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  • This wonderful new series, takes what I felt was a dubious premise, and instantly turns it into entertainment gold.

    I'd never liked "ER", though Margulies has formidable talent. Given the right character, script & director, I felt certain she could deliver. In The Good Wife she does. Her distinctive ability lies in nuance, & here she is finally given the perfect vehicle.

    The scripts as well as the entire cast, take directions you'd never expect. That's is the real appeal of the show. Archie Panjabi is a spiffy surprise as the "investigative assistant", if you will. She approaches her character as if she's the entire supporting cast of "Shark", (James Woods 2-season crime drama) rolled into one easy-on-the-eyes, package. She's tough, loyal, funny, & adds to the show's depth.

    Kudo's also, to veteran Christine Baranski for playing her "been-everywhere...done everything" role in a fresh way she seldom has in recent years.

    I watched the first episode with my wife.. (ok, FOR my wife) not expecting much at all. Boy, was I surprised. Subsequent episodes have been exponentially better, richer, & have demonstrated that THIS show simply refuses to go down already beaten paths. I really love that! I have yet to be able to predict anything at the beginning of an episode, as I can with just about any other major network drama. This show is a TV page turner...

    TGW is at once touching, topical, intriguing, even funny. Example: The courtroom judges are not your "standard-TV-crime-show-judges". They always prove to be yet another surprising element this show takes advantage of. In my opinion, this is the show's greatest strength. There ARE obvious choices at every turn in the story lines, the characters, even directorial choices, but NONE are ever followed. Prepare to be entertained and surprised.

    Rare in this era of formulaic crime dramas... formulaic everything on TV, "The Good Wife" deceives slightly, even in it's title, which almost caused me not to watch what I figured was going to be "chick-flick-TV". Males take note. This is simply a great show & will not disappoint.

    Everything in it is fresh, imminently watchable, & the result of great creative effort to not be just another law-oriented drama. IMHO, this really IS "Must See TV".
  • This is the best new show of the season. The "story within a story" method is used to great effect, as we follow Alicia's marital woes, the inter-office politics, the husband's efforts to get out of prison, and the family ups and downs at home. Interwoven with these ongoing plot lines, there's a new legal case to tackle each week. I find this show a rich combination of humour, pathos, romance, mystery...

    Kudos to the young actors who play Alicia's children (Makenzie Vega and Graham Phillips). They are likable teenagers, neither bratty nor too-good-to-be-true. In fact, I think this show is very well cast overall.
  • This is not a family/drama series.

    This is an intelligent and well written series about politics and the law.

    The system, if I may.

    The character developments are great, indeed, but the focus of the series is not on the main character as a wife or parent - but as a lawyer, and the cases her firm handles. Her struggles with her husband becomes another way of portraying examples from politics, rather than being the center of the series. With that being said, the drama scenes here and there are extremely well written.

    This is a show that grows on you, like great series does, building up slowly - Until you find yourself hooked. It gives me the same feeling as another great TV-series, The Wire. It is also visually stunning.

    Take your time with it, watch the whole first season. It won't disappoint you.
  • First post. Thanks to other IMDb reviews, I decided to give The Good Wife a try. And boy I was not disappointed. Julianna Margulies leads a stellar ensemble cast, the acting and script writing is near-flawless, and the weekly stories are believable yet not over-the-top. A nice almost Thriller main storyline flows throughout the episodes, adding a compelling undercurrent to what could have been just another legal drama.

    The Good Wife examines the lives of legal professionals as affected by their cases and work circumstances. It certainly does not mirror the style of any other legal drama in style, timing or episode structure, and I believe it has found a well-deserved niche of it's own on current high-quality television drama.

    I highly recommend you watch this series if you enjoy fine acting and tight, coherent and interesting story lines.

    Greg PS. Thankfully there is no "This is based on a true story" etc. tag-line to distract the viewer from the scriptwriters obvious prodigious talents, and a very enjoyable hour of weekly escapism!

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1st May 2012 Review Update (no spoilers): ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    I have just finished watching Season 3. Literally sitting on the edge of my couch. WOW!. Since my original review this fantastic drama has grown in depth and breadth - I can now place it (almost) with Deadwood, Dexter, The Walking Dead, Battlestar Galactica and Six Feet Under as an all time television great - no exaggeration.

    The interplay between characters (of whom the depth is truly 3 dimensional) is complex, yet does not try to confuse the viewer in an attempt at narcissistic scriptwriting "greatness" (We all know shows that do that). It just flows.

    Amongst the stellar cast, my favorite character would have to be exotic and mysterious Kalinda Sharma, played by the mesmerizing Archie Panjabi (2009 Emmy award winner for best actress, and Chopard Trophy winner for the phenomenal 2007's "A Mighty Heart").

