Leverage: The First Season

By LEVERAGE · Monday, February 8th, 2010
Leverage: The First Season
Customer Rating: Rating 5.0 out of 5 (87 Reviews)

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Product information Actors: Timothy Hutton, Gina Bellman, Christian Kane, Aldis Hodge, Beth Riesgraf
Brand: Paramount
Publisher: Paramount Home Video
Category: DVD
Release Date: July 14, 2009
Formats: Ac-3, Box Set, Color, Dolby, Dvd, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc
Language: English
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Product Description: Follows a team of high-tech criminals led by an ex-insurance investigator as they try to thwart corporate and governmental injustice.

Amazon.com: TNT's Leverage takes a Robin Hood approach to criminal justice. After losing his son, ex-insurance investigator Nathan Ford (Timothy Hutton) reinvents himself as an avenging angel who rights wrongs for victims of organized greed with the skilled support of thief Parker (Beth Riesgraf), hacker Alec Hardison (Aldis Hodge), grifter Sophie Devereaux (Coupling's Gina Bellman), and retrieval specialist or “hitter” Elliot Spencer (Angel's Christian Kane).

In the spirit of Mission: Impossible, each episode revolves around a different job, and though producer/director Dean Devlin (Independence Day) shot the pilot in Chicago, Leverage Consulting sets up shop in L.A., where the rest of the series takes place. Hardly original--even the jazz-funk score sounds familiar--it's still a breezy lark that moves easily between drama and comedy, and the flashbacks to the team's past are a fun touch. During their inaugural year, they represent clients ranging from a wounded reservist to Nate's pastor (D.B. Sweeney). Other notable guests include Buffy's Danny Strong as a conscience-free contractor and Popular's Sara Rue as an endangered whistleblower. All the while, the hard-drinking Nate's attraction to the increasingly alarmed Sophie grows at the same rate as his alcohol consumption (Alec also develops a crush on the oblivious Parker).

Despite Hutton's Oscar credentials and top billing, 21-year-old Hodge often steals the show with his hilarious line readings and the deleted scenes reveal some equally amusing adlibs. Other extras include five featurettes and commentary on the 13 episodes from Devlin, creators John Rogers and Chris Downey plus key writers and directors, like Tony Bill (My Bodyguard) and Jonathan Frakes (Star Trek: The Next Generation), who directs Trek veterans Brent "Data" Spiner and Armin “Quark” Shimerman in "The Juror #6 Job." In response to strong ratings, TNT renewed Leverage for a second season. --Kathleen C. Fennessy

Customer Reviews

Grand fun!

by Linda C. Bergstrom 2009-05-24, 31 people found this review helpful
This series features a modern day Robin Hood and his band of Merry Men -- or in this case, men and women -- pulling off cons, capers, and heists that redress wrongs, return ill-gotten gains to their rightful owners, and also pad the pockets of our heroes.

Though it's tempting to focus on the excellent cast, who do a uniformly stellar job with the scripts, the greatest strength of this show is in the writing. The stories are focused as much on revelation and development of the characters and their histories and interactions as on the clever and intriguing plots. The characters are given depth and dimension -- not to mention humor -- and the viewer finds as much to care about in each of them as in how the caper of the week will play out.

An outstanding opening season for this new series. Not to be missed.

Robin Hood meets Ocean's 11

by Melaka Fray 2009-02-24, 36 people found this review helpful
Love this show, too. I wasn't sure how it was supposed to work after the pilot but it really did. The stories are good, the dialogues witty, smart and to the point, the characters are intriguing and the mix of comedy, thriller & action is very well balanced.
Season 2 is being shot april-october so the first new episodes will air in summer, by the way.
The seasons are shorter than usual, somewhere between 12 and 16 episodes I believe, but the budget must be as big as for 22 episodes because each on feels like a small blockbuster. So for those of you who missed the show so far, get it ASAP!!!

Great show - Average DVDs

by Karsten Schramm 2009-07-23, 38 people found this review helpful
The show is great and I love to see it again. But what makes me give only 3 stars are two things: 1st: No subtitles, neither standard nor for the hearing impaired.

2nd: The order of the episodes. They seem to be totally random and the original airedates printed on the inside of the cover don't match with what was actually aired.

