Eureka
Plenty of new television series need a season or two to sort themselves out, and as this three-disc, 13-episode (plus bonus features) box set from the second season (2007) reveals, the Sci-Fi Channel’s Eureka is still a work in progress--which is not a bad thing, considering that it’s one of the more provocative and ambitious shows out there. For the uninitiated, here’s the basic premise: Sheriff Jack Carter (Colin Ferguson), accompanied by his teenage daughter Zoe (Jordan Hinson), is stationed in Eureka, a picturesque little burg somewhere in the Pacific Northwest. Eureka is hardly Anytown, USA; indeed, this is the place where "the world’s greatest thinkers" live and work, most of them at Global Dynamics, "the most advanced scientific facility in the world." It’s also a place where exceedingly strange things happen on a regular basis. In Season Two, those happenings include people spontaneously combusting, becoming invisible, turning into gold, or simply disappearing (and leaving nothing behind--not even a memory that they ever existed); a "personal force field" that’s growing so large and so fast that it will soon engulf the whole town, and maybe even the whole world; freaky weather that changes by the moment; and even an experiment to re-create the Big Bang inside a Global Dynamics lab, leading to some unexpected side effects.
These developments are all presented with enough cool special effects and scientific techno-babble to make Eureka a perfectly viable and sometimes quite dramatic science fiction diversion. But there’s more--much more. Sometimes this is a show about relationships: Jack and Zoe (custody becomes an issue when Jack’s ex, played by Olivia D’Abo, shows up in the early episodes); Jack and Allison Blake (Salli Richardson), Global Dynamics’ new boss (their growing attraction is complicated by the continued presence of her ex, a genius scientist type); Jack and his pal Henry (Joe Morton), who blames Jack for his girlfriend’s death but gradually learns there’s more to it than that. Much of the time it’s a comedy, heavy on the quirks; and, in a change from the first year, it’s also a serial, with several story arcs continuing over the course of the season. All of that can make Eureka a but convoluted and hard to get a handle on, but this show is a keeper. Extensive bonus features include deleted scenes, gag reels, podcast commentaries, and a good deal more. --Sam Graham
Henry and Jack struggle to deal with their losses as people begin burning to death for no apparent reason. At Global, Stark awaits the decision of the DOD.
When Fargo activates a mysterious device on Allison's first day, he endangers not only himself, but Global Dynamics and Eureka as well.
A surprise visitor disrupts Jack and Zoe's lives; strange weather must be tracked to its source before it becomes an "ice funnel of death."
The people of Eureka start disappearing, and Jack is the only one who notices.
Debris starts raining down on Eureka on the day of the school's science fair, and there may be a connection to Zoe.
Groups of people begin sharing dreams in some embarrassing and conflicting ways as a result of some accident of convolutedly blended pairing of technologies and havoc ensues.
Fargo's grandfather is discovered in a cryo-stasis chamber, but no one can determine how he got in there. Elsewhere, Zoe pursues another mystery involving her dad and a dozen roses.
When Allison puts a newly hired, but criminal, genius in Jack's care he's less than pleased, but then an accident in a lab causes most of GD to lose their smarts, and he may be the only one with the solution.
Carter begins to disappear on his anniversary, Zoe is stuck with another student for a school project, and Henry and Nathan examine the item Henry found.
Zoe and her friends lose their voices, but whatever is causing the symptoms has an even worse effect on Allison and her only hope comes from an unusual source.
All the women of Eureka begin to pursue Carter, so something must be very wrong.
The town's metals begin to spontaneously turn to gold, but the wealth may be as fleeting as the town when the structures begin deteriorating.
A flesh eating virus has infected Global Dynamics, and the building goes into a security protocol that endangers everyone's lives.
|
Colin Ferguson | Sheriff Jack Carter |
|
Salli Richardson | Allison Blake |
|
Joe Morton | Henry Deacon |
|
Jordan Hinson | Zoe Carter |
|
Erica Cerra | Deputy Jo Lupo |
|
Ed Quinn | Nathan Stark |
|
Neil Grayston | Douglas Fargo |
|
Chris Gauthier | Vincent |
|
Debrah Farentino | Beverly Barlowe |
|
Matt Frewer | Jim Taggart |
| Packaging | Custom Case |
|---|---|
| Nr Discs | 3 |
| Screen Ratios | Anamorphic Widescreen (1.78:1) |
| Audio Tracks | Dolby Digital 5.1 [English] |
| Subtitles | English |
| Distributor | Sci-Fi Channel, The |
| Layers | Single side, Dual layer |
| Edition Release Date | Jul 15, 2008 |
| Regions | Region 1 |
| Purchased | For $ 39.98 |
|---|---|
| Watched | |
| Index | 123 |
| Added Date | Aug 10, 2015 01:03:20 |
| Modified Date | Jun 20, 2024 23:31:19 |