Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Great Price for $39.84

Touching Evil 1 Boxed Set (The Lost Boys/To Death and Back/What Amathus Wants) Review



Touching Evil I saw on PBS "Mystery!" When it first came out and my husband and I were totally dependent. Touching Evil is a gripping and stylish British miniseries about a team of crack investigators, organized crime and number (OSC) unit. The series examines the effect on the evil has touched people on a day to day - men and women who swore they are fighting. The mini-series will be six hours, from three different stories about crime sprees compound. Each series of crimes differsbut the nature of the crimes for team members is a thread to tie together all the episodes. The story closes the circle in the end.

It is a dark drama about serious crimes. It is not bloody or graphic, but some crimes are worrying - The series deals with murderers. The first episode is disturbing, dealing with a serial killer who murdered two years ago, children and, more recently kidnapped three. The first episode revolves around the desperate efforts of the team to findchildren before it is too late. The use of children is not free - you end up becoming the cornerstone of the entire series.

The series is centered around a different type of creegan Detective - Dave. Complex and conflicts, creegan only be a detective, my work, which allows him to hide from society would. However, he is also driven by an intense desire to make the world a better place. sole purpose Creegan membership in CSOs is to save lives. He can notTo understand why some might be satisfied with less. He sticks to the rules until they are only in their own way. His unwillingness to be bound by the rules make it a liability, while his brilliant mind and a sense of mysterious proportions make him a hero to deny. Throughout the series, the viewer is led to wonder how far he would go creegan to protect the innocent.

Robson Green plays creegan perfectly, described him as a cold person, but thoughtful, vulnerable, idealisticvery nice. The green razor creegan intensive nor its guide, the clipped speech and large, piercing eyes widened.

creegan In the first episode is followed by the OSC, a closely knit group of dedicated copper plates, which follow the rules and try to do the job properly. Creegan has the support of the CO, who knows at first, but he's a secret inside the rest, he can not his reluctance at first, crude ways, but creegan had a near death experiencelong ago, who painted inside and out, making it difficult for him to work as part of a team. First, it seems that both the team and there are creegan - and the challenge is to bridge the gap between the two. How to explain the events, it is obviously not so simple. Is the team as hard as it seems?

While the series revolves around creegan, the other characters are important. The actors do a good job making it interesting and believable. Although it is not openInstead, they are filled with their priorities and concerns developed. DC Mark Rivers, the rookie Constable, serious and friendly. DC Jonathan Kreitman His partner is older, more experienced, with sharp, suspicious eyes and a reluctant attitude. Susan Taylor hardbitten, capable, ambitious and absolutely beyond any doubt. There are others, but these are at the core.

They balance and integrate creegan. He is not the brain and the rest of Brawn. The rest ofThe team is important in the process of solving the case. Are you interested in what they do. Their professionalism and commitment to help all together.

One thing I like about this series is that the actions of the characters meaning. They do things that seem logical to investigators, or at least consistent with their quality of character.

There are some important things that are a stretch. One is the incredible amount of manpower that the Policeavailable. You have to interview dozens of officers available to support or user. I doubt that real life can afford that kind of force, but it makes for impressive camera settings. Sometimes their use of technology is weak (in one case, could use triangulation to locate a radio signal), but has led to some interesting scenes, I could see.

The biggest problem is that their treatment by the legal system ... stupid ... (Especially if you have never seen the lawand Order). In this series, the law is always too short. The police do their job, but disappointed by the law. I must admit that this is highly artificial, but the rest of the show is so funny that I can get over it.

Other than the legal aspect goes, densely written script smooth and flawless. Every scene is necessary for the plot. Like any good mystery, this script is also a challenge to the viewer to follow the action and to decode sentences. Notflash, or something is missing!

Although I give high marks to Touching Evil, I was disappointed with the quality of the sequel (Touching Evil Touching Evil 2 and 3). I enjoyed seeing the characters resume their roles, but I thought the sites were ridiculously contrived and lame. The main characters from time to time do something smart, but also making things that I hope, a real cop would even consider. It 'was such a waste. The problem may be that Paul Abbot, who createdSeries and wrote the sections better than the first mini-series, not to write the sequel.




