"Oz" A Game of Checkers (TV Episode 1997) Poster

(TV Series)

(1997)

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8/10
Burn it all down
injury-6544712 June 2020
Enjoyable enough, but felt like a strange way to end season 1. Kind of felt like it was trying to be an epic season finale just for the sake of being epic. Up until this point the best parts of the series were the ones focused on character moments and interpersonal drama. Then they go and just throw up a big chaotic mess full of everybody just running around like maniacs.

I don't fully understand Said's logic. He wants better justice for the downtrodden. How is a prison riot that kills a bunch of people going to help? Does he hope it will draw media attention thus leading to systemic change? I don't think he's that naive. I guess ultimately he has decided that death is preferable to imprisonment in an unjust system; and he's willing to make that choice for everybody. What a guy.

Beecher gets to play the mad dog. I'm sure he had fun with it, but it occasionally comes off as a little goofy.

I hope that every season of Oz doesn't end in a full scale riot episode.

The way they have finished Season 1 seems like a kind of cleaning house. It pretty much allows them to build up Season 2 with any characters they want; casualties in the riot can be anybody that's convenient.

I'm curious to see which characters have survived, and whether any of the storylines from Season 1 will carry into Season 2. A lot of characters had a lot of growth, and a bunch of motivations and schemes were going on; I hope it's still there when the smoke clears.
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Season 1: Needs polish & strengthening but is solidly enjoyable and shows potential
bob the moo18 September 2010
Warning: Spoilers
As with the majority of UK viewers of OZ, my awareness of this show was totally by chance. Channel 4 used to have a slot of oddities (I forget the name) that ran on week nights from midnight to 4am. I was a student at the time and my house was often cold, making it harder to fall asleep - so I would watch my TV in my bedroom. Channel 4 never really promoted it or gave it a set slot but at least it was on. I have general memories of the show in regards quality but I had only ever seen it once and most of it had been very late at night (I think it was season 4 when I got a video recorder and didn't need the late nights. Anyway, watching season 1 again recently made me question my memory to a point and also assume that it progresses from where it was in season 1 (which in fairness it probably does). What season 1 mostly does is set out the stall of the show: the characters, the style, the concept, the plots are all here to be seen even if it perhaps doesn't have all the polish that it could (will?) have.

Most of season 1 is themed with religion, drugs etc coming to the fore in any specific one hour episode. This theme is clearly presented by the show narrator (also one of the prisoners) who delivers his view in a street-theatre style from a position of being removed from the prison itself (often inside a spinning glass cube). If it sounds a bit pretentious it is because it is very close to being so, but yet in practice it works. Within the thematic frame of each episode we have several threads involving several key prisoners out of the wider group. These overlap a lot less than I would have liked but mostly they all work as stand alones. To the new viewer Beecher's destruction is probably the easiest way in - a prison cliché perhaps to see the "new fish" drowning in a world he cannot hope to understand, far less compete in. This is done well and is the heart of the show. The "struggling with prison" theme is also explored through two characters (Keane and Ortolani) who both suffer a similar fate. The use of these two is good but perhaps the speed of developments undercuts it as well, preventing the viewer getting emotionally involved.

Indeed this is a problem for me with season 1, in that I didn't always care because the material didn't have quite enough depth in the characters but at the same time the plots themselves were not brutal or smart enough to wholly engage me on this level either. On one hand it does seem to carry itself with a certain earnest that suggest the viewer take it all seriously and get emotionally involved, but then at the same time it doesn't provide enough to do this and instead spends a lot of time on "event" based threads that depict prison life. In this way it does work though - we will all have seen prison dramas with more budget (this season does look a bit cheap in combination with being a bit dated now as well) but Oz does still convince in terms of the tribalism, the betrayal, male sexual abuse, drug addiction and continued crime within this prison unit. The show perhaps could beef this aspect up a bit (ad I hope it does) because it is more of a drama than an insightful piece about prison life. This would also need to happen with stronger plotting as well as too much happens too quickly at times - given the time involved in being in prison, plots seem to be hatched, delivered and concluded very rapidly, reducing their impact on the viewer.

