Monk - Season Two with Tony Shalhoub: DVD Cover
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Monk - Season Two Cast: Tony Shalhoub

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  • DVD Release Date: 01/11/2005
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 242

Viewer Rating: (6 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Replayability" See All

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  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
  • Customer Reviews
  • Cast & Crew
  • Full Product Details

Features

"The Minds Behind Monk"; Disher (Jason Gray-Stanford) character profile; Stottlemeyer (Ted Levine) character profile; Precinct tours with Jason Gray-Stanford

Full Product Details

Scene Index

Side #1 -- Disc One
1. Apparent Suicide
2. Bad Grammar
3. Airtight Alibi
4. Time's on My Side
1. Midair Drowning
2. Impossible Circumstances
3. Not Dead Yet
4. Bad Blood
1. "Girls Can't Eat Fifteen Pizzas"
2. In a Slump
3. Monk the Ump
4. Million Dollar Ball
1. Rubbed Out Ringmaster
2. Suck It Up
3. Clowning Around
4. Crushing Evidence
Side #2 -- Disc Two
1. Foul Play
2. Roommates
3. "The Human Time Machine"
4. Unearthed Confession
1. Play Acting
2. "Speed Dating"
3. Adrian the Actor
4. Stage Fright
1. Mail Bomb
2. Sibling Rivalry
3. Separation Anxiety
4. Live Wire
1. Deadly Workout
2. Compromising Position
3. The Sapphire Girl
4. Magnetic Murder
Side #3 -- Disc Three
1. Bizarre Homicide
2. Members of a Jury
3. Question the Defendant
4. Attention to Detail
1. Read All About It
2. Solving Crimes
3. A Test of Strength
4. Hitting the Jackpot
1. Winning the Raffle
2. Throwing the Race
3. The Proof Is in the Pie
4. All Mixed Up
1. Star Struck
2. Unwarranted Confession
3. Overly Observant
4. Doctored Audio
Side #4 -- Disc Four
1. Carried Away
2. Reinstated
3. Official Practice
4. The Written Exam
1. Barefooted Sniper
2. Crossing the Line
3. Union Relations
4. A New Understanding
1. Striking It Rich
2. Gold Digger
3. Cave-In
4. Eureka!
1. Last Meal
2. Bunking With Spider
3. Jail Talk
4. Nazi Alert

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

In the best tradition of such classic small-screen whodunits as Murder, She Wrote and Diagnosis: Murder, Monk offers complex murder mysteries in which solutions rely on perceptive analyses of seemingly unimportant clues, as well as the protagonist's command of arcane information. Season 1 introduced viewers to Adrian Monk (Tony Shalhoub), a brilliant detective afflicted with obsessive-compulsive disorder in the wake of his wife's still-unsolved murder. Bounced from the police force on medical grounds, he has become a private investigator who relies heavily on his assistant, Sharona Fleming (Bitty Schram), in order to limit his dealings with the outside world. Monk's cases generally bring him back into contact with an old nemesis, Captain Leland Stottlemeyer (Ted Levine), who has little patience for Monk's neurotic behavior but great respect for his deductive abilities. The 16 episodes of Season 2 (2003-4) continue Monk's string of cleverly formulated and well-written episodes, though relying somewhat more on "stunt" casting to lend novelty to the formula. Andrew McCarthy is the chief suspect in the season opener, "Mr. Monk Goes Back to School," in which the eccentric investigator determines that an English teacher's apparent suicide is actually a murder, based on grammatical errors in the note she purportedly left behind. Lolita Davidovich plays a glamorous trapeze artist in "Mr. Monk Goes to the Circus," another outstanding episode. One of the season's highlights, "Mr. Monk and the Very, Very Old Man," introduces Glenne Headly as Stottlemeyer's wife, a documentary filmmaker convinced that one of her subjects has been murdered. Former child star Danny Bonaduce portrays himself in "Mr. Monk Meets the Playboy," which finds the detective matching wits with the publisher of a men's magazine. And John Turturro won an Emmy for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series for his debut as Monk's agoraphobic older brother, Ambrose, in "Mr. Monk and the Three Pies," another season standout. Obviously challenged to sustain Monk's quirks without letting them get overly familiar, the show's writers maintain a very high standard in Season 2, and armchair detectives will find themselves hard-pressed to keep pace with the compulsive crime-solver. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

Customer Reviews

  • Viewer Rating:
  • Ratings: 6Reviews: 2

Monk is a great television show...by R_DeSautel

Reader Rating:
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August 30, 2009: It makes my idiosyncracies to seem so minor, and yet, it gives hope that I may be good at something, regardless of those difficulties. It is also good humor for all ages.

Monk is the Bestby Anonymous

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February 09, 2005: To Tony Shalhoub and the entire cast: Monk is awesome! Thanks for the laughs and entertaining episodes. As an added bonus, filming the show from the wonderful city of San Francisco doesn't get any better!