Touching Evil 1 Boxed Set (The Lost Boys/To Death and Back/What Amathus Wants) Overview


Robson Green (Reckless) stars as the smart, sexy, brash, and slightly mysterious Detective Inspector Dave Creegan in these three gripping and gritty mysteries that follow the exploits of the Organized and Serial Crime Unit.

Maverick police detective Creegan is the newest member of London’s Organized and Serial Crime Unit (OSC), an elite, rapid-response crime squad. The OSC uses their diverse crime-fighting skills to bring justice to society. Along with his stalwart partner D.I. Susan Taylor (Nicola Walker, Four Weddings and a Funeral), Creegan squares off against some of England’s most dangerous criminals–a serial murderer of children, a killer intent on murdering hospital patients, and a cyber-criminal who lures young Web-surfers with a gothic fantasy game and manipulates them into committing violent crimes.

Special DVD features include: link to the Mystery! Web site; scene selections; and closed captions.

On three DVD5 discs. Region coding: All regions. Audio: Dolby stereo. Screen format: 4 x 3 full frame.


Touching Evil 1 Boxed Set (The Lost Boys/To Death and Back/What Amathus Wants) Specifications


This three-volume set captures a police force totally unlike the ones U.S. television and film audiences regularly see. Gone are the gunshots and widespread violence that afflict characters on NYPD Blue and Homicide. This dark British miniseries has an unflinching focus on the pensive, slightly spooked but always confident Detective Inspector Dave Creegan (Robson Green). Of course the caseload isn't entirely alien to a pop culture audience, weaned as it is on crime novels and American television-style plots. There's an aging geneticist who is possessed by an odd infatuation--apparently not a sexual one--with children, keeping them penned in an all-white room while watching them on a remote video cam, and other deviants just interesting enough to capture extended interest. Touching Evil's pacing is intricately slow, such that evidence gathering can be seen from an inchworm-like perspective (showing tweezers extracting a single hair, for example). Green's role is structured like Fox Mulder and other U.S. television creations. Moody and a bit inscrutable, Creegan comes to the Organized and Serial Crime Unit after a long sabbatical, triggered (no pun, really!) by his getting shot in the head. Rather than give up police work after meeting with the bullet, however, he recommits to the job, treating cases as if they're his personal obsession. And they are. Creegan violates all the conventions his American TV-cop counterparts break in their unbridled passion to solve crimes, but he does it with unforced and unhurried relish. The plots in each of these episodes are singular, allowing the story lines to develop like good mysteries, even driving the viewer to suspect that Creegan's passions are leading him waywardly away from the cases. Shot with mostly stoic camera angles, the show's energy changes significantly when Creegan's heart begins to pound, the camera catches in halted visuals, and the drama builds and builds until, well, until it avoids resolution time and again, much to the viewer's delight. --Andrew Bartlett

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Customer Reviews


Tension and Fear - Kevin L. Nenstiel - Kearney, Nebraska
Someone once described John Le Carre novels and short stories by the guard rather poor against the really terrible. This is a good blurb for Touching Evil. Hard-bitten war on corrupt police in Britain, but their story through a line of casual corruption and brutality tell us that our heroes are immersed in sin and strive to represent the stand.

Detective Dave creegan (Robson Green) is back to the Organised and Serial Crimes Unit dragged advanced medicalleave. A blow to the head has a loose cannon, but the OSC needs of his genius in their work as Britain last ditch enforcement officials to attack the usual routes soon. His colleagues fear him as the villain, and his relationship with his ex-wife is in the air. But he gets the job done, sometimes, despite the rules.

The writing and performances are and what they do in this series. The actors do their best in close, complex stories, including walk-in roles, theIntensity of lightning. There is very little violence, which happens most of the off-screen, but the characters attack each other with the intensity of their personality. Corridor conversations, the striking force of a drunken brawl.

Atmospheres can sometimes be difficult for the eyes. The show is very set-bound and often dark, and so confused I think it's meant to feel creepy. But the flicker of fluorescent lights, the hood of cigarette smoke, and muteColors are conspiring to give me the desire to Windex screen. The spectacle of visual design is best when the characters and set eyes, blinking and speechless for a world lit by the harsh sun.

