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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, August 8, 2006

DVD REVIEW
'Prison Break' DVD a great escape

By Ed Bark
McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Dominic Purcell, left, and Wentworth Miller star in Fox TV's "Prison Break."

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'PRISON BREAK,' SEASON 1

Starring: Wentworth Miller and Dominic Purcell; created by Paul Scheuring

List price: $59.98

966 minutes

In stores today

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Escaping into the world of "Prison Break" just got easier.

Today's DVD debut of the show's get-outta-jail first season has become business as usual for Fox, which turned TV's first quick gratification trick in 2002 with "24."

It used to be at least a one-year gap, and often longer, between the end of an ongoing show's most recent season and the release of a companion disc collection. But Fox cannily changed that equation by selling the first coming of "24" as a way to whet appetites for the real-time thriller's second season. The strategy worked spectacularly, so here comes "Prison Break" on DVD, less than three months after its on-the-lam cons left fans hanging in mid-May.

For anyone who somehow hasn't received the memo, "Prison Break" is in the second month of filming its entire sophomore season in North Texas. The show returns Aug. 21, making speed of the essence for those who want a full 22-episode refresher course plus extras.

A six-disc set features full commentaries on six of those episodes, with two different tracks on four of them. By all means catch the freewheeling banter between executive producer Paul Scheuring and co-star Dominic Purcell on "Prison Break's" pilot. OK, they're prone to saying that each and every actor is either "fantastic" or "great." But you also can learn a lot about how the series was constructed.

Or you can just enjoy the banter, as when Scheuring says it was "like manna from heaven" when Purcell auditioned for the role of wrongly imprisoned Lincoln Burrows just four days before filming began.

"C'mon, tell the truth," Purcell rejoins. "The first time you saw me, you thought, 'Who the hell is this cheesy guy with surfer boy hair?' "

Purcell, previously better known as the star of Fox's "John Doe" series, took a shot at "Prison Break" after toiling on the network's short-lived, sub-awful "North Shore," which was filmed on O'ahu. From surfing to a real-life cellblock in the Joliet Correctional Center is a jarring transition, but occasional conjugal visits are worked into the script.

"Add a little sexuality to a prison show and its not man-on-man love, it's kinda neat," Scheuring says of a dressed-down scene in the pilot between jailed Fernando Sucre (Amaury Nolasco) and his strikingly sculpted fiancee.

"Working on 'Prison Break,' you're surrounded by disgustingly ugly men 24 hours a day," Purcell jests. "It's very refreshing when a beautiful young lady ... comes into the show."

Heartthrob Wentworth Miller, who plays Burrows' younger brother, Michael Scofield, surprisingly is not among the 18 actors, producers and directors contributing commentaries.