The Unit seasons 1-4 DVD boxset
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Director: David MametThe Unit is based at a fictional army post, Fort Griffith. The location of Fort Griffith is never explicitly stated, but in Episode 303 Always Kiss Them Goodbye, the storyline suggests that it is northwest of Pine Bluff, Arkansas, and west/southwest of St. Louis, Missouri, which would place it in the vicinity of the real-life Fort Leonard Wood.
Actors: "Max Martini, Robert Patrick, Regina Taylor, Michael Irby, Scott Foley, Audrey Marie Anderson, Abby Brammell, Dennis Haysbert, Demore Barnes"

Video:
Widescreen 1.78:1 Color (Anamorphic)Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]Subtitle:
"English, Spanish, French"Condition: new
NO. Of Discs: 26
Region: Region Free
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Weight: 0.8kg
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I've always loved David Mamet films because of his brisk realistic dialogue Review by Sally
Price Value Quality I've always loved David Mamet films because of his brisk realistic dialogue and his preoccupation with the male code and its clash with civilization. That theme is well served in The Unit, even better than films, because he has the long-range TV landscape to develop his characters, Delta Force anti-terrorist unit who, for hardly any pay, risk their lives in international missions while their wives, living in a nondescript military base, pinch pennies and deal with the daily dramas of having husbands who could die in the blink of an eye. Avoiding sentimentality, piety, and jingoism, The Unit has an appropriately cynical look at power and the use of trickery to succeed against one's enemies and even one's bureacratic bosses. In this sense, The Unit resembles the show 24 but unlike 24, which is often over the top, The Unit employs psychological realism. Perhaps better than any TV show right now, The Unit specializes in riveting plot lines, especially employing the reversal, where the plot goes one way and then turns the tables in a way that never seems forced or arbitrary. So far the second season has proved as the good as the first. If you haven't seen The Unit, the DVD first series season is a must. (Posted on 5/13/11)
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I've always loved David Mamet films because of his brisk realistic dialogue Review by Sally
