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Overview
of the Miami Vice TV Series
Miami Vice
is an American television series produced by Michael Mann
for NBC. The Miami Vice television show became noted for its
heavy integration of music and visual effects to tell a
story. The Miami Vice television series starred Don
Johnson and Phillip Michael Thomas as two Metro-Dade Police
detectives working undercover in Miami. The Miami Vice
TV series ran for five seasons on NBC from 1984 to 1989.
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Miami
Vice - Season One on DVD (1984)
Amazon.com
DVD Review - To hear the opening beats of Jan
Hammer's percussive, propulsive Miami Vice theme is
to be instantly transported back to 1984. But this
groundbreaking series, with its cinematic
sensibility, cool clothes, and killer soundtrack is
no mere blast from the past. It still rocks. This
three-disc set would be worthless if it didn't.
Music was an integral part of Miami Vice's hip vibe.
The soundtrack propelled the stories and established
the mood like no series before it. So the first
thing you want to know is: Have the music rights
been secured for this DVD release? In the pilot
episode, does Phil Collins's "In the Air Tonight"
still play ominously as vice undercover cops
Crockett and Tubbs speed toward a bust? Does Eric
Clapton's "Wonderful Tonight" serenade Sonny and
Gina on his boat in the episode "One-Eyed Jack?" And
what would the benchmark episode, "Smuggler's Blues"
be without Glenn Frey's instant classic? From the
Rolling Stones on a boombox to Elvis Presley singing
"Rubberneckin'" on a TV, Vice's cutting-edge
soundtrack has been preserved and honed in 5.1
surround sound glory. Miami Vice made stars out of
Don Johnson, Philip Michael Thomas, and Edward James
Olmos, who won an Emmy as the intense, taciturn Lt.
Castillo (watching him bust some martial arts moves
in "Golden Triangle" is like Yoda cutting lose in
Attack of the Clones), but the first season also
offers time-capsule glimpses of actors on the cusp
of stardom, including a pre-L.A. Law Jimmy Smits in
the pilot, a pre-Crime Story Dennis Farina in
"One-Eyed Jack," and a pre-Moonlighting Bruce Willis
in "No Exit." Miami Vice put a neon sheen on
cop-show convention. Its fashion sense (pastel
suits, no belt, no socks), and the brilliantly
employed freeze frames are still arresting. Miami
Vice was a TV watershed, and this DVD set does it
full justice. --Donald Liebenson |
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Miami Vice - Season Two on DVD
(1984)
Amazon.com
DVD Review - In its second season, Miami Vice walks
that fine line between hip and cool. Hip fades, but
cool is timeless. Then, as now, it doesn't get much
cooler than this groundbreaking and trendsetting
series' promise of a "life of adventure, exciting
folks, and exotic locales," to quote one sardonic
character. But the compelling stories, cinematic
trappings, and lightning-in-a-bottle chemistry
between costars Don Johnson and Philip Michael
Thomas elevate Miami Vice from time capsule status.
Likewise, the eclectic soundtrack, that would be
painfully dated had it been stuck in the '80s, is a
mind-blowing shuffle of genres and mainstream,
alternative and world artists. "Prodigal Son," the
double-length episode that opens the season,
features Glenn Frey, U2, the Neville Brothers,
Debbie Harry, Brian Ferry, Lou Reed, Traffic, and
Phil Collins. Collins himself portrays a con man in
one of the season's most entertaining episodes,
"Phil the Shill." Not content to just be heard,
other musicians who generally eschewed television,
appeared on Miami Vice this season, adding to the
series' considerable cachet. Among them: Kiss
frontman Gene Simmons ("Prodigal Son"); Miles Davis
("Junk Love"); Leonard Cohen ("French Twist"); Ted
Nugent ("Definitely Miami"); and Frank Zappa
("Payback"). Miami Vice instantly established itself
as an oasis for character actors, many at the
beginning of their careers. The second season offers
early glimpses of Nathan Lane ("Buddies"), Harvey
Fierstein and a pre-Seinfeld Michael Richards as a
menacing heavy ("The Fix"), David Strathairn ("Out
Where the Buses Don't Run"), Bob Balaban ("Back in
the World"), and John Leguizamo ("Sons and Lovers,"
which also features the unfortunate stunt-casting of
Lee Iacocca as a gun-toting parks commissioner).
Most of Miami Vice's buzz-generating episodes were
in season 1, but season 2 offers several series
benchmarks. Two of Johnson's finest hours are "Back
in the World" (which he directed) and "Buddies," two
episodes that explore Crockett's Vietnam War
experience. Thomas got his chance to shine in
"Prodigal Son" and "Sons and Lovers," in which Tubbs
becomes a target of the vengeful Ivan Calderon.
"Bushido" is an always-welcome showcase for
Emmy-winner Edward James Olmos as Castillo, who
helps shield an associate's Soviet wife and son from
the CIA and KGB. "Out Where the Buses Don't Run"
boasts an Emmy-worthy performance by guest star
Bruce McGill (D-Day in Animal House) as an unhinged
former vice cop. Miami Vice stylishly subverted TV
cop drama convention, but despite one too many
downbeat endings that freeze on a devastated
Crockett, it remains exhilarating to re-visit. There
are no extras on this three disc-set, but the
episodes are enough to make you want to party like
it's 1985. --Donald Liebenson |
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Miami Vice - Season Three on DVD
(1984)
Season 3
of the Miami Vice television series on DVD.
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Miami Vice - Season Four on DVD
(1984)
Season 4
of the Miami Vice TV show on DVD.
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Miami
Vice: Season Five on DVD (1984)
Season 5
of the Miami Vice television series on DVD.
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