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In Treatment: Season One

In Treatment: Season One

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 w

Rating: (out of 83 reviews)

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4 Comments

4 Comments

  1. Kamuizot

    October 12, 2010 at 1:49 am

    Review by Kamuizot for In Treatment: Season One
    Rating:
    Fine example of great television plot structure. You can follow the large story arch’s of each individual character or drop in for a single episode and still be engrossed in the story. This show is made for television and not dvd like so many other tv shows today. Thoroughly enjoyable, relies on good acting and good writing, not on gimmicks.

  2. William W. Wood

    October 12, 2010 at 12:55 am

    Review by William W. Wood for In Treatment: Season One
    Rating:
    As a psychiatrist, I firmly believe that this series is without equal in the history of film portrayal of the work of a therapist. Despite a few, trivial criticisms one could level at this production, the work as a whole transcends the limits of the therapeutic “hour” and just as vividly portrays our limitations while bringing absolute realism to what it is like to be “In Treatment” from a number of perspectives. Yes, therapy is a complex process fraught with pitfalls and misadventures, but it is also a process that can and often does liberate and free the human spirit from the chains and fetters of the dark forces and shadows that plague us all until the final release that occurs at journey’s end for each of us. This is the most captivating and compelling series that I have ever seen on television. For anyone contemplating entering therapy or struggling while in therapy or has been in therapy or is thinking about becoming/already is a therapist, psychiatrist, psychologist, or any mental health professional, this series is an absolute must see.

  3. John Kuczmarski

    October 11, 2010 at 11:54 pm

    Review by John Kuczmarski for In Treatment: Season One
    Rating:
    The palette this series uses to paint emotive, empathic, and richly textured profiles of real problems with people has an alluring and self-therapeutic effect. This sounds cheesy, but after a few episodes you grow and feel a kinship with the characters.

    I don’t know how to describe how amazingly real this series is. As someone’s not only studied therapy and psychology academically, but who has also been “in treatment” for over 100 hours, this is the closest thing to real thing. Byrne is exceptional. Wise, smooth, suave, composed, compassiaonte, and real. His supporting cast (the patients) are equally captivating.

  4. Spunk Monkey

    October 11, 2010 at 11:05 pm

    Review by Spunk Monkey for In Treatment: Season One
    Rating:
    This is a powerful, deeply moving, intelligent, emotionally nuanced series. It consisting of nothing more than psychotherapy sessions between a cast of reoccuring characters, this show fills an important niche missing from most television — the richness, complexity, and heartbreak of the “emotional life.”

    Are you tired of seeing thin, carbon-copied and cliched characters in movies and television shows? Then this is the perfect series for you, because here the whole point is to explore the inner lives of the characters.

    Does the the fact that this series focuses a great deal on the emotions of the characters mean that there is no “action?” Only if you define “action” as soley encompassing explosions or giant robot attacks.

    To me, however, there was more action in this show than almost any other I’ve seen: there was the complexity of coming to terms with the guilt of death, of a disintergrating marriage, of children torn between parents, of unrequieted love, of the intense pressures to be successful, of professional jealousy, of the quiet desperation of everyday life, and the pain and bravery of those trying to take control of their lives.

    The writing is really quite incredible. I was time and again rivited by the ways in which the story tellers captured and traced the emotionally raw and complex workings of the human heart- the tangled web which constitutes human relationships.

    Some detractors have said they find the characters “annoying:” these characters strike me as “real,” for, in life, people are themselves complex and full of paradoxes, at times annoying but at others deeply sympathetic. I came to be involved with all the characters, and, in the end, they all suprised me, up until the very last episode.

    The acting is also superb. Gabriel Byrne (as the therapist “Paul”) gives the performance of his lifetime, and Mia Wasikowska gives a star making performance as “Sophie,” a troubled gymnast.

    This is a show for people who find themselves interested in the human mind and heart, particularly, in the complex ways in which we become entangled with our fellow human beings, and often punish ourselves, lie to ourselves, and hide from our own inner truths. What is the thrill of an asteroid threatening to destroy the Earth compared to the everyday struggle with such things as love, guilt, and the fear of facing another day on this planet.

    Truly, one of the great shows I have seen- original, thought provoking, powerfully acted, intelligently written, and as deep and as rich a portrait of the human soul as we’re likely to ever get on television.

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