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Life on Mars: Series 2 (UK)
 
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Life on Mars: Series 2 (UK) (2006)

Starring: John Simm, Philip Glenister Director: Andrew Gunn, Richard Clark Rating: NR (Not Rated)   Format: DVD
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

List Price: $59.99
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Life on Mars: Series 2 (UK) + Life On Mars: Series 1 (U.K.) + Life on Mars: The Complete Series
Total List Price: $159.97
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  • This item: Life on Mars: Series 2 (UK) DVD ~ John Simm

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What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

Life on Mars: Series 2 (UK)
83% buy the item featured on this page:
Life on Mars: Series 2 (UK) 4.7 out of 5 stars (11)
$44.49
Life on Mars: The Complete Series
7% buy
Life on Mars: The Complete Series 4.6 out of 5 stars (102)
$28.49
Life On Mars: Series 1 (U.K.)
7% buy
Life On Mars: Series 1 (U.K.) 4.8 out of 5 stars (51)
$47.99
2012
1% buy
2012 3.1 out of 5 stars (227)
$17.99

Product Details


Editorial Reviews

PopMatters.com

It transcends television to become, simply, superb entertainment.

Product Description

The International Emmy®-winning series seen on BBC America

Same place, same job. Different time, different rules. That’s the situation facing detective Sam Tyler (John Simm, State of Play) in this British drama that TV Guide calls "an entertaining collision of bare-knuckled police-procedural realism and mind-blowing surrealism."

Knocked unconscious by a hit-and-run driver in 21st-century Manchester, Tyler wakes up in 1973. Is he dreaming, time traveling, or just plain crazy? Whatever the case, he might as well have landed on another planet. Although shocked by the brutality of his bullying boss (Philip Glenister, Cranford) and the callousness of his squad mates, Sam gamely adapts to crime solving in this retro world. But even as romance blossoms with policewoman Annie (Liz White, The Fixer), mysterious voices from his former life keep calling him home. Trapped in the past, he must decide where his future lies--and how to get there--in the tension-filled finale.

DVD BONUS FEATURES INCLUDE
-"The Return of Life on Mars" documentary (45 min.)
-Bonus behind-the-scenes footage for episodes 3, 5, and 7 and tour of the set (48 min.)
-"The End of Life on Mars" featurette (28 min.)


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11 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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27 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A rich and satisfying finale to the series, June 27, 2009
By A. Whitehead "Werthead" (Colchester, Essex United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
Sam Tyler is still stuck in 1973, unsure if he has somehow really travelled backwards in time or if he is merely stuck in a coma in 2006 and is fantasising everything that is happening to him. However, now he has been there for a few weeks he is getting more used to life in the 1970s and is starting to downplay the unusual auditory and visual hallucinations he continues to suffer from. But, just as things seem to be settling down, questions about Sam's previous 1970s life in 'Hyde' before relocating to Manchester arise, and set in chain a sequence of events which could lead Sam home...wherever that is.

Life on Mars' second season was the last, due to a combination of the producers not wishing to over-exploit the concept and lead actor John Simm's well-known reluctance to be typecast in a long-running television series. It was a bold decision for a series that had become a big hit on British television and done the seemingly impossible by getting audiences fired up over a cop show.

The second season offers up pretty much more of the same as the first season: Sam and Gene butt heads over their different approaches to policing, but they have, grudgingly, accepted that each has skills the other does not, and when they combine their approaches it often leads to good results. Sam and Annie continue to not quite get it together in the tradition of all great TV will-they, won't-they romances, and Sam continues to be haunted by hallucinations of his life in 2006 which relate to his current situation in 1973. The show also moves onto slightly more contentious ground in Season 2 by covering the more controversial subject of IRA terrorism in one episode whilst continuing to examine the extent of corruption and heavy-handed methods in the 1970s police force.

