Product Description
-------------------
Hang on for this high-octane thrill ride that goes even deeper
into the gritty world of an outlaw biker gang! Reeling from the
combined pressure of an ATF crackdown and an unprovoked murder,
the Sons face a far more deadly threat from a cold-blooded enemy
who will stop at nothing to drive them out of Charming—for good.
As Jax and Clay square off over questions of leadership and
loyalty, lines are drawn and chaos reigns as the club threatens
to destroy itself—from the inside out.
.com
----
Get your motor running and head out on the highway for the heavy
metal thunder of the Sons of Anarchy, the biker gang--er,
motorcycle club, or MC--from Charming, California, whose members
rank among television's more unlikely heroes. Fans of the FX
series already know that the Sons of Anarchy Motorcycle Club,
Redwood Original Chapter (better known as SAMCRO, or simply Sam
Crow), are a fairly unsavory bunch engaged in any number of
criminal activities; the fact that they specialize in illegal
running doesn't stop them from also dabbling in pornography,
drugs, murder, assault, and various other nefarious pursuits, all
of which are on display throughout the 13 episodes (on three
discs, plus bonus features) comprising this second season. But
that sort of thing didn't stop anyone from caring about the
gangsters in The Godher, and while no one is suggesting that
creator Kurt Sutter's show is on that level (then again, what
is?), he too has imbued his characters with enough individual
nuance, along with a consistent moral code, to make for very
compelling viewing.
As the season opens, the MC is still reeling from the death of
member Opie Winston's wife, which we and everyone except Opie
(Ryan Hurst) himself knows was the Sons' own doing--a fact that
President Clay Morrow (Ron Perlman) is at pains to conceal from
him. That in turn puts Clay at odds with his son-in-law, Vice
President Jax Teller (Brad Pitt look-alike Charlie Hunnam); this
conflict becomes one of season 2's major ongoing themes, as Jax
is torn between his loyalty to his "brothers" and a nagging
conscience that keeps pushing him toward the straight and narrow
(like Michael Corleone, Jax finds that his promise to his
"civilian" girlfriend, a doctor played by Maggie Siff, to make
the Sons legit is easier made than kept). Elsewhere, the MC must
contend with the arrival of the League of American Nationalists
(LOAN), a white separatist group headed by Ethan Zobelle (Adam
Arkin) and his menacing enforcer (a well-cast Henry Rollins), who
intend to run SAMCRO out of Charming; their brutal assault in the
first episode on Gemma (Katey Sagal, who once again turns in
perhaps the show's strongest performance), Jax's mother and
Clay's wife, is part of the season's other principal story line.
As before, the Sons also grapple with a variety of other bikers
and criminal groups, not to mention the frequent attention of the
Bureau of Alcohol, and Firearms. Sons of Anarchy doesn't
exactly glorify these violent, misogynist, debauched guys, but it
does remind us while they are criminals, they're also people with
spouses, children, problems, jobs (sort of), and other
quotidian concerns--not like us, to say the least, but worthy of
our attention. Bonus material includes a brief but well-done
behind-the-scenes featurette and a "roundtable discussion" in
which the cast answers questions submitted by viewers. --Sam
Graham