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The Riches - Season 1
 

The Riches - Season 1
Actors : Minnie Driver, Eddie Izzard
Studio : 20th Century Fox
by 20th Century Fox
Brand : TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX HOME ENT
Release Date : 2008-01-08
Publisher : 20th Century Fox
Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Number of Items : 4
EAN : 0024543488057
UPC : 024543488057
Avg. Customer Rating:(based on 20 reviews)

List Price : $49.98
Our Price : $16.73


Editorial Reviews for  'The Riches - Season 1'
 
Product Description
Minnie Driver and Eddie Izzard star in this well-received FX series based on the concept of what happens when a family of traveling con-artists finds its way into a wealthy suburban community fooling everyone around them into thinking they belong while trying to convince themselves of the same thing. Driver plays Dahlia Malloy a wife and mother who at the start of the series has just been released from prison for a crime her husband conman Wayne (Izzard) committed. Understandably bitter Dahlia self-medicates and steals to protect her children ending up on the run from a scary crew of extended family. When a crazy coincidence gives Wayne and Dahlia the keys to a new life and a new identity they seize it mistakenly figuring life in the suburbs will be a piece of cake. Like a mixture of DESPERATE HOUSEWIVES WEEDS and Coen-brothers comedy THE RICHES has the potential for wide appeal. This set contains all 13 episodes from the show's premiere season including the pilot.System Requirements:Run time: 161 minutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: TELEVISION/SERIES & SEQUELS Rating: NR UPC: 024543488057 Manufacturer No: 2248805
 
Americancivilwar.com
British comedian Eddie Izzard (Glorious, Dressed to Kill brings his raffish charisma to The Riches, a sneaky satirical drama about a family of con artists who lie their way into a wealthy gated community. Wayne and Dahlia Malloy (Izzard and Minnie Driver, Grosse Pointe Blank) are travelers--a kind of American gypsies--who get in trouble with their clan and have to hit the road with their three kids (Shannon Woodward, Noel Fisher, and Aidan Mitchell). When a confrontation with other travelers causes a deadly car accident, the Malloys take over the dead couple's brand-new home--a mansion bought over the Internet--and assume the lives of Mr. and Mrs. Rich. The premise stretches plausibility, but that's part of the fun; any successful con game forces the mark to accept something absurd, because why would anyone tell such a preposterous lie? The pleasure of trickery drives the show. Wayne weasels his way into a job as lawyer to an obnoxious real estate developer; Dahlia persuades a private school to admit her kids after the admission deadline; and the kids find their skills serve them well in the surface-obsessed suburban world. But over the course of the thirteen-episode season, the Malloys' wily architecture of lies grows increasingly precarious, constantly threatened by fear of exposure and vengeful travelers. The final episode builds to a nerve-wracking crisis as someone who actually knows the dead couple comes to visit. Ironically, some of the most compelling moments are flashes of honesty--in an early episode, oldest son Cael realizes that the traveler girl he loves has set him up, and the two stare at each other across a diner table, wordlessly brokenhearted. The entire cast is great--Woodward shines as smart, conflicted daughter Di Di, and Margo Martindale (Paris, je t'aime, Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story) routinely steals scenes as the Rich's unhappy neighbor. But The Riches rests on Izzard's shoulders; though Driver's acting chops are more polished (and her Southern accent is more consistent), Izzard captures the soul of a man who lives by his wits, a man who navigates the world with a wink and a stream of beguiling words. The Riches - Season 1 includes a couple of chatty commentaries and flimsy featurettes, but the best extra is a series of short webisodes of Izzard teaching Woodward and Fisher assorted cons; the family chemistry is delightful. --Bret Fetzer

Beyond The Riches: Season One


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Stills from The Riches: Season One







 
Customer Reviews for  'The Riches - Season 1'
 
Very Good Series
I really enjoyed this series. I would definitely begin watching it or purchase seasons as they come on DVD.
 
This is the direction television should have gone.
Television could have been a wonderful enhancement to human existence, but for some reason has only served to reduce the quality of our lives.

If TV had gone in the direction that The Riches does go, perhaps more people would be having intelligent conversations at the water cooler instead of discussing what Britney Spears is up to these days.

The writing of the show is wonderful and complex and the performances of every actor, down to the smallest part, are exceptional. The story lines are not only duplicitous, but witty and thought provoking.

You would be doing yourself a disservice to miss out on this show.

I simply cannot say enough good things about it.