The third and last episode leaves much to be desired. Rewritten as the Internet and threatened, has a cyber-killer, but shows little familiarity with the technology set, I mean that was hip and current, but acts only as strange. Couple that withhistory of pre-Diana Rigg episode, which was included for the mission of the United States and contains spoilers and the series ends on weaker note.

However, the significant content in the middle as creegan begins to reveal its secrets and corruption in OSC raises his ugly head, are soft enough to compensate for this extension. This is a show for the spectators, the intensity of the American crime drama, as in a series of character-driven British. Exhausting and relentless, you are an intelligent thrillerAccess Chair with tension and fear.






believable - Cynthia S. Murphy - tennessee
The British Crime drama based on the greatest capacity to act and write very well, as a "Special Effects / gore superfluous. This series is the thinking man law and order. Every story has two long sides, and not every loose end is good until the end of history wrapped. watched the series was like looking through a window in an extract from real life. People do not always fit into tidy boxes. dialogue and stories were very believable. This is what I like this crimeSeries.



Two out of three - Thomas Paul - Plainview, NY USA
4 stars for the program.
1 star for the DVD features.

"Touching Evil" is the story of Inspector Dave creegan (Robson Green), which reverses the organized crime and number (OSC) device after recovering from a gunshot wound to the head. Creegan injury as he turned in an unpredictable way, but his boss wants him back because he was a genius is forever in the minds of serial killers. Creegan and his partner DI Susan Taylor (Nicola Walker) to investigate the most serious crimesin England, including a serial killer of children. The show was originally broadcast on British television in 1997 and has been shown recently in the U.S. on PBS program, Mystery. USA Network has produced its own version of the short duration of the show in 2004.

The show is much less violent and more thoughtful than we are accustomed to in American television. It 'also very elegant in its way. With a set of dark and light creates a strange atmosphere strange and unpleasant. Robson Green is excellentleadership roll. Has an intense blue eyes and rugged good looks and makes it completely believable as the detective who can concentrate on his work, while his personal life falls apart. Creegan has forced a loner, with a partner who can not trust him to work. The other members of CSOs are not sure whether creegan healthy as the man once known.

The first episode deals with creegan return to OSC and its investigation of several young boys who were abducted and left in aRoom air-tight to suffocate. The abductor has a camera transmission so that it can see them die. Creegan and Taylor must solve the case before it is too late. The second episode deals with a serial killer have in-patients and realistically deal with their demons creegan raised from the dead in the emergency room the night he was shot in the head occur. The two episodes are excellent and the script and the acting are perfect. The two episodes are moving, but also focus on developingbelievable characters.

The third episode was a big disappointment. An attempt to lead Cyber-Space in a story line, you have written in 1997 by writers who do not understand cyberspace. The murderess is completely unbelievable as a computer geek or a psychological manipulation of adolescents. For example, the police college, where suspected criminals and demand that all students User ID and password to log into the computer system.Surprisingly, the next day, each student has a new computer ID. The reason for the initial police investigation is not entirely credible, because the offense was committed, the mutilation of horses. The character of the murderess is fully developed and we have never had the opportunity to discover who he is and why he committed this crime. I found this the weakest of the stories.

During the episodes, there are dark scenes designed to provide a state of mind. In part, this worksbut sometimes (especially in the last episode), it bothers with history, so "in your face." For example, the offices where the work of the detective always dark. I find it hard to believe that someone read a file or a formality in those offices. An interview room is to be a large dark room with a small table that reflects in the middle. A single spotlight is on the table are reflective and shine light on the faces around the table. This could be good forcool looking camera, but is not really credible. Another scene in the offices is red light through a window on the face of one of the investigators, while the same office is lit only by a small reflector. The dust is everywhere so easy always floating through what looks like dust or smoke started. This episode feels very badly overstaged.

But this is only a three clinker and other glass definitely worth the ticket price. The DVDthemselves are of good quality, but have special characteristics. No comments or interviews. The episodes appear on the DVD exactly as they appeared in the television program Mystery, so that each episode is divided into two programs, two hours to one hour. This means that after the first hour, there are claims and by then followed by Diana Rigg Mystery preload the introduction, in some cases, the episode more than I wanted. It would have been much better ifbeen edited so that it can watch the episodes without interruption.


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