In Treatment: The Complete First Season

In Treatment: The Complete First Season

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Editorial Reviews

HBO premieres the first of 43 episodes of In Treatment, a new half-hour drama series starring Gabriel Byrne, and adapted from an enormously popular Israeli series created by Hagai Levi (one of HBOs executive producers, along with Rodrigo Garcia, Steve Levinson and Mark Wahlberg). Set within the intimate confines of individual psychotherapy sessions with five sets of patients, the series centers around Paul (Byrne), a therapist who exhibits an insightful, confident demeanor when treating his patients, but displays a crippling insecurity while counseled by his own therapist, Gina (Dianne Wiest). Patients undergoing treatment with Paul include a young doctor (Melissa George) who has fallen in love with Paul, a Navy pilot (Blair Underwood) reevaluating his life after a failed mission in Iraq, a teenage gymnast (Mia Wasikowska) with suicidal tendencies, and a sexually passionate couple (Josh Charles and Embeth Davidtz) who are troubled in all other areas of their lives. In addition, Pauls wife Kate (Michelle Forbes) will be featured prominently this season.

HBO's first half-hour drama gives new meaning to the term, "appointment television." Adapted from a popular and award-winning Israeli series, In Treatment in its first season aired five nights a week for nine weeks beginning in January 2008. Each episode eavesdrops on a weekly therapist-patient session. "The magic happens"—as one observer sarcastically remarks—in the home office of Paul Weston (Gabriel Byrne in his Golden Globe Award-winning role). Monday's patient is Laura (Melissa George), a doctor who reveals in a harrowing "about last night" monologue in the first episode that she is in love with Paul ("You've become the center of my life"). Tuesdays bring Alex (Blair Underwood), a cocky fighter pilot whose last mission over Iraq went horrifyingly awry, earning him the media tag, "The Madrassa Murderer." Wednesday's child, Sophie (Mia Wasikowska in a breakout performance) is a teenage Olympic hopeful in need of an evaluation following a near-fatal bicycle "accident." On Thursdays, Paul meets with Amy (Embeth Davidtz) and Jake (Josh Charles), whose rocky marriage is further shaken as they wrestle over whether or not she should get an abortion. Fearing he is "losing patience with my patients," Paul turns to his former mentor, Gina (Dianne Wiest in an Emmy-winning performance), with whom he had a falling out years before, to talk out his own troubles. The therapist whose own personal life is unraveling could have either been bad sitcom or static and stagey talking heads. But with its insightful writing, powerful performances, and deft, unobtrusive direction, In Treatment avoids the pitfalls to become an intensely gripping drama. Each episode thrives on what Laura calls "the back and forth stuff," the soul-searching and the questioning that strip away the defenses of each damaged character, including Paul himself, who has his own demons to confront as he becomes further estranged from his neglected and resentful wife, Kate (Michelle Forbes), and grapples with his feelings for Laura. This series is something of a career breakthrough for Byrne, a celebrated character actor (Miller's Crossing, The Usual Suspects). As the rumpled and weary Paul, he is more compelling just sitting and listening than many actors are in action. Quality programs for adults that deal with the human condition are at a premium on television. For anyone whose psyche has been scarred by so-called reality TV, In Treatment is excellent therapy. --Donald Liebenson

Customer Reviews

Very good

Reviewed by kirikoukou, 2010-02-28

Received order within 10 days in spite of overseas shipment to France.
Appreciated the conversion into Euros which made things much easier.
A first-time order through amazon.com which I will renew gladly

Richard Carlson Johnstown Colorado

Reviewed by Richard Carlson, 2010-01-10

I live in the country and don't have access to cable programing. Through the magic of DVD's I have been watching different cable shows. How do you compare these shows? That is actually impossible. They can vary so much, but the quality in writing is so superior to network television. I've watched westerns, cop shows, doctor shows, shows about dieing. Comparing them to each other is sort of like comparing steak to pizza. In Treatment is a wonderful example of what good writing is all about. I thought "the wire" had an amazing story line that followed through 5 years. I started to watch this show and found it slow to start with. It was so different, but I gave it some time and by week 7 I had changed my mind. This show would be so much harder to write for, because of the limited cast and the limited set. This show makes you sit, sometimes squirm, and read peoples faces as well as listen to the words come out of their mouths. It makes you think. You get to think about your life and how your childhood has formed you into the person you are. This show probably can't answer your own questions, or change your life, but it will work your brain. If you want to think as you watch the screen, give it a chance. It doesn't stimulate you like action shows do, but it is one fantastic show. Give it a chance to work on your mind and your heart. It's well worth it.

Interesting but tedious

Reviewed by coach, 2010-01-07

This season has some fantastic acting. However, it just became too tedious for me. There are over 30 episodes, and it takes a long time for the season to develop. I think this was a better show concept in theory than in practice. If you are looking for an action-packed show, this is definitely not for you. It is all about talking, silence, and emotion. Again, I enjoyed that for a while, but I was ready for the season to be over by the end.

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Reviewed by Estersazzy, 2010-01-02

I've just sat through the first 4 episodes and I'm not impressed. "Kindly" therapist Paul seems very quick to throw his analytical interpretations at clients who look like they are quite unimpressed and want to walk out. The writing is so wooden with lots of occasions where it is just being fluffed out. I doubt if any of it was done by an experienced therapist, or if one was consulted. Blah, inane, boring, silly stuff. Good acting

BRILLIANT PERFORMERS FROM MONDAY TO FRIDAY

Reviewed by C. Farrell, 2009-12-21

In Treatment is one of the most original ideas for a television series in a long time. Short episodes do not allow for wasted time on useless storyline. Gabriel Byrne's transformation into a therapist is flawless. Between Monday to Friday there are real characters with every day problems that are sure to leave the viewer thinking. HBO you have backed a winning horse yet again, do the not so simple minded viewers a favour continue bringing these original ideas to life.