This is the order on the DVDs:

Disc 1)
1.01 The Nigerian Job
1.02 The Homecoming Job
1.07 The Wedding Job
Disc 2)
1.09 The Snow Job
1.08 The Mile High Job
1.04 The Miracle Job
Disc 3)
1.03 The Two-Horse Job
1.05 The Bank Shot Job
1.06 The Stork Job
1.11 The Juror #6 Job
Disc 4)
1.10 The 12-Step Job
1.12 The First David Job
1.13 The Second David Job

And while this is a procedural show and not a serial show, there's simply no reason to deviate from the production and airing in such a chaotic way.

"Sometimes bad guys are the only good guys you get."

by H. Bala 2009-08-05, 8 people found this review helpful
Hog heaven, brother, is what I'm wallowing in. Loving con artist stories like I do, LEVERAGE: THE FIRST SEASON is like unwrapping a crazy awesome present. If you dig stuff like The Sting (Universal Legacy Series), Ocean's Eleven (Widescreen Edition), or even Paper Moon, then LEVERAGE falls right in your wheelhouse. It's slick and smart and funny, and the key characters, initially cut from that predictable mold, quickly grow on you. TNT rolled out thirteen episodes of television goodness, except that by the first episode I'd already gotten hooked. Okay, "The Miracle Job" isn't any great shakes, but the rest of the episodes are very good. In fact, the standouts are "The Nigerian Job," "The Mile High Job," "The Stork Job," "The Juror #6 Job," and the two parter season closers "The First David Job" & "The Second David Job."

I don't follow Timothy Hutton too much, but if a guy was ever meant to play a functioning alcoholic mastermind, it's Hutton. Nathan Ford (Hutton) is an ex-insurance investigator who parted ways with his insurance company when it refused to pay for his 8-year-old son's medical treatment. And Nathan's son died. So there's a grudge against corporate entities already set in place when Nathan is approached to lead a "specialized" team in a righteous heist. And that's how the not-quite-legal Leverage Consulting & Associates firm was born (providing "leverage" for the downtrodden).

Thing is, Nathan Ford, all divorced and still grieving for his dead son and bleary eyed from the cups, is still a straight shooter, even though he's now orchestrating heists and stiffing soulless mega-corporations and underhanded governmental agencies who've effed with the helpless common Joes. And, while Nathan hasn't exactly reformed his tiny gang of thieves, hackers, muscle, and flim-flammers (all of whom had, before this, preferred to work solo), he's got them having so much fun doing bad for good causes that it's almost the same thing. I don't know if this is coming out of left field or not, but there's also this A-TEAM vibe permeating the thing, with Timothy Hutton's character just falling short of lighting a stogie and declaring that "I love it when a plan comes together."

The show makes these characters interesting, and respective episodes do fill in some of the gaps in their backgrounds (although there's still a lot about their pasts that we're kept in the dark about). My favorite lawbreaker is Parker, the world's best thief and played with endless quirk, daredevil flair, and antisocial tendencies by Beth Riesgraf. Not to mention, she also provides a huge chunk of the funny. In "The Mile High Job" Parker's less than hostessy demeanor sets back stewardess/passenger relations for years. And in "The Juror #6 Job" I'll only mention that Parker attends jury duty (oh, and that she quiickly sniffs out a rat). Gina Bellman as grifter Sophie Devereaux also rocks it. I like that, when she's not hoodwinking her marks, Sophie sidelines as an actress, except that she's cringingly horrible at acting. But then put her in a scam, and she's flawless with her lines. She's simply hilarious in "The Stork Job," in which the Leverage crew takes over a Belgrade movie set (the movie is "Howl Force," about NATO troops being attacked by werewolves). Bellman and Riesgraf aren't your classic lookers, but there's no denying that Gina Bellman oozes sexy sophistication (and touts a range of convincing accents), and Beth Riesgraf smacks so much of crazy that I find her all kinds of attractive. (Huh. I may be a little disturbed myself.)

The stings usually involve lots of hi-tech stuff, and so it's gratifying to have an episode in which Parker is unexpectedly asked to steal an item and she, on the fly, bypasses an impressive security system using nothing but what's available at hand (bit of make-up, aluminum foil, etc.).

In thirteen episodes set to a jazzy cool musical score, the five-person team inflicts disguises, diversions, smooth con talk, double crosses, variations on classic scams and all around nasty trickeration on crooks big and small but all deserving. Part of the fun is when things don't go according to plan, and they end up having to improvise. The show indulges some in Fool-the-Audience and so part of the fun is also when the episode gets around to revealing what was really going on behind the scenes. And, to add even more flavoring, the show even introduces an element of romance here and there.

