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Ally McBeal: Theme of Life/Playing the Field [VHS]

Ally McBeal: Theme of Life/Playing the Field [VHS]
  • Directors:Greg GermannPeter MacNicolJace AlexanderSarah Pia AndersonAdam Arkin
  • Actors:Greg GermannPeter MacNicol
  • Studio:20th Century Fox
  • List Price: $5.99
  • Buy New: $1.41
  • as of 5/20/2012 11:36 MST details
  • You Save: $4.58 (76%)
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  • Format:Color, NTSC
  • Language:English (Unknown)
  • Media:VHS Tape
  • Running Time:45 Minutes
  • Rating:NR (Not Rated)
  • Discs:1
  • Shipping Weight (lbs):0.4
  • Dimensions (in):7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1
  • Release Date:January 11, 2000
  • UPC:024543000716
  • EAN:0024543000716
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com
While Billy sits speechless at ringside, "Theme of Life" (first season, episode 17) gives Ally and Georgia the opportunity to vent their suppressed animosity in a kick-boxing match, and the battering leaves them bruised but closer as friends and colleagues. Meanwhile, Ally defends Greg (Jesse L. Martin), a handsome young doctor who transplanted a pig's liver into a dying woman without securing official permission. A romance begins between him and Ally that will continue in subsequent episodes. Fish is seen on the town with Attorney General Janet Reno (later Whipper confronts him about his obsession with Reno's wattle), and Ally reluctantly visits a therapist (Tracey Ullman) who urges her to choose a lively, danceable "theme song" for her life. While the kick-boxing match is surely a season highlight, this episode is memorable for creator David E. Kelley's seemingly effortless balance of crackling wit and engaging drama. Here we have an episode that's as moving as it is amusing--a quality that gives the series its singular appeal.

A lively round in the battle of the sexes, "The Playing Field" (first season, episode 18), finds Ally returning to the therapist (Tracey Ullman), worried that the "dancing baby" that plagued her in previous episodes has reappeared as a roller-blading hockey player! ("Get him!" advises the counselor.) Continuing the "baby" theme, Ally finds herself pitted against child prodigy Oren Koolie (Josh Evans), a pint-sized 9-year-old attorney whose negotiation strategy consists primarily of crying when he doesn't get his way. Kelley continues to probe the gender gap in a case of harassment via sexual exclusion, the outcome of which causes a tempest of fury in the office, with Ally and Georgia confronting Fish over his backward theories of gender inequality. All's well that ends well in the closing nightclub scene, where men and women call a truce. --Jeff Shannon

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