Sex scenes and violence
| Actors: | Anna Paquin, Stephen Moyer, Ryan Kwanten, Chris Bauer, Lynn Collins, Lois Smith, Raoul Trujillo, Carrie Preston |
TRUE BLOOD chronicles the backwoods Louisiana town of Bon Temps where vampires have emerged from the coffin, and no longer need humans for their fix. Sookie Stackhouse (Anna Paquin) works as a waitress at the rural bar Merlotte's. Though outwardly a typical young woman, she keeps a dangerous secret she has the ability to hear the thoughts of others. Her situation is further complicated when the bar gets its first vampire patron 173 year old Bill Compton (Steven Moyer) and the two outsiders are immediately drawn to each other. Delivering the best of what audiences have come to expect from Creator and Executive Producer Alan Ball (writer of Oscar winning Best Picture American Beauty, creator of the Emmy Award winning HBO series Six Feet Under), TRUE BLOOD is a dark and sexy tale that boldly delves into the heart and the neck of the Deep South.
| Status: | QuickPick |
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| Run time: | 636mins |
| Origin: | UNITED STATES |
| Aspect Ratio: | 16:9 |
| Run Time: | 636mins |
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| File Size (Approx): | 5.7 GB |

Now, this is a story all about how... Vampires are undead but no longer undercover in the fictional town of Bon Temps, Louisiana. Psychic southern belle Sookie Stackhouse (Anna Paquin) falls under the charm of former Confederate soldier Bill Compton (Stephen Moyer), who is keen to restore the reputation of his kind as peace-loving….but it’s not just vamps that are out for blood. Happy days? Currently at the end of its fifth season, True Blood is like that gorgeous high school crush who became a toothless meth addict. Sure, you may have missed out while they were in their prime; just be thankful you aren’t saddled with them now. Arriving on television just as the pop-cultural vampire wave began to crest, True Blood gathered enough word of mouth over the course of its first season to emerg...
Now, this is a story all about how... Vampires are undead but no longer undercover in the fictional town of Bon Temps, Louisiana. Psychic southern belle Sookie Stackhouse (Anna Paquin) falls under the charm of former Confederate soldier Bill Compton (Stephen Moyer), who is keen to restore the reputation of his kind as peace-loving….but it’s not just vamps that are out for blood.
Happy days? Currently at the end of its fifth season, True Blood is like that gorgeous high school crush who became a toothless meth addict. Sure, you may have missed out while they were in their prime; just be thankful you aren’t saddled with them now.
Arriving on television just as the pop-cultural vampire wave began to crest, True Blood gathered enough word of mouth over the course of its first season to emerge at the start of Season Two HBO’s biggest hit since The Sopranos. It was the network’s new saviour after a lean period both commercially and critically.
For all its reputation as a show to never meet a plot twist it didn’t like, the first season of True Blood doesn’t actually move that fast. Creator Alan Ball (Six Feet Under) lets it meander through the Deep South setting at a pace alarming to anyone only familiar with the latter era. The sex scenes are spaced out, the violence is used for impact rather than shock value, the acting is mostly convincing even if the accents are not, and the mysteries start small and grow rather than open big and fizzle out. However, the seeds for its eventual decline are present as well; a reluctance to lose any key characters while introducing new ones at a record rate, a lack of stakes, Tara.
The final frontier: The first season of True Blood is undeniably patchy but often compelling. It’s a promising start to a series poised for a greatness that failed to eventuate.
Top 3 Episodes: 1) Strange Love. The season opener has a few good moments and some great character introductions but the snail’s pace would have thrown a few people off. 5) Sparks Fly Out. Bill’s vampiric origins are revealed, buried underneath some surprisingly compelling flashbacks. 9) Plaisir D’Amour. Character actor par excellence Stephen Root effortlessly outshines the main cast in his run on True Blood, and never more so than here.
Worst Episode: 7) Burning House of Love. In which Tara’s mother gets her closest thing to a spotlight episode, featuring two of the season’s worst scenes.
Season MVP: Stephen Moyer. The Englishman failed to nail the accent (the way he says Sookie is endlessly mockable) but he’s brooding, dangerous, romantic, and occasionally funny. If only he hadn’t been punished with a procession of atrocious storylines ever since.
3/5
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1. Episode 1 (55m) | ||
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2. Episode 2 (55m) | ||
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3. Episode 3 (55m) | ||
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4. Episode 4 (55m) | ||
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5. Episode 5 (55m) | ||
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6. Episode 6 (55m) | ||
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7. Episode 7 (55m) | ||
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8. Episode 8 (55m) | ||
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9. Episode 9 (55m) | ||
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10. Episode 10 (55m) | ||
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11. Episode 11 (55m) | ||
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12. Episode 12 (55m) |