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172 of 178 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Makes you think, whether you like it or not.
Ninety percent of all stories are based on the Idiot Plot -- you've seen it: any conflict that could be resolved in three seconds if not for the fact that everyone involved is an idiot. (Seinfeld based an entire series on this idea, but at least in their case it was intentional.)

Then there's the other nine-point-nine percent, in which the plot involves a...
Published on May 8, 2006 by scott welles

versus
2.0 out of 5 stars Bored me to tears
No offense to the many die-hard fans, but after all the hoopla in these reviews I figured this was going to be unique and high-quality. Instead, I found a very prime-time soap-opera-looking, over-written show that tried to moralize left and right while featuring some exceptionally standard network "acting". Tom Skerritt and the rest just seem wooden and lifeless, and the...
Published on September 17, 2007 by K. Swanson


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172 of 178 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Makes you think, whether you like it or not., May 8, 2006
By 
scott welles (los angeles, ca United States) - See all my reviews
Ninety percent of all stories are based on the Idiot Plot -- you've seen it: any conflict that could be resolved in three seconds if not for the fact that everyone involved is an idiot. (Seinfeld based an entire series on this idea, but at least in their case it was intentional.)

Then there's the other nine-point-nine percent, in which the plot involves a real problem, worthy of the main characters' attention (and, therefore, the audience's as well). NYPD Blue, ER, and other shows with life-and-death professions fall in this category. (At least, the good ones do.)

Picket Fences, that last tenth of a percent, is the rarest of the rare, in that each episode seems to start off with the Idiot Plot, everyone getting stirred up by minor little things that should be solved easily...but then something very unusual happens. You slowly realize that this issue is much deeper and more complex than it first seemed. Pretty soon, the most innocuous of personality quirks has expanded into weighty moral, ethical and philosophical territory, and everyone's got an opinion worth considering, whether you agree with them or not. Ain't no slam-dunk solutions in Rome, WI.

I don't know how David Kelley did it, but he handed us the single most compelling drama series I've ever seen. There are shows I've enjoyed more, with characters I liked better, with action that was more satisfying (action in the story sense, not just violence), but few that compelled me to think like this one did. Even when things ended badly, horrible travesties of justice unfurling as we watched, I couldn't help but think, "I hate it, but I can see their point."

(On the downside, the quality of the series also took the biggest, fastest nosedive in TV history in its last season, when Kelley left the show and let someone else revamp it...but that's sometimes the penalty for such a high level of excellence in the first place, I suppose.)

A few other notes: No review would be complete without mentioning Ray Walston's Emmy-winning role as 'The Judge Of All The Earth', as I think of him, and I would be remiss if I didn't add that this series had one other quality achieved only by the finest of dramas: it's funny as hell.
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36 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars People who don't watch "Picket Fences" shouldn't throw stones at it, June 17, 2007
By 
Steven Bailey "Cinemaven" (Jacksonville Beach, FL USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Picket Fences - Season 1 (DVD)
Back before David E. Kelley's skewed TV viewpoint became predictable, he did a wicked little number called "Picket Fences."

Kelley first gained TV fame in the early 1990's by injecting his wry humor into Stephen Bochco's then-ailing lawyer show "L.A. Law." (Kelley penned the episode where wicked lawyer Rosalind Shays met her demise down a vacated elevator shaft.)

After that, Kelley settled at CBS, where he created -- and wrote or co-wrote -- the first season of "Picket Fences." It took place in the fictional town of Rome, Wisconsin, meant to represent Everytown, U.S.A.

At first glance, you had to give the show credit just for daring to be out of the ordinary. The pilot episode alone featured the town's musical production of "Wizard of Oz," only to have the actor playing the Tin Man drop dead on-stage. (The town's newspaper can't resist running the headline, "If I Only Had a Heart Attack.")

As if that isn't enough, sheriff Jimmy Brock (the beautifully understated Tom Skerritt) has to contend with the town's first murder case. Mind you, no ordinary murder would do for this occasion; it consists of a housewife who was crammed into a running electric dishwasher.

"Picket Fences" never failed to exercise its flair for the bizarre. But upon second glance, the offbeat stories were merely attention-getters for some of TV's best fleshed-out characters. Among them were Jimmy's family (including Holly Marie Combs, later to star in The WB's "Charmed"), headed by his doctor/wife Jill (Kathy Baker). And in Kelley's seeming take-off on "Law and Order," the town's many legal cases were overseen by Judge Henry Bone (Ray Walston) and ambulance-chasing lawyer Douglas Wambaugh (deservedly Emmy-winning Fyvush Finkel).

Rarely has a TV ensemble exploded on the scene with such gutsiness and flair. Among many first-season highlights, my favorite is the Thanksgiving episode, in which Jill must contend with the new fiancée of her father (an Emmy-winning guest turn by Richard Kiley). The episode hinges on a scene where Jill's bitter argument with her father is counterpointed by Wambaugh's equally heated discussion with his wife. It's one of the most perfectly acted and edited pieces of television I've ever seen.