In my review of Season 1, I mentioned that the show's continuous use of Sam's odd mental state occasionally gets a little exasperating, as sometimes you'd quite like to just see Sam and Gene butt heads and then solve the crime without Sam freaking out every twenty minutes. The producers play on this in two episodes in particular in the second season, one in which Sam doesn't have any odd experiences and starts getting worried about the lack of them, and another in which Sam reacts very badly to whatever is happening to him in the present and has to sit most of the investigation out. This latter episode, which is by far the most 'freak-out' intensive of the series, also perversely is one of the very best episodes, with flashbacks showing how they operated before he arrived (and giving rise to the unusual sight of scenes not featuring Sam, which feels odd as he is in every other single scene of every other episode of the whole series).

Of course, as good as the individual episodes are (and they are pretty damn good), the one episode that everyone will be left talking about is the very last one. British SF is awash with series-ending episodes that leave the audience reeling and talking about them for years or decades afterwards: Blake's 7, Sapphire and Steel and The Prisoner being the most notable (Quantum Leap's befuddling finale is probably the USA's closest equivalent). Life on Mars joins their august ranks with a finale that takes the viewer on a crazy existential rollercoaster ride as we finally get an answer for what is going on with Sam, but that answer is in turn supplanted by another, contradictory one in a manner that would make Christopher Priest proud. Which is the truth and which do we believe? The finale operates on multiple levels of reality with the viewer not quite able to trust what is going on. There is a very clear 'obvious' possible answer for what is going on, but just as with David Lynch's Mulholland Drive, that 'obvious' answer still leaves other, key questions unanswered.

Taken in isolation, Life on Mars' finale is very strong indeed. However, the news that a sequel/spin-off series was forthcoming which would shed more light on events did dilute the strength of that finale a bit, and Ashes to Ashes' plot developments have indeed plunged much of what we thought we knew from Life on Mars' finale into doubt. But further examination of that series is for another review.

The second season of Life on Mars (****½) is thoroughly entertaining, funny, thought-provoking and just the right side of ambiguous. It draws a line under the series and sets up the sequel series quite nicely. It is available now in the UK (DVD, Blu-Ray) and will be released in the USA on DVD in November.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars 1st USA review on this USA DVD set. CRIME SERIES FINALE PACKED WITH BONUS, October 9, 2009
By Harold Wolf "Doc" (Wells, IN United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
WHAT IS BETTER THAN "LIFE ON MARS: SERIES ONE"?? Easy--Series Two.
It is a crime investigation drama, action packed, Emmy winning BBC series that intentionally ended itself while on the top of it's fan base. THIS REVIEW IS SPECIFICALLY FOR THE USA, N. America playable, DVD SET.

DI Sam Tyler (John Simm) is still in a 21st-century ICU ward while simultaneously fighting London criminal life in the year 1973. Will he ever return to 2006? Will his relationship with DC Annie Cartwright (Liz White) get beyond he-cop/she-cop?

Major crime investigation continues with criminal mayhem and police illegal procedures, 1973 style, oh yes, with a bit of time-travel suspense. This is the best time-travel writing since Dorothy visited OZ & the Emerald City. Series Two, has an increase in comedy moments. It's not Police/Action/Drama turned comedy, but small moments and lines that cause LOL belly chuckles. Tension breaks at unexpected times, perfectly timed. This series, as compared to Life On Mars One, also has increased police violence toward the accused. A "By-the-Books" 1973 mindset must have came from the comic books, not today's acceptable criminal investigation rules. Sam objects to that.

This has a very real feel to a period (1973) drama piece, taking the viewer back in visuals, props, sets, costumes, speech, and music. 1970s music is a vital part of the show, and pleasant background for the nostalgic viewers. Included, but not limited to, are artists and songs: David Bowie, "Goodbye Yellow House Road", "The Sweet Hellraiser", Barclay James Harvest, "In the Shining Sun", David Cassidy, Moody Blues, Gilbert O'Sullivan, Elton John, "Rocket Man", Whiskey in the Jar, Traffic, Cream, "Crossroads", The Sweets, "Love Lies Bleeding", Israel Kamakawiwi'de, "Somewhere Over the Rainbow", "Changes", and of course, "LIFE ON MARS."

