Product Description
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Allison Dubois (Arquette) is a strong-willed, devoted
young wife and mother of three girls, who has gradually come to
grips with her extraordinary ability to talk to dead people, see
the future in her dreams and read people's thoughts. This season,
Allison and her family's world is turned upside down after her
abilities are publicly exposed, resulting in sweeping changes
both professionally and personally.
.com
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As this sixth season of Medium kicks off with the first
of 22 episodes (on five discs), lead character Allison Dubois
(Patricia Arquette) is one month out of the lengthy coma she fell
into at the end of the previous year, brought on by a brain
tumor. It's bad enough that she's now partly paralyzed on her
right side; even worse, she no longer has the dreams that were
the key to her abilities as a medium and psychic, meaning she
can't be much help to the Phoenix district attorney's office as
anything other than a paralegal. Husband Joe (Jake Weber), who
quit his job to take care of Allison during her illness, would
prefer that her powers, and the "darkness" that accompanied them,
never return, but one needn't be Nostradamus to know that they
will, and soon. When they do, another season of creator/executive
producer Glen Gordon Caron's series quickly hits its stride--and
that's entirely a good thing.
Two of the Dubois daughters, Ariel (Sofia Vassilieva) and
Bridgette (Maria Lark), share some of their mother's abilities,
and thus are featured a bit more this time around (not always to
good effect; an episode in which Ariel confronts a dead guy in a
rabbit suit who's tormenting a young boy is fairly silly). Joe,
the odd man out as the females in his life grapple with the
weighty weirdness of their "gift," is the focus of a few story
lines, as are Allison's colleagues, D.A. Manuel Devalos (Miguel
Sandoval) and Det. Lee Scanlon (David Cubitt). But this is still
the Allison Dubois show. This season, as she tries to help solve
murder cases involving stalkers ("Deja Vu All Over Again"),
serial killers ("An Everlasting Love"), crooked cops ("The
Future's So Bright"), identity thieves ("Will the Real Fred
Rovick Please Stand Up?"), a maniac who drains the blood from
entire families and then poses them like wax dummies ("There Will
Be Blood," a two-parter), and more, Allison's clues come to her
in some very peculiar ways. In one episode, she hears the
conversations of people nearby via her car radio; in another, she
dons a pair of sunglasses that allow her to see exactly how many
days whoever she's looking at has left to live. And then there's
"Bite Me," probably the season's best and most inventive show. In
the course of this Halloween-themed tale, Allison dreams that
she's a character in Night of the Living Dead; what's more, she
wakes up to find herself afflicted with the very same injuries
her character suffered in the dreams (these sequences,
brilliantly re-created from George Romero's classic horror tale
and in black and white, are also the subject of a featurette
included in the bonus material). Episodes like "Bite Me" reflect
Caron's quirky, often whimsical style, and even if his
inspiration and eccentric little touches sometimes come off as
merely frivolous, Medium still makes for highly entertaining
viewing. --Sam Graham