Review of C.S.I.: Season 3 Part 2 (Box Set)

7 / 10

Introduction


This boxed set offers us Part 2 of the Third Season of this successful American TV Series. Seen on Channel 5 in this country it is a slick, good looking and well groomed team that are presented here.

Headed up by Gil Grissom, wearing his perpetual expression of puzzled squirrel this is the Criminal Science Investigation bureau. They really do pick up the pieces of Humpty Dumpty and try to piece him together. Gil is a loner, coming to terms with his impending deafness due to inherited traits. His job depends on his five senses and he feels he is counting down to his imminent dismissal.

His assistants are two women and two men. Catherine Willows, a retired exotic dancer who got her degree from night school is a single parent. Constantly exasperated by Grissom who blithely does his own thing without taking any notice. Nick Stokes and Sara Sidle are the younger members of the team. Still angling to go solo, they are competitive when it comes to work. Sara is also nursing an unrequited passion for Grissom. Warrick Brown is a reformed gambler which can`t be easy in Las Vegas. Pulling them all together is Captain Jim Brass the homicide detective who oversees the cases. No CSI department would be complete without its affable coroner Dr David Robbins.

Each episode and there are 11 in this boxed set offers a more or less encapsulated case study. Usually one programme covers two cases that are intertwined but not normally connected other than by the team themselves. Occasionally shows follow one case through; which the whole team `process`.

The series for non-viewers is set in Las Vegas. It`s a glossy, hard core town of gamblers prostitutes and dirty money- there are visiting film stars, boy racers college students and the conventioneers. Behind the glitzy façade death lurks in many guises. Other crimes are featured but it`s mostly murder that takes centre stage. Death is not pretty even if the investigators are. With close up shots of corpses sometimes in advanced stages of decay; young and beautiful; old and ugly they have one thing in common they are very dead. It is sometimes said that the dead tell no tales but of course that was before we had forensic science. Now the scraping of DNA can convict a killer years after the event.

CSI introduces the gathering of evidence as a story in itself. I can imagine the pitch for this one. `Hey boys lets make a programme where some guys scrapes under a dead guy`s finger nails and works out that the killer is Caucasian, around 140 lb and works in a butcher`s shop!` It doesn`t sound like compelling TV. What is different about CSI is the extreme close up of death. Crimes are not witnessed as they happen but it is when the corpses are taken in for examination that the trauma is shown. This usually means a rather gruesome poke through the internal organs as we see the cracking of vertebrae to paralyse, the entry of a bullet, a corkscrew immobilising a windpipe. Another thing that CSI is very good at is showing how many different ways there are to kill.

What the show does well is to pick on a particular subject and weave its tale around it. Somehow it avoids the hamminess of Midsummer Murders `death by bell ringing` scenario. There are subjects as diverse as dwarfism, boxing, capital punishment and they all are dealt with competently. It also scores on being able to wrap up its case in about 40 minutes when it usually takes Detective Barnaby at least 90.

The show is pretty popular too and has spawned a spin off called CSI Miami with CSI New York soon to come with Gary Sinise heading up the cast list. This franchising of popular shows is getting a little endemic in the States with Law and Order now having three Spin offs. The problem with this is that there is a good chance it will stifle innovation with these becoming a `safe `option.

Part 2`s Episode Guide

Random Acts of Violence, One Hit Wonder, Lady Heather`s Box, Lucky Strike, Crash and Burn, Precious Metal, A Night at the Movies, Last Laugh, Forever, Play with Fire, Inside the Box.

Part two`s episodes that I actually received are;



Crash and Burn

When a grandmother crashes her car into a restaurant there are three victims but who is really to blame? Meanwhile a mother is dead from carbon monoxide poisoning-it looks like an accident but the appliance of science may prove otherwise.


Precious Metal

A body found in an oil drum leads to the world of `robot-wars`, where intense rivalries could have lead to murder.


A Night at the Movies

Cue Brass as a hard boiled detective-not alas a trip to the holo-deck but simply playing up to the location. A night of `noir` at an art house cinema leads to a gruesome killing and no real suspects. Has the killer taken the plot of a film too much to heart?

The Last Laugh

A murder at a comedy club is on laughing matter;especially when there is another victim with no connections. Who`s laughing now?



Video


Visually an interesting piece with dramatic lighting and although the locations are limited, hey this is Vegas!

The tawdry glamour is sufficient to keep the eye interested. Even the opening shots of the Disney like plastic-looking buildings set the heart racing. Some of the cutting to the missing ad breaks is sloppy but remembering this is made to strict timetable and budgets I`ll let them off.



Audio


Scoring and background music has been crucial to success for many recent TV dramas. CSI is no exception with great attention being paid to the use of music.

The opening song from The Who `Who are You?` is sufficiently frantically paced to get the adrenaline going before the programme starts. Then the background music takes over and is used well to enhance the storylines.



Features


Just one on the disc I got:

"Making it Real"

A short documentary looks at how they produce `interior` shots, mainly of the human body but also of certain mechanical processes such as inside a jet engine
The participants describe with relish the way they are able to construct the shots and the materials and processes they use. The result on screen is pretty convincing to a layman and is part of the appeal of the show. The contrast between the clinical blue light of the CSI lab and the raw gruesome crime scenes complete with `internal` re-enactment is the key to the show`s success.



Conclusion


Why are the viewing public, myself included, so fascinated by the mechanics of murder? The grim reality would make us turn away in horror but somehow when it is served up in these short form dramas with a neat conclusions it is strangely compelling viewing. It helps of course to watch the glamorous investigating team. They are so calm, so collected and godammit, always bloody right!

Cases are served up in a delicious double helping although occasionally they find something big enough to stretch the whole team. Sometimes the conclusion doesn`t feel quite right with the combination of circumstance a little beyond belief. Given the rapidity of the conclusions it is easy to miss the more blatant stretching of the plot to breaking point. This is mainly down to the demands of a 24 episode schedule and how many series in this country could come up with such sustained quality for that many episodes. All round then, a great series to watch and learn.

So for the record as far as I can ascertain there is no drop in quality between Part`s 1 and 2 and no earthly reason to issue it in two halves apart from it being more expensive than the Region One version available at the same price for the full set. Still an opportunity to catch up with an excellent series at the price you decide on.

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