episode details:
1---Casino owner & killer in '73 is the man about to pull the plug in ICU 21st-century. Can Sam change history? Annie gets promoted.
2---Safe cracker Dickie Fingers escapes prison, gets set-up, re-nicked, and fingers a cop on the inside for protection promised by Sam. Is it true?
3---Sam's sure IRA bombs & threats are a hoax. Will DCI Gene Hunt (Philip Glenister, also of "Cranford", see my 5-star review) "rounding up" Irish solve the crisis?
4---Sam gets to go undercover as Annie's husband to investigate a social circles connection to a girl's death. Spouse key-swapping link? Tough assignment for Sam?
5---Sam helps solve a kidnapping while sick. Is a hospital overdose his illness? This episode has a twist to a twist. Packed drama.
6---Heroin, new drug on the street, is mixed up in racial bigotry. Murder raises the stakes. Then a link that topples Sam's 2 worlds.
7---DCI Hunt awakes from a drunk stupor facing a murdered body, the man Gene publicly threatened. Interim DCI Morgan finds the guilty evidence fast. Sam must find Hunt's innocence.
8---Sam finally is told his mission--what he must do to get back home (to 2006). But can he do it? There are those in 1973 he's begun to care about.

Within the USA's "Life on Mars: Series 2" 4-DVD set with 8 (approx. hour long) episodes, are Bonus Features galore.
SDH subtitles, even on some features.
documentary of "The Return of Life on Mars"
3 "Behind the Scenes" segments. #3 details the exploding car, awesome. #5 the how of a funny animation snippet. #7 deals with difficulties in an on-location period courtroom.
A tour of the set, the police headquarters, an elaborate construction
featurette on "The End of Life on Mars", a spoiler best left for after viewing all episodes.
"Tufty's Cameo" a closer look at one of the funny segments.

What a combination of drama potential, first/foremost police crime investigation, but also period excellence, a kiss of romance, outbursts of comedy, action enough to rival any contemporary film, suspense to make you jump, music to enchant but yet relevant to the story, and time travel for a twist. 3 "RIGHT ON" cheers for this USA DVD set, subtitles, and it's giant bonus package.

HIGHLY RECOMMENDED, as is, of course, Series One (see my review on year one of this masterfully written 2-YEAR series that is concluded with LIFE ON MARS: SERIES 2.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Exceptional series!, January 14, 2010
By cassie (Danville, CA USA) - See all my reviews
I could have given this a five star review - actually everything but the ending (which was disturbing) was truely excellent. I watched the US version before seeing this. They are very different, so I didn't get bored. It is definately worth watching.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars They're back!
Thank you thank you BBC for finally releasing this amazing show in a format those of us in the U.S. can view. Read more
Published 13 days ago by TVfan

5.0 out of 5 stars Life On Mars Series 2
Both Life on Mars Series 1 and Series 2 are the best and most entertaining DVDs...you will enjoy the story and the music from the 70s is also a great treat and brings you back to... Read more
Published 26 days ago by G. Moczulski

5.0 out of 5 stars best british show ever
I ran across this show on the BBCA and I was hooked, it introduced me to Johm Simm and Philip Glenister who are wounderful actors. Read more
Published 1 month ago by C. Smith

4.0 out of 5 stars VERY GOOD
AS GOOD AS I THOUGHT IT WOULD BE. HERE IN BRAZIL WE ONLY FIND THE FIRST SEASON, SO IT WAS A RELIAF TO FIND HERE IN AMAZON. USED AND IN GOOD CONDITION. EVERY THING IT"S OK. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Marcos A. Costa Neto

5.0 out of 5 stars Time travel for all
This series, in addition to being great, literally pulls you back to the early 70s in England. The music is great (more so if you heard at the time) and the series shows you how... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Lorenzo Segovia

4.0 out of 5 stars Nowhere Story
Leaving besides juxtaposing the surrounding with future and adopting a notion "Do it in Rome as Romans do", a time-wondering detective looks more realistic and liveable while... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Michael Kerjman

5.0 out of 5 stars The song goes on...
One of the best TV series we've watched in years. Original, well written and produced, and the cast played their parts perfectly. Read more
Published 8 months ago by R. P. Emptage

5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome!
I bought a region-free DVD player so I could watch these series!
The Life on Mars series Two has the final episode for the series' I really liked the ending. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Margarita Retana

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