I was drawn to it because I'm an Eddie Izzard fan, (I mean - the man tells historical jokes!) and was not let down. Eddie and Minnie are just the cream on the top of all of these wonderful actors.
 
The Riches, Season 1
Oh, man! I loved, loved, loved this series. I didn't know what it was about, but heard some really great buzz that it was well worth watching! And the buzz was right! This series takes you away to another way of living, which is so different from the norm. The acting and storyline are both superb! I can't wait to order Season 2!
 
Get ready for the most fun you'll ever have getting conned out of a peaceful evening...
I've never been the type of person to get excited over television. I like my sitcoms because they're easy to follow, even if you miss a week, and reruns barely ever get old (I think I've seen every episode of `Friends' twelve times over), but aside from that I really can't say that the idea of following a shows premise all season long interests me. It's easy for me to miss a week and then find myself lost and wondering what is going on. There are really just a few shows I've watched religiously; `The Sopranos' being one, another being the early seasons of `Nip/Tuck' (I lost faith after the disastrous third season).

Well, you can add `The Riches' (as well as `Damages') to that short list. As we head further into season two I feel compelled to write my review of the first season before too much blurs together.

Like I said, following a show all season long seems like a daunting task for me. When that show sinks its claws into you and refuses to let go though, you find it much easier to plop down in front of the TV every Tuesday night. That's how things went for me with `The Riches'. After deciding the `Nip/Tuck' was so behind me I needed to find something to fill that void. I happened to stumble onto a encore showing of the pilot for this new `provocative' show called `The Riches' and within the first few minutes I was hooked. Watching this cute little girl con someone then turn around and reveal that he was a cute little boy was enough for me; I was in.

The shows premise is that of a traveling family (modern day gypsies), the Malloy's. Dahlia has just been released from prison and her husband Wayne and three kids (Di Di, Cael and Sam) have come to bring her home. Dahlia has her own set of problems, most instigated from the time she's just finished serving, but when Wayne decides that the life of a traveler is just not for them anymore the Malloy's find themselves in a hole heap of trouble. Segregated from the rest of their traveling family, which includes Dahlia's crazy cousin Dale, the Malloy's find themselves on the run for their lives. When an unfortunate accident costs a young wealthy couple their lives Wayne and Dahlia see this as an opportunity to change the course of their lives. Taking on the identity of Doug and Charlene Rich, the Malloy's are now living the `American Dream', but is it really all they could have hoped for.

The show at times may stretch the boundaries of reality, but that is what makes it so much fun. The writers are smart enough to make what on the outset may appear implausible seem completely doable. Looking at the situations Wayne and Dahlia find themselves and the ways they purpose to survive them is enthralling and exciting beyond belief. What's so great about `The Riches' is that it asks the viewer to really examine what makes them happy. As Wayne tries to turn his families life around and create a more stable and `normal' environment for his children he ultimately finds himself sacrificing the morals he has already set for them, and while Dahlia tries to support her husband she finds that her life is becoming more and more miserable by being someone that she doesn't want to be. The children also have to adjust and decide if they even want to pursue a `normal' life if it forces them to change who they are inside.

The acting is superb here. Eddie Izzard and Minnie Driver are phenomenal as Wayne and Dahlia Malloy. Izzard has impeccable control and becomes the stability in the show, while Minnie steals every scene with her acting range and emotional temperance. She conveys so much realism with her performance, it's captivating and touching. All three actors who play the Malloy children are flawless. Noel Fisher captures Cael's rebelliousness which is really nothing short of his outward display of disapproval with his parent's new lifestyle. Aidan Mitchell is adorable as young Sam, the gender-bending son who can't seem to decide just who he really is. But it is Shannon Woodard who really shines brightest here as Di Di, the smart and yet torn daughter who battles herself with their new life, wondering if it's perks outweigh it's disadvantages.

Each episode is littered with superb supporting performances by Gregg Henry who plays Wayne's outlandish new boss as well as Margo Martindale who plays their nosey yet caring neighbor Nina.

I can't think of a flaw here, at least not one large enough to deter anyone from enjoying the entire season. Season two has now officially begun and is building strong on its first season so I truly only see good things to come at this point. `The Riches' help make my Tuesday nights all that much more interesting and hopefully they can do the same for you. Leave it to FX to create something new and exciting and completely worthwhile. I may have just been conned out of my Tuesday evenings, but it was well, well worth it.
 
WATCH IT
This show is fantastic. I've seen every episode, some a few times. I can't wait for it to come on every week.
 
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