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Name: Bones
Genre: Crime | Drama | Romance | Mystery
No. of Season: Season 1 2 3 4 5
Discs: 32
Created by: Hart Hanson
BONES 1-5
Starring: Emily Deschanel, David Boreanaz, Michaela Conlin,Tamara Taylor T.J. Thyne, Eric Millegan,
Release Date: 13 September 2005
Format: Support both NTSC & PAL
Weight: 1.4 kg
Condition New Bones Box Set
Bones
Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
Subtitles - removable
Based loosely on the Kathy Reich crime novels, Bones introduces Special Agent Seeley Booth (David Boreanaz) partnered with Temperance Brennan, (Emily Deschanel) a forensic anthropologist loaned out to the F.b.i from the Jeffersonian Museum.
Brennan, the only forensic anthropologist in town, is persuaded to help with a case under the condition that she has full involvement with his current case. She's highly devoted to her work which has damaged her personal relationships, and kept her from connecting to those outside of her work. Whilst working with Booth, she's intimately acquainted to the politics of the world outside her lab, the differences between her work with science, and Booth's work with people, and her feelings for her reluctant partner whom she feels so far from but finds startling similarities.
Booth, having played Brennan in a previous case, promises full recognition and involvement in order to get her back on his side. Being the only forensic anthropologist in town, and being of remarkable intellect and skill, Booth sees the importance of having Brennan's help in future investigations. Having previously been a military sniper, Booth feels he must reconcile for all the lives he's taken by putting an equal number of criminals away, and through Brennan and her team, he feels increasingly dismissive of the politics he's lived by in his career, and more certain that the truth is more important than his career.
Though the majority of the cast are highly intelligent, Booth, not having any doctorates of his own, allows for the show to dumb down its terminology without patronising its viewers, keeping true to Reich's novels. If the show's ,stunningly warm and unique, array of characters, adorning the main cast, continue to grow as they have done thus far, I feel that Bones will only get better with time. Each character, though vastly different, (as one expects the writers of any show to manoeuvre) are pieced together in a way that makes their interaction with each other as funny as the likes of Angel, or C.s.i, and looks to make an interesting drama.

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