Amy Poehler (Baby Mama, Saturday Night Live) leads an ensemble
cast joined by guest stars Rob Lowe (The West Wing), Will Arnett
(Saturday Night Live, 30 Rock), and Andy Samburg (Saturday Night
Live) in the hilarious second season of Parks and Recreation.
Pawnee, Indiana’s most enthusiastic public servant solves all of
her town’s problems - hosting a local telethon, ridding the golf
course of possums and getting uny energy bars out of park
vending machines. By her side - but not necessarily doing
anything - are her friends and colleagues: lady-killer Tom
Haverford (Aziz Ansari); disinterested intern, April (Aubrey
Plaza); best gal pal, Ann (ida Jones); shoe-shine
extraordinaire Andy (Chris Pratt); charismatic city-planner Mark
Brendanawicz (Paul Schneider); and their anti-government boss,
Ron Swanson (Nick Offerman). Primetime Emmy® Award winners Greg
Daniels (The Office, The Simpsons) and Michael Schur (The Office,
Saturday Night Live) bring you all 24 episodes of the comedy that
critics are hailing as the “a terrific show” (Ken Tucker,
Entertainment Weekly).
.com
----
What a difference a season makes. If they gave an Emmy for most
improved series, Parks and Recreation would have been a shoo-in
for its turnaround second season that ranks atop the Ron Swanson
Pyramid of Greatness (check out the season 3 sneak preview
included as an extra). An Emmy for being TV's funniest series
would not have been out of line either. Everything works, from
the seamless ensemble and pitch-perfect character-based humor to
the deft direction in the mockumentary style of The Office.
Unlike Michael Scott, however, Emmy nominee Amy Poehler's Leslie
Knope is competent to a fault. The deputy director of the Pawnee,
Indiana, parks department, she's a stick-in-the-mud,
dyed-in-the-wool bureaucrat. But her insane work ethic and
maniacal devotion to her job has earned her the grudging respect
of her less-than-enthused coworkers, including Swanson (Nick
Offerman, a master of the deadpan), her libertarian,
antigovernment boss; Tom Haverford (Aziz Ansari), always on the
make but a sheep in wolf's clothing; April Ludgate (Aubrey
Plaza), a disaffected Daria type; the hess Jerry (Jim O'Heir),
who gets less respect than Meg on Family Guy; and sassy Donna
(Retta Sirleaf). Unlike other workplace comedies, Knope is not
the calm center around which an engaging group of goofballs
orbits. The voices of reason in this series belong to Leslie's
best friend Ann (ida Jones) and her boyfriend Mark (Paul
Schneider), whose relationship is one of the through lines of
this season. The breakout star this season is Chris Pratt as
simple-hearted lug Andy, who gets a job running the city hall
shoeshine stand where he can pursue Ann, his former girlfriend,
but who enters into a sweetly played Jim and Pam-like
friendship/romance with April. Very special episodes include "Ron
and Tammy," featuring Megan Mullally (Offerman's real-life wife)
as Swanson's scheming ex-wife Tammy, who works for the library,
the inexplicable bane of Leslie's existence; "Hunting Trip," in
which Leslie proves herself worthy after imposing herself on a
guys-only bonding weekend; and "Practice Date," in which Leslie
panics over her first date with a decent, straight-shooter cop
(Louis C.K.). As in Modern Family, each episode is brimming with
hilarious bits of business (like Andy's "I am on hold" song and
April's lesson in the art of the spit take in "Hunting Trip"),
character grace notes (Ron's alter ego, a smooth jazz smoothie
named Duke Silver), and unexpected touching moments that ground
the series. This four-disc set works overtime with prodigious
extras, including hilarious deleted scenes for every episode,
several convivial audio commentaries, webisodes featuring Pratt,
and dated but still gold medal-worthy Winter Olympics promos.
--Donald Liebenson