Prison Break (TV Series) (DVD)
Season 1
APPROX. 966 MINS. - PROD. YEAR: 2005 - MPA RATING: NR
" The series effortlessly piles on twist after twist, while providing an excellent build up of suspense.
Connect to Facebook/Twitter, recommend via email and much more.
"Prison Break" may seem absurd in premise, a man enters prison with intricate plans to break out with his brother, a death row inmate, but the show´s execution is one that intrigues and entertains episode after episode. Executive produced by Brett Ratner, who also directed the pilot episode, and created by writer Paul Scheuring, the show is more intelligent, clever, and engaging than it deserves to be. It´s a slow bubbling pot of plot twists, action and characterization, offering glimpses into the lives of a group of inmates, all of who posses lives that may seem black and white but actually bleed shades of gray.
The series revolves around Michael Scofield (Wentworth Miller), a structural engineer, who lives in a penthouse apartment and from the looks of things lives a pretty good life. However, in one motion he throws it all away, seemingly destroying a bevy of information he has been collecting in his apartment and then attempting armed robbery in a bank. During his arraignment, Scofield shows very little remorse, pleading no contest and the judge slaps him with a five year term to be served at Fox River penitentiary.
Once inside things start to add up. It seems Scofield is planning something and it involves his brother, Lincoln Burrows (Dominic Purcell), who has been convicted of murdering the Vice President´s brother. Scofield brilliantly navigates the system, having planned, in advance, his every move and anticipating almost every alternative. He´s tattooed, on his body (shirt and sleeve style), necessary bits of information and the blueprints for Fox River, but the blue prints don´t look like blue prints at all and are deftly hidden in the images now permanently inked on his body.
The show isn´t just about these guys trying to break out of prison. From the get go there is a higher power lurking in the shadows surrounding the Burrows case, and it isn´t until Burrows ex-girlfriend/attorney, Veronica (Robin Tunney), starts investigating the case that things start to unravel. Veronica slowly starts to piece together a conspiracy reaching all the way to the upper echelons of political office. Combine this with an eclectic mix of inmates that are brought to help Scofield and Burrows escape and what we´re left with is an extremely captivating show. The series effortlessly piles on twist after twist, while providing an excellent build up of suspense.
Despite the centrality of Miller and Purcell in the lead roles, who are both exceptionally good in their respective roles, the series shines because of its supporting cast. Peter Stormare gives his John Abruzzi a Shakespearean touch, a mob boss who plays an important role in the escape; Robert Knepper gives an incendiary turn as Theodore "T-Bag" Bagwell, a wretch of human being edging his way into the plan, and Rockmond Dunbar plays C-Note, a not so typical thug with more to his past than it seems, with an excellent edge. The stands outs, however, are Muse Watson as Charles Westmorland, who may or may not be the infamous hijacker D.B. Cooper. Watson lends his character a sense of grace and poise under the most dire of circumstances; and then there is also Amaury Nolasco as Fernando Sucre, who is quite charming as a man who is waiting to get home to the woman he loves.
