Condition: New
Format: DVD
Box set; Closed-captioned; Color; Dolby; DVD; Subtitled; Widescreen; NTSC

Product Description

West Wing: The Complete Sixth Season (DVD)

Experience the inner workings of the White House in this innovative multi-award-winning drama series created by Emmy? winner Aaron Sorkin (Sports Night) and executive produced by Emmy? winners John Wells (ER) Alex Graves (Journeyman) and Christopher Misiano (ER). Martin Sheen (Apocalypse Now) as President Josiah Bartlet continues to lead an acclaimed ensemble cast.The West Wing enters its sixth season with a total of 25 Emmy? Awards including a win for Allison Janney (Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series) for her portrayal of C.J. Cregg newly promoted to Chief of Staff. Mary McCormack takes on series- star status as the brash new Deputy National Security Advisor Kate Harper. High-profile recurring guest stars include Emmy? Award winner Alan Alda as Arnold Vinick a Republican senator from California with presidential ambitions; Emmy? winner Jimmy Smits as three-term Houston Congressman Matthew Santos; and Sam Robards reprising his role as member of the press Greg Brock.

]]>

Amazon.com

With the ghost of creator Aaron Sorkin fully expunged from the spotlit soundstage maze representing that most busy portion of the White House the sixth season of The West Wing is less a return to form than it is a remaking of the things that were best about the show in the first place. There's C.J. and Josh throwing high-speed dialogue at each other; there's the tension and personality arc as characters are back in step with their original realization; there's the overarching story that runs throughout the 22 episodes along with the self-contained mini-dramas within each one; there are the new people who bind themselves to plots that are alternately tidy and messy just like real life. The taking-stock the show's creative minds clearly did after a roundly drubbed season five had a lot of help from the necessity of thinking ahead to a new crop of faces and places as the Bartlett administration starts winding down its second term. Some of the plot points may be a little hard to swallow: Would C.J. really deserve to take over the Chief of Staff position? Would Josh really walk away from his dream job to pursue the seeming nightmare of running a preside