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Monk: Season Four
 
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Monk: Season Four


3.5étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (2 évaluations de client)
Prix éditeur: CDN$ 62.95
Price: CDN$ 56.49 & Livraison super-économique GRATUITE pour cet article. Détails
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Produits fréquemment achetés ensemble

Monk: Season Four + Monk: Season 3 + Monk: Season Five
Prix public : CDN$ 196.89
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What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

Monk: Season Four
82% buy the item featured on this page:
Monk: Season Four 3.5étoiles sur 5 (2)
CDN$ 56.49
Monk: Season Six
8% buy
Monk: Season Six
CDN$ 45.99
Monk: Season 3
4% buy
Monk: Season 3
CDN$ 49.99
Monk: Season 1
4% buy
Monk: Season 1 4.8étoiles sur 5 (29)
CDN$ 49.99

Les détails du produit


Descriptions du produit

From Amazon.com

Adrian Monk is still "the man" as this brilliant fourth season demonstrates. Not that his confidence in his crime-solving abilities isn't tested from time to time. In the fun season-opener, Monk finds himself upstaged by low-rent private eye Marty Eels (guest star Jason Alexander in a spinoff-worthy role). The very flappable Monk is further undone by Eels' seemingly uncanny ability to find clues in the baffling case of a jewelry store robbery ("He's cheating," Monk protests in vain). This is something of a "threshold" season for Monk, to quote his psychiatrist, who is moved to openly weep when Monk uncharacteristically allows a glass to go uncoastered at one point. But his obsessive-compulsive disorders still get the best of him, as in one of the season's more clever episodes, "Mr. Monk Goes to the Office," in which Monk, going undercover, is blissfully in his element as an "office drone," doing the same tasks day in and day out. Just as he is accepted as one of the office gang, he alienates them by not participating in a bowling tournament (it must be the shoes).

Tony Shalhoub, a two-time Emmy-winner for his nuanced performances as Monk, was nominated for his third Emmy for this season. One of his finest hours is "Mr. Monk and Mrs. Monk," in which it appears that his beloved late wife, Trudy, is not only still alive, but a suspect in a murder. This season also develops Monk's relationship with his new personal assistant, Natalie (Trayler Howard). In "Mr. Monk Gets Drunk," it's all about trust when Natalie initially doesn't believe Monk's implausible tale of a disappeared wine-country-inn guest Monk claims to have met the night before. Genius is pain, John Lennon once said, and this applies to Monk. His neurotic tendencies alienate him from the mainstream. In "Office," he so wants to be accepted that he writes conversational cue cards, and the solving of the crime doesn't compensate for him being a cubicle laughingstock. But as the series progresses, Monk is getting better, so much so, that Captain Stottlemeyer (Ted Levine) informs him that he is being put under contract retainer for "16 homicides a year." With a sly nod to the series' renewal, Stottlemeyer tells him they best take things "one year at a time." --Donald Liebenson



Description

He’s ingenious, he’s phobic, he’s obsessive-compulsive. Emmy and Golden Globe Award winner "Tony Shalhoub is a riot" (TV Guide) in Monk, the show that critics are praising as "fresh, exciting and utterly original." (Chicago Tribune) Monk’s hilarious, offbeat antics have made him unfit for duty but he’s back as a police consultant to help out on their most baffling cases.

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L'avis des consommateurs

2 évaluations
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3.5étoiles sur 5 (2 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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Commentaires client les plus utiles

 
3.0étoiles sur 5 a bit annoying(and he's no Columbo)but the premise is interesting, Aoû 22 2007
Par falcon "disdressed12" (canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
the show "Monk"is about an obsessive compulsive germophobe,who's also a
detective.Adrian Monk(Tony Shaloub)often helps the police solve
difficult crimes.the premise sounds good,and should be fairly funny,but
it isn't,at least not too me.to say it's a bad show wouldn't be right and
to be fair,it's not just a comedy,it's also a drama.it is interesting
how Monk solves the crimes,though the way he gets there is sometimes a
bit of a stretch.the character of Monk can also be a bit annoying at
times.Tony Shaloub is a very gifted actor,but i think he needs a bit
more to work with.i think i may have chuckled a few times so far.i
think the writers may be trying for the modern day Columbo,and Columbo
he ain't,not by a long shot.the show doesn't completely work,though i
can see what they are trying to do.i give "Monk" a 3/5 for trying
something different.
Ce commentaire vous a-t-il été utile ? Oui Non (Signaler ce commentaire)



 
4.0étoiles sur 5 A gift, and a curse, Fév 22 2007
Par E. A Solinas "ea_solinas" (MD USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
"Monk" is one of those intelligent cult shows that usually dies a quick and painful death -- and this is one of the few that has lasted more than a few weeks. The obsessive compulsive detective returns on DVD with his fourth season of bizarre, seemingly unsolvable crimes, from homicidal dentists to amnesia.

As the season opens, Adrian Monk (Tony Shalhoub) encounters a nasty new obstacle -- an inept private eye, Marty Eels (Jason Alexander), has suddenly become better than him. Everyone thinks Mart is a genius -- but Monk knows better. And when Eels' case explodes in his face, he calls on Monk and Natalie (Traylor Howard) to bail him out.

As the series goes on, Adrian deals with all sorts of weird cases -- murderous dentists, black widows, a case of amnesia that has him thinking he's married to the town weirdo, a wine tasting, a stolen diamond with a million-dollar reward, deals with his boss's marital problems, fashion models, and a Christmas party that turns deadly. Worst of all, he's called on to do jury duty, and has to solve two crimes without leaving the room.

And on the personal front, Monk reunites with his even-more-neurotic brother Ambrose for a Halloween mystery. But when Adrian shows signs of overcoming his disorder, Natalie sees what seems to be his dead wife Trudy walking around San Francisco -- and she's implicated in a murder.

"Monk" just wrapped its fifth season (which wasn't quite as good as this one), which is something of a record for any semi-intelligent TV show. And for the fourth season of a detective series, it has aged quite well -- the stories are still unusual and cleverly written.

The writing is still quite solid, albeit with one or two lesser episodes ("Mr. Monk and the Captain's Marriage" just feels incredibly awkward). But the comedy and unique crimes continue, to the point where Monk can even solve crimes without leaving his bed. And the series continues to chronicle Monk's struggles against his OCD, while reminding us that he could be worse.

The characters continue to be well-fleshed out: We get some flashbacks to Monk's school years. And though more time has passed, he's still in love with his late wife -- one of the most charming scenes of the season has him slowly turning in the snow, thinking of Trudy.

For the supporting characters: Stottlemeyer's marital problems continue with shocking results, and Randy Disher's secret rock'n'roll dreams get revealed when he quits the police force. And we get to see more of Natalie's background -- she comes from a moneyed socialite family, complete with a snotty mom.

The fourth season of "Monk" is still solid and enjoyable, with the lovable obsessive-compulsive detective. Solid work.
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