Sleeper Cell



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Sleeper Cell

 Sleeper Cell

List Price: $29.98
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Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
Brand: PARAMOUNT PICTURES
EAN: 0758445210927
Format: Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC
Label: Showtime Ent.
Manufacturer: Showtime Ent.
Number Of Items: 3
Publisher: Showtime Ent.
Region Code: 1
Release Date: March 14, 2006
Running Time: 659 minutes
Sales Rank: 12932
Studio: Showtime Ent.
Theatrical Release Date: 2005-10




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Editorial Review:

Product Description:
Sleeper Cell takes viewers behind the veil of an U.S. home-grown terrorist group tracking the harrowing challenges faced by a FBI agent determined to learn its secrets. Having posed as a prisoner inside a federal penitentiary a young agent (Michael Ealy) develops contacts that enable him to infiltrate an Islamic terrorist cell in Los Angeles. The cell is led by an intimidating charismatic extremist (Oded Fehr) who considers all acts of violence moral when serving the greater good of his cause. But early in the investigation something goes wrong placing lives and the integrity of a three-year mission in serious jeopardy.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: ACTION/ADVENTURE/THRILLERS UPC: 758445210927 Manufacturer No: SHO21092D

Amazon.com:
As a praiseworthy effort to enlighten viewers about peaceful practice of the Muslim faith and lesser-known aspects of domestic terrorism, Sleeper Cell succeeds as a conventional thriller with its heart in the right place. Originally broadcast in late 2005, Showtimes's 10-hour limited series owes more to familiar Hollywood plotlines than to the precise realities of radical extremism, and authenticity frequently takes a backseat to well-crafted suspense. So, while it may not earn a high score in terms of absolute realism, the series works far better on an emotional level, beginning with the revelation that newly released prisoner Darwyn Al-Sayeed (Michael Ealy, from Barbershop and Their Eyes Were Watching God) is actually an undercover FBI agent and practicing Muslim, recruited to infiltrate a sleeper cell of Islamic radical extremists led by Farik (played by Israeli-born actor Oded Fehr, from The Mummy and The Mummy Returns), the mastermind of a Jihadist plot to detonate a chemical bomb in a crowded Los Angeles sports arena. Representing a broad spectrum of anti-American sentiments, Farik's band of holy warriors includes a hot-tempered Frenchman (Alex Nesic), a Bosnian chemist (Henri Lubatti), and a young, Berkeley-born American (Blake Shields) with a post-military beef against the U.S. government. While clandestinely reporting to his FBI handler (James LeGros), Darwyn is forced into deadly circumstances that continuously threaten to blow his cover and get him killed. His ill-advised romance with a single mother (Melissa Sagemiller) poses further threat to the integrity of his investigation, which ultimately involves everyone from local LAPD detectives to the senior staff of the White House.

As the terrorist plot unfolds, Sleeper Cell is by turns intense, dramatically involving, and philosophically illuminating as Darwyn struggles to reconcile his undercover activities (which connect him to murder, obstruction of justice, conspiracy, etc.) and his passionate devotion to Islam as a peaceful religion. With a number of Islamic consultants, writers, and directors, series creators Ethan Reiff and Cyrus Voris (the team responsible for Bulletproof Monk) have admirably attempted to balance national fear of terrorism with a very sympathetic and positive depiction of the law-abiding Muslim majority. In a subtle but somewhat one-dimensional performance, Ealy conveys the spiritual anguish of Darwyn's stressful situation, while Fehr provides stark contrast, portraying Farik as a smart, charismatic source of constant threat, ruling over his fellow terrorists with passionate conviction. As the series nears its powerful two-hour finale, their clash of ideologies plays out like an above-average episode of 24, sharing elements of Reservoir Dogs as each isolated member of the sleeper cell nears his individual fate. With plenty of surprises along the way, Sleeper Cell grabs your attention and never lets go, even when you're aware that a real-life scenario would play by a different set of rules. --Jeff Shannon



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Well Assembled Piece With a Few Flaws
This show was in many ways a breath of fresh air. It attempted to portray Islamic terrorism within an actual, well-researched Islamic socio-political framework. The terrorists were not homogeneous, and in fact were shown to have motives and characteristics that often put them in serious contrast to one another. The show didn't take the easy out of making the them senseless caricatures, but also did not attempt to excuse their actions or claim that they were "driven" to what they did by external forces. I knew people on the right and left who disliked this show, I'm sure because it did not cater to their black and white sensibilities. The show did not strike me as having an ideological axe to grind; the Muslim terrorists are the antagonists, but no party comes out looking good. I knew Muslims who had a problem with the show because it was honest; Darwyn, the operative, does several things immoral from an Islamic viewpoint (such as fornication) while undercover. Whether Muslims want to admit it or not, this does happen, even in everyday situations.

Several of the characters, especially in supporting roles, were clearly based on real people, helping show the diverse and sometimes conflicting interests of mainstream Sunni Islam. A character clearly based on Aqil Collins (ex-gang member with a missing leg who converted to Islam and fought in Bosnia) trained mujahidin to fight in Iraq against coalition forces, but remained completely opposed to the cell's plans to kill innocents. A Yemeni ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - PULLS NO PUNCHES
The government inserts an undercover agent in a sleeper cell of Islamic radicals who plan to kill thousands of Americans in Los Angeles. Edgy and controversial, SLEEPER CELL pulls no politically correct punches. Instead, the radicals are shown to be fanatical killers and devoted practicioners of Sharia Law, which all of us they don't kill will be subjected to. The fact that this series itself is a "sleeper" and not getting much notice from the liberal press and media, proves to me that a chord has been struck by SLEEPER CELL.



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - I wish I could review these DVD's!
Haven't received my DVD's yet and the e-mails reporting that fact have not yet been answered.



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Expected better from this show.
It has such a great idea for a story, but, sadly fails on all counts. Read the other truthful reviews to understand why, I won't repeat over what was written before.

If you want a better experience and more action/excitement grab "The Grid" it's more realistic and a lot more entertaining and researched better.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Everything 24 Ever Wanted to be and More
Showtime does an amazing job presenting a sides of the War on Terror that are rarely presented. Not only does this series present realistic and intriguing character arcs that keep you watching from episode to episode, but there is enough action to keep even the shortest attention spans riveted.



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