For many viewers the cast will suffer from the usual HBO/Showtime curse of having lots of faces known from other shows - although at least in the case of Oz I know most of them from here first. Still it is a bit distracting to see so many characters from The Wire from the start. Outside of this the majority of the cast are OK - but nobody is brilliant here even if they work well within the demands of the show itself. A good example is Winters - not a great actor but he fits his character well and delivers with energy. Mostly everyone manages to play "up" their characters without ever being too hammy - the material often prevents them having a lot of depth though. Walker is a good example as he plays large and is asked to deliver too much too quickly. Akinnuoye-Agbaje (also British) is more effective with less as his character is intimidating without saying a word. Hudson and Kinney are solid enough in the staff roles but like I said nobody really wows. Tergesen gets the closest thanks to the material his Beecher has, but even then he doesn't seem to have been allowed to explore the character beyond the "events" on the page but the full extent of evil that is Schillinger isn't out of the box yet as Simmons appears to be holding back here. I liked Leon while he was around and support is generally solid from Acevedo, Moreno and Perrineau (who makes the narration work very well).

Season 1 of Oz is worth watching even if it is very rough around the edges. It has a honest brutality about it that acts as a strong base, while the narration adds a fresh feel and the characters carry the plot twists. A bit more intelligence and commitment in the plotting and writing is required but Oz season 1 is a solidly enjoyable start.
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Like No Other Show You've Seen
Theo Robertson12 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I first heard of OZ in a British tabloid involving an American inmate who was suing the state because the prison had run out of icecream " American prisons are known as hell holes . A reputation that is reinforced by a new show called Oz which started last night where a Neo Nazi carved a swastika on a fellow inmates backside . Why was the inmates backside bare in the first place ? Don't ask " Hmmm sounds compelling I thought Doubt if it'll be turning on British network TV soon though , But with descriptions of swastika's on bare backsides it's not something you forget about and was surprised when it appeared in the TV listings of channel 4 a year later .

Nothing had prepared me for this mindblowing drama . Within seconds I was hooked as an inmate was stabbed in the reception area and after that comedy interlude things started getting very nasty indeed . Tobias Beecher a lawyer who killed a young girl in vehicular manslaughter finds himself used as a sex slave by neo nazi Vern Schillinger . Mafia enforcer Dino Ortolani gets burned to death . Ryan O Reilly tries to get play all the sides off one another and governor of Emerald city an experimental unit tries to keep order but it's obvious by the end of the first episode that this will be in vain

The first episode is probably the best but all the episodes are very strong drama . It's also very obvious how thematic they are . Episode three revolves around religion , episode four capital punishment episode , episode five drugs etc . This is related to us by Augustus Hill , the series narrator done in an abstract street theater manner which is bizarre and surreal but works wonderfully . Despite being violent murderers etc you really do make a connection with them which speaks well of how well crafted they are from the pen of Tom Fantana . It's highly quotable too . " Death is certain . life is not " and " If sex is sweet and death is bitter love is both . Love will always and forever break your heart " being my personnel favourites . It's also a show that where you never know what's going to happen next . Wait till you see Beecher's revenge on Vern !

The cast also contribute to the drama greatly and everyone will have their favourite performances . Eamon Walker will be well known to Brits since he played Alf Garnett's gay home help IN SICKNESS AND IN HEALTH but this is forgotten by you sa he becomes becomes Karim Said . Despite ending up inprison for killing a child Tobias Beecher manages to elicit great empathy helped in no small part by Lee Tergesen's intense performanceand Dean Winters is superb as O'Reilly the brash confident anti-hero responsible for so much carnage between the prison tribes . Most underrated performance is surely Adewale Akinnuoye Agbaje as Simon Adebisi who on paper might just come across as the " stock scary black guy " but his intimidating presence means he doesn't have to say a word to terrify an audience . All he has to do is just appear and ... gulp pass the Valium

What about flaws ? It's not family television so the fact that every scene has extremely foul language is not a criticism nor are the scenes of graphic violence . There are one or two plot turns that are quickly forgotten about such as Joey being beaten senseless , landing up in hospital and then never being seen again . Likewise Keane and Groves commit murders and are effectively executed in an implausibly short period of time but with hindsight it's nowhere as bad as it becomes in latter series

If there's a problem with the casting is that it has destroyed other shows for me . I know many people love THE WIRE and one of the reasons I was unable to get in to it totally is that many of the cast from OZ would go on to appear in that show . JD Williams plays a very similar character in series one called Kenny " Bricks " Wangler and he'll always be Wangler a violent imprisoned street thug to me so I'd be interested in finding out how fans of THE WIRE view the casting between the two shows . There's also something else puzzling me - why didn't the actors go on to Hollywood stardom ? They certainly deserved to do so
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