Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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34 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Best Show You Never Watched, 26 Sep 2004
TV Guide voted it "The Best Show You're Not Watching" ("If they're not watching it, how do they know?" demanded Peter Krause, accepting the award.)Sports Night was West Wing creator Aaron Sorkin's first venture into television. Its focus was a fictitious sports show, the struggling "Sports Night" on cable channel CFC ("A third-rate show on a fourth-rate network"), and the dramas lived out behind the scenes by the characters: Dan Rydell (Josh Charles, in one of the most marvellously complex and multi-faceted performances ever to grace the small screen) and Casey McCall (Peter Krause, now better known as Nate in Six Feet Under), the two handsome, charming, talented and hopelessly neurotic anchors; the producer, Dana Whitaker (Felicity Huffman), confident in her professional abilities but insecure in her personal life; associate producers Jeremy Goodwin (Joshua Malina, now to be seen in Sorkin's other show), geek extraordinaire, and his girlfriend, the forceful, opinionated Natalie Hurley (Sabrina Lloyd); and, overseeing it all with quiet dignity, veteran journalist, now managing editor, Isaac Jaffee (Robert Guillaume, known to a generation of viewers as "Benson", whose dry delivery makes his every utterance a joy, and whose mere presence lends the show gravitas). A critical success but a ratings failure, it lasted for a scant two seasons comprising 45 half-hour episodes (less commercials and credits, more like 22 minutes apiece). That was enough to gain it a small but dedicated audience, and a fanbase whose numbers are still growing. The release of this DVD boxed set has helped to bring Sports Night, never to date aired on UK TV, to a new and appreciative audience. Some aspects of the show, which ran from September 1998 to May 2000, haven't aged well - the frequent establishing shots of the New York skyline dominated by the twin towers of the World Trade Centre send a jolt through the system every time, whilst a passing reference to the Spice Girls seems laughably dated. But the dialogue (much of which Sorkin recycled for use in The West Wing) is as fresh and vibrant as the day it was penned, the storylines as compelling, the characters as real, human, endearing and, frequently, maddening, as ever seen on TV - and a great deal more so than most. The performances throughout are assured and compelling, the timing split-second, the direction flawless; and Sorkin's trademark walk-and-talk dialogue and long tracking shots through a standing set will be instantly recognisable to anyone familiar with his work. Two criticisms: season one is plagued by a laugh track, superimposed (presumably in a fit of madness) by the US network; and there are no DVD extras, only the 45 episodes. But, really, that should be enough. Wanting more is simply greedy. But, of course, I do want more. And so does everyone else who loved this show.
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21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Bargain of the Century, 20 Oct 2004
I have no wish to write a full review of this DVD, it's not possible! Suffice to say, if you want to pick up 45 (yes Forty Five) episodes of Aaron Sorkins' first attempt at a TV series, this is the bargain of the century.You will see so many West Wing actors you won't believe it, but the "Pure Joy" of this DVD is the magic of Sorkin's scripts, you laugh, you cry, you think, you open your mind and pause the DVD and check out something on Google ! Just buy it, it is pure entertainment, scripts are modern day Shakespeare (as is the West Wing), the main characters are so so good and all the backing actors are superb. I am only posting this because I am watching it for the 4th time ( I stuck it in again after WW4, and I thought I should air my views, buy and enjoy :)
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Best Show No-One Watched, 15 Sep 2004
TV Guide voted it "The Best Show You're Not Watching" ("If they're not watching it, how do they know?" demanded Peter Krause, accepting the award.)Sports Night was West Wing creator Aaron Sorkin's first venture into television. Its focus was a fictitious sports show, the struggling "Sports Night" on cable channel CFC ("A third-rate show on a fourth-rate network"), and the dramas lived out behind the scenes by the characters: Dan Rydell (Josh Charles, in one of the most marvellously complex and multi-faceted performances ever to grace the small screen) and Casey McCall (Peter Krause, now better known as Nate in Six Feet Under), the two handsome, charming, talented and hopelessly neurotic anchors; the producer, Dana Whitaker (Felicity Huffman), confident in her professional abilities but insecure in her personal life; associate producers Jeremy Goodwin (Joshua Malina, now to be seen in Sorkin's other show), geek extraordinaire, and his girlfriend, the forceful, opinionated Natalie Hurley (Sabrina Lloyd); and, overseeing it all with quiet dignity, veteran journalist, now executive producer, Isaac Jaffee (Robert Guillaume, known to a generation of viewers as "Benson", whose dry delivery makes his every utterance a joy, and whose mere presence lends the show gravitas). A critical success but a ratings failure, it lasted for a scant two seasons comprising 45 half-hour episodes (less commercials and credits, more like 22 minutes apiece). That was enough to gain it a small but dedicated audience, and a fanbase whose numbers are still growing. The release of this DVD boxed set has helped to bring Sports Night, never to date aired on UK TV, to a new and appreciative audience. Some aspects of the show, which ran from September 1998 to May 2000, haven't aged well - the frequent establishing shots of the New York skyline dominated by the twin towers of the World Trade Centre send a jolt through the system every time, whilst a passing reference to the Spice Girls seems laughably dated. But the dialogue (much of which Sorkin recycled for use in The West Wing) is as fresh and vibrant as the day it was penned, the storylines as compelling, the characters as real, human, endearing and, frequently, maddening, as ever seen on TV - and a great deal more so than most. The performances throughout are assured and compelling, the timing split-second, the direction flawless; and Sorkin's trademark walk-and-talk dialogue and long tracking shots through a standing set will be instantly recognisable to anyone familiar with his work. Two criticisms: season one is plagued by a laugh track, superimposed (presumably in a fit of madness) by the US network; and there are no DVD extras, only the 45 episodes. But, really, that should be enough. Wanting more is simply greedy. But, of course, I do want more. And so does everyone else who loved this show.
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