
In an age of plunder and greed, the richest gold strike in
American history draws a throng of restless misfits to an outlaw
settlement where everything and everyone has a price. Welcome to
Deadwood...a hell of a place to make your fortune. Timothy
Olyphant, Ian McShane, Molly Parker and Keith Carradine lead an
ensemble cast in Season 1 of this drama series that focuses on
the birth of a frontier town and the power struggle between its
just and unjust inhabitants. 'Deadwood' combines fictional and
real-life characters in an epic morality tale set in a town
comprised primarily of ruthless outlaws and naive settlers--most
of whom are driven by the greed and ambition of the Great
American Gold Rush.
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The remarkable first season of Deadwood represents one of those
periodic, wholesale reinventions of the Western that is as
different from, say, Lonesome Dove as that miniseries is from
Howard Hawks's Rio Bravo or the latter is from Anthony Mann's The
Naked Spur. In many ways, HBO's Deadwood embraces the Western's
unambiguous morality during the cinema's silent era through the
1930s while also blazing trails through a post-NYPD Blue,
post-The West Wing television age exalting dense and customized
dialogue. On top of that, Deadwood has managed an original look
and texture for a familiar genre: gritty, chaotic, and surging
with both dark and hopeful energy. Yet the show's creator,
erstwhile NYPD Blue head writer David Milch, never ridicules or
condescends to his more grasping, futile characters or overstates
the virtues of his heroic ones.
Set in an ungoverned stretch of South Dakota soon after the 1876
Custer massacre, Deadwood concerns a lawless, evolving town
attracting fortune-seekers, drifters, tyrants, and burned-out
adventurers searching for a card game and a place to die. Others,
particularly women trapped in prostitution, sundry do-gooders,
and hangers-on have nowhere else to go. Into this pool of
aspiration and nightmare arrive former Montana lawman Seth
Bullock (Timothy Olyphant) and his friend Sol Starr (John
Hawkes), determined to open a lucrative hardware business. Over
time, their paths cross with a weary but still formidable Wild
Bill Hickok (Keith Carradine) and his doting companion, the
coarse angel Calamity Jane (Robin Weigert); an aristocratic,
drug-addicted widow (Molly Parker) trying to salvage a gold
mining cl; and a despondent hooker (Paula Malcomson) who
cares, briefly, for an orphaned girl. Casting a giant shadow over
all is a blood-soaked king, Gem Saloon owner Al Swearengen (Ian
McShane), possibly the best, most complex, and mesmerizing
villain seen on TV in years. Over 12 episodes, each of these
characters, and many others, will forge alliances and feuds, cope
with disasters (such as smallpox), and move--almost invisibly but
inexorably--toward some semblance of order and common cause.
Making it all worthwhile is Milch's masterful dialogue--often
profane, sometimes courtly and civilized, never perfunctory--and
the brilliant acting of the aforementioned performers plus Brad
Dourif, Leon Rippy, Powers Boothe, and Kim Dickens. --Tom Keogh