West Wing, The - Season 1 (2005)
Genre Comedy; Drama
Studio Warner Home Video
Series The West Wing
Movie Release Date 2005
Country USA
Language English
Audience Rating NR (Not Rated)
Running Time 956 mins
Format DVD
Color Color
Cast
Martin Sheen President Ned Bartlet
Stockard Channing Abigail Bartlet
Allison Janney C.J. Cregg
Moira Kelly Madeline Hampton
Rob Lowe Sam Seaborn
Bradley Whitford Josh Lyman
Richard Schiff Toby Ziegler
Dulé Hill Charlie Young
John Spencer Leo Thomas McGarry
Janel Moloney Donnatella Moss
Joshua Malina Will Bailey
Crew
Director Jason Ensler
Director Paris Barclay
Director Nelson McCormick
Writer Aaron Sorkin
Writer John Sacret Young
Producer Thomas Schlamme
Producer Aaron Sorkin
Plot
Conventional wisdom prior to season one of The West Wing was that the only successful television shows were half hour sitcoms and hour long police, legal, or medical dramas. Building on surplus ideas from his film The American President and the walk-and-talk style of comedy and drama from his critically acclaimed television show Sports Night, Aaron Sorkin bucked the trend and created his masterpiece, one of the most memorable American political depictions to reach the big or small screen. Season one introduces viewers to a Nobel Prize-winning economist and unabashed intellectual president Jed Bartlet (Martin Sheen) and his key staff members, a newly elected Democratic administration trying to find its footing amidst the corridors of the White House's west wing. To the credit of its cast and their brilliant ensemble acting, The West Wing manages to immediately conjure nearly a dozen distinct and memorable characters. Perhaps the greatest star of all is Sorkin's rapid-fire dialogue, especially as delivered by Press Secretary C.J. Craig (Alison Janney), Deputy Chief of Staff Josh Lyman (Bradley Whitford), Deputy Communications Director Sam Seaborn (Rob Lowe), and Chief of Staff Leo McGarry (John Spencer). They carry on conversations while stalking purposefully and unhaltingly down corridors, around corners, and through doorways, and all of it unfurls with the choreographic precision of a classical ballet and the pace of an Olympic ping-pong rally.

What emerges is more than a collective liberal dream of an impassioned administration battling back ultra-conservative bogeymen ranging from the religious right to bigots to gun-toting militants. Wonderful episodes like "The Pilot" and "In Excelsis Deo" portray a government led by heroic, intelligent, and decent men and women. Whether or not one regards that as a political fantasy, it's a remarkably refreshing and appealing vision of politics and its practitioners, one that the public embraced with consistently strong television ratings. In a country whose citizens are used to viewing their elected leaders with mistrust and cynicism, that might be The West Wing's greatest accomplishment. --Eugene Wei

Episodes
1 Pilot
2 Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc
3 A Proportional Response
4 Five Votes Down
5 The Crackpots and These Women
6 Mr. Willis of Ohio
7 The State Dinner
8 Enemies
9 The Short List
10 In Excelsis Deo
11 Lord John Marbury
12 He Shall, from Time to Time
13 Take Out the Trash Day
14 Take This Sabbath Day
15 Celestial Navigation
16 20 Hours in L.A.
17 The White House Pro-Am
18 Six Meetings Before Lunch
19 Let Bartlet Be Bartlet
20 Mandatory Minimums
21 Lies, Damn Lies and Statistics
22 What Kind of Day Has It Been?
Features
Disc 1: Color Closed-captioned
Personal Details
My Rating 0
Seen It Yes
Index 289
Collection Status In Collection
Purchase Price $59.98
Location Shelf 2
Links Amazon US
Amazon UK
Amazon US
Amazon.co.uk
Amazon.de
Amazon.fr
Amazon.ca
Movie Collector Connect
IMDB
Edition Details
Distributor Warner Home Video
Edition Special Edition
Barcode 085392425921
Region Region 1
Release Date 11/18/2003
Packaging Custom Case
Screen Ratio 1.33:1
Subtitles English; French; Spanish
Audio Tracks English Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround
Layers Single Side, Single Layer
No. of Disks/Tapes 4