Be aware that the show doesn't shy away from hot topics (though it never goes for cheap thrills or laughs, as so many "relevant" dramas and sitcoms do). But if you know that going in, then you'll be rewarded with some very riveting TV viewing.

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25 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best TV series most people never saw..., August 29, 2005
By 
J.S. McIntyre "Mc" (San Francisco, CA USA) - See all my reviews
I missed a few episodes myself due to conflicts, but those I saw rarely failed to provide thoughtful and entertaining television. The first episode I ever saw featured Skerrit, Baker, and the two actors playing his deputies settling in for a nice dinner that turned into a verbal donnybrook that lasted the entire hour. I was completely riveted through it all, and look forward to the day I get to see that episode, and all the others, seen and unseen.

Add to this a capable ensemble of actors featuring, amongst others the late Ray Ralston as the acerbic, sharp-tongued judge who more and more became the moral conscience of the series, and you have a serious keeper for your DVD library.
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This show got me through law school, June 5, 2006
Okay, this show is probably one of the top 10 things that TV got right. It had quirky but charming characters. It had fun, interesting and even gripping plotlines. It grabbed your attention and even made you think.

While I was in law school my constitutional law professor regularly demanded his students watch this show, and darn if he wasn't right. Pretty much every hot button constitutional law issue made it's way into one of the plotlines sooner or later, and in a way that was just so much more fun than reading caselaw!

Hopefully they will release this soon. I never saw the whole series and I'm waiting with baited breath for years.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Picket Fences - Quirky, Fun, and Normal, November 26, 2006
This review is from: Picket Fences - Season 1 (DVD)
The reason that I liked Picket Fences is because even though it was quite quirky for its day, it took huge global issues and put them into a tiny little town quite effectively. Even though it focused on a family where the father was the sheriff and the mother was a doctor, it took these family issues and weaved them quite effectively into a small Wisconsin town that was screwed up, yet very normal based upon the hidden little secrets that every town and family has. It's funny, serious, and just good TV.
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars David E. Kelley's shows are not on DVD!!, October 8, 2005
Can someone please tell me why aren't any of David E. Kelley's tv shows on DVD??? Picket Fences started all of the wacky shows that I love to watch. They put out an Ally McBeal DVD that left out half of season one and now there is nothing replacing that!! I miss Picket Fences, Ally McBeal, Boston Public and The Practice. Will someone call him and tell him he will MAKE MONEY when they get released!! I am tired of seeing all of the new series out all ready and classics like this that are not out.
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20 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hello? (knock, knock, knock) Hello McFly?, October 13, 2006
What the heck is going on in this country?! We put a man on the moon in 19-friggin-69 but we can't get the Picket Fences DVD Box set out by 2006?! Come on industry people! This is a no-brainer. You see, it's your job to get us DVDs of great shows like Picket Fences, BEFORE WE DIE OF OLD AGE, and then we will gratefully give you millions of dollars. It's practically FREE MONEY! It's what makes America great. NOW KINDLY GET CRACKING!
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars eagerly waiting for this masterpiece, February 18, 2006
Picket Fences was really ahead of it's time. It was sort of a sleeper in that it aired initially on Friday evenings, so never truly gained the following it deserved. I have friends that were too young to really remember it, but love the contemporary work of David Kelley. I can't wait until I can introduce them to this ... his best work imho. It never really ran into the same problems his more recent work has: the cast was never completely overhauled (aside from periodic mayors), and the level of shock and humor remained pretty steady. It never seemed like it was blown out of proportion to be a water-cooler show or to get ratings. I rate this near the top of my top ten television shows of all time. Come on Fox ... everyone wants to see Lauren Holley and Kostas Mandylor when they were really appealing, Jack Black in a cat suit and dressed as an enormous hotdog, and Holly Marie Combs when she did some of her best work.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Why it's taking so long..., May 15, 2007
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This review is from: Picket Fences - Season 1 (DVD)
According to a blurb in Entertainment Weekly, the reason Picket Fences hasn't been released yet is they are having trouble procuring all the music rights used in the show. And that was a direct explanation from David E. Kelley productions. People familiar with his shows know how much he likes to toss in a tune here and there, and in this day and age of everybody wanting to get their cut, the delay is not surprising. And simply removing the song or songs in question from whatever episode would be heresy to PF's dedicated fans. Needs to be in its original, as-aired, uncut format. It's that good!
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Picket Fences, March 24, 2006
By 
S. A. Patton (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The best TV series ever. Ten years off the air, but I remember so many of the episodes - in detail. It was CBS's Friday night jewel. Every week, the program startled me, made me laugh, made me think and usually made me cry. There were weeks when I would tape Picket Fences rather than watch it at 10:00 because I knew I needed more sleep than I got after because I was so stirred up by the show. I can't wait for this to be on DVD. I've told my children about Picket Fences for so many years, I think they would enjoy it as much as I did.
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Picket Fences - Season 1
Picket Fences - Season 1 by Mel Damski (DVD - 2007)
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