If there's a running sub-plot in this season, it's Nathan's worsening alcoholism. This finally forces the crew to do an "intervention," except that their notion of intervention isn't what you or I may come up with. This leads into the two-parter season finale, as the Leverage consulting firm tries to take down the insurance company which so messed up Nathan's life. And we also finally get to check out Nathan's hottie ex-wife. Also featured in the two-parter is recurring slimeball James Sterling, the chief investigator who'd taken over Nathan's position in that very same insurance company. In past episodes Sterling had gotten the better of Nathan. Methinks it's time for a getback.

Four discs in this set, with not too shabby special features: pretty informative producer/director/writer audio commentary on each episode (although one wishes that the cast had also been allowed to provide commentary); deleted scenes on selected episodes; "Leverage: Behind the Scenes" (12:40 minutes); "Anatomy of a Stunt Fight" - Christian Kane ("Eliot") breaks down a fight sequence from the episode "The First David Job"; "The Cameras of LEVERAGE" - um, basically a 2-minute showcase for the different types of cameras used in filming the show (kinda pointless, unless you're a tech freak); "LEVERAGE Gets Renewed" - a cool brief segment in which Dean Devlin gathers his cast & crew (necessitating some video conferencing) for the 2nd season renewal announcement; and Beth Riesgraf's very weird Crazy Actress Spoof.

The closing moments of the season finale attempts to throw some doubt as to whether these guys will stay together or go their separate ways. But no one was fooled. I mean, what beats getting payback for the little guy and being rewarded with an alternative revenue stream? The Leverage Consulting & Associates firm may be peopled with shifty characters, but they're shifty characters with pure hearts. More or less. Man, what a fun show!

I adore the show !

by Kit 2009-02-21, 15 people found this review helpful
This show is so much fun to watch . Thieves going after those who have hurt others . Man do we need them in real life . Timothy Hutton is wonderful . This is has 2nd series after Nero Wolfe and he has found a great new series . Can't wait til it comes out on dvd and when is season 2 ? Can't wait for both !

A fun, dizzy romp with a modern Robin Hood and his crew

by J. Whitford 2009-05-21, 6 people found this review helpful
With so many reality shows on TV, medical dramas and procedurals, I was happy to run across this wonderful show. The cast is superb and acting is sublime. The writers made sure the characters have their own past histories and flaws to work through and all of them appeared to grow in the first season (except Nate who seems to be getting worse.) There is no gratuitous sex or violence in this show and the writers keep things moving with witty dialogue and action. Frankly, I have yet to guess how they are going to resolve each caper each week. My favorite episode is the pilot - The Nigerian Job. If you have not seen the series, download the pilot. I promise you will be hooked. This DVD series is scheduled to be released on July 14, 2009. I cannot wait to buy it.

Great show - a lot of fun

by B. Otto 2009-07-23, 5 people found this review helpful
I'm a great fan of this show. I started watching because of Christian Kane (plays the hitter Eliot Spencer) but I fell in love with the whole team and the smart stories immediately. So I waited impatiently for the DVD. But I'm a little bit disappointed.

I'm not a nativ speaker that's why I have sometimes problems to get every word and every joke (I understand most of it) and I was looking forward to see the show with subtitles, but there are none.
And I could only find deleted scenes of two episodes, thought there would be more. And also no bloopers. But there are some other specials.

So, it's still a lot of fun to watch the show now in DVD quality, but I only give four stars because of the missing subtitles.

Great but I miss scenes

by Schutzler Kerstin 2009-07-22, 5 people found this review helpful
I love this show and when I got it in the mail I couldn't wait to see it again.
The sound is superb and the picture is great. The extras is okay.

I have given this a five star rating because I really love the show and the box works just great. But I miss scenes in several episodes. I thought maybe those scenes were in the "deleted scenes" section, but it wasn't.

The first scene I really reacted on that is missing is in the Homecoming Job, when Hardison shows his new toy, the TV sets. The fun sports part was gone, I really miss that one.
So scenes has been deleted and other scenes has been added.

Having said that, the show is still great, and well worth spending some money on.

Excellent Program - Worth Owning

by Ann 2009-04-27, 9 people found this review helpful
This is well written and acted; so worth watching more than once. Highly recommend purchasing the DVDs. Also recommend watching Season 2 on TNT.

Best show on TV

by E. Jackson 2009-05-30, 4 people found this review helpful
This show is intelligent, witty, well written, and the characters are great; I love the way they play off each other. I am so tired of the reality shows, I refuse to watch them, so I am happy TNT has gone with such a wonderful scripted production.
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