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CSI: Crime Scene Investigation

Gil Grissom is the senior forensics officer at the Criminalistics Bureau in Las Vegas who heads a dedicated team of Crime Scene Investigators.

 

CSI: Crime Scene Investigation DVD and Blu-ray

C.S.I. Crime Scene Investigation - The Complete Second Season

C.S.I. Crime Scene Investigation - The Complete Second Season

Actors: William Petersen, Marg Helgenberger, Gary Dourdan, Jorja Fox
Language: English
Formats: Anamorphic, Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only)
Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1
Number of Discs: 1
Studio: Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)
Release Date: September 02, 2003

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Product Description

Studio: Paramount Home Video Release Date: 05/01/2007 Run time: 960 minutes Rating: Nr

Amazon.com

The second season of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation consolidates the show's well-deserved popular appeal, while beginning to explore (gently at first) beneath the slickly professional surface of the investigators themselves. Gradually we learn more about what makes Grissom and his astonishingly gifted forensics team tick, beyond merely that they are workaholics who seem to require no sleep at all. The show's trademark reveals of vital evidence--be it on the autopsy slab or under the microscope--add a fresh spin to what is, at heart, a good old-fashioned whodunit series. William Petersen brings the requisite air of antiquarianism to a character whose meticulous demeanor and love of order consciously inherits the mantle of Sherlock Holmes (whose vast collection of tobacco samples and bottles of chemicals are the ancestors of CSI's high-tech crime lab). This is a series in which scientific evidence-gathering is elevated to the status of a religion. "When a tree falls in the forest, even if no one is around to hear, it does make a sound," affirms Grissom with the calm assurance of a yogi on the path to Enlightenment.

And just when CSI starts to seem a little too pat, just when the trail of clues seems a little too neat, the show always seems able to throw a surprise or two at us: perhaps there has been no crime after all; perhaps the evidence concerns a completely different crime altogether; or perhaps, as in one brave episode concerning brothers implicated in multiple murders, the evidence simply isn't good enough to convict the right man, even when Grissom knows which one really is guilty. As a result, every episode is simply compulsive viewing. --Mark Walker