    Subtle humor is so well crafted and acted, you are guaranteed at least one belly laugh per episode; these become almost a small gift from the writers - an (we want these characters to resonate with you) unexpected and welcome tangent from the often serious, sometimes even chilling story lines.

    Truthfully I can't recall one episode where I reflected "gee that was a bit dull, I guess they had to do that to pad out the season". Forget the usual clichéd formula episodes from the Scriptwriting For Dummies handbook - you won't find them here. No lame flashbacks, no "24 hours earlier" and no musical/costume themed episodes here thanks. Just gritty, compelling and eminently enjoyable television.

    The Good Wife is simply superb.
  • For five years, during its original runtime, I avoided watching "The Good Wife." I didn't see the appeal in a show about a corrupt official and his lawyer wife. Even with the constant adverts from More Four, it just never appealed to me.

    Then, in early 2014 I worked abroad and had no access to internet. A friend gave me the first three seasons and, after having given up on "Downton Abbey" during the second season premier, decided to give "The Good Wife" a shot.

    "The Good Wife" is one of those quiet shows. It's rarely melodramatic, despite the potential for melodrama in its storylines. You get a better understanding of how Alicia is doing by how much we see her drink in an episode, than how often she screams at colleagues.

    Alicia Florrick is the wife of disgraced DA, Peter Florrick. Despite the fact he maybe traded the law for sex and drugs, Alicia continues to stick by him. She actually goes further when, due to his assets being frozen, she returns to work after 16 years. How'd she get a job? Well, her ex-flame is now a named partner at a law firm and he hires her on the (secret) condition that his partner also gets to hire a new start, with only one being kept on after a year's probation. While she deals with duking it out with a boy half her age for a job in an office that makes her uncomfortable, she deals with her husband's mess through the tabloids, the blackmailers and, worst of all, his mother. Drama, no?

    "The Good Wife" manages (for its first 6 and a half seasons) to find surprising and satisfying ways to remain exciting. Alicia, played by Julianna Margulies, is just such a power house of emotion and remains magnetic throughout. The creators often stumbled with the periphery characters, but Alicia is so perfectly created, from her dress sense, to her walk, to her little laugh. Even when the show dipped in the final season, Alicia remained worth watching.

    That's not to say the side characters aren't pulling their own weight: Cary Agos (Matt Czuchry), Will Gardiner (Josh Charles), Diane Lockart (Christine Baranski), Peter Florrick (Chris Noth) and Kalinda Sharma (Archie Panjabi) all put in excellent work and each have arcs or moments throughout that often rival Alicia's ongoing story. My favourite story, involving Cary's false imprisonment, is one of the best montages in the show and it doesn't occur until Season 6.

    Throughout the show, guest actors pop up repeatedly as judges, lawyers, family members and I don't think a performance was ever squandered. Alan Cumming, who appeared as Eli Gold, was so damn good he became a regular. Michael J Fox, Stockard Channing and Nathan lane all show up throughout the run, alongside some other surprising special guests.

    My love of the show stems from Alicia's character arc. She's a tragic character who learns, unfortunately, that power comes with a price. Throughout the show, she is named "good" or "saint," but as her confidence and ability grow, and as she steps out of her husband's shadow, she becomes what she hates. Despite never losing the namesake "Saint Alicia," her actions from season 5 onwards see her use her power for selfish and mean reasons. What's interesting is that she never once sees herself as the villain. Not until the very final moment of the show when it comes full circle. She wants to get ahead in the game, who can fault her for that?

    If you're on the fence about The Good Wife, I recommend jumping right on it. It's a sexy, sophisticated procedural with some stellar and exciting character arcs throughout.
  • Why is The Good Wife such an extraordinary show? (I write this while eagerly waiting for the fist episode of Season 7) 1) The character. Alicia is independent, but not a feminist; she sometimes fails, but she never gives up; she is deep, but witty and funny; she has principles, but is sexy; she is true to herself, but dares to experiment and change; she is wise, but you can never take her for granted. In a word, Alicia is brain, morals, fun and passion.

    2) The secondaries. They are all pertinent, unpredictable and greatly acted characters. They give perfect balance without distracting from the main line.

    3) The themes. The show presents very contemporary and controversial legal issues, related to seldom visited subjects such as Bitcoin money, odd consented sexual behaviors, electronic fraud, bots interactions, non-conventional marriage, new intellectual property rights, and the like.

    4) The action. The show is always fast-paced but not frantic; lots of interesting and very gripping things happen across the episodes, which always seem plausible and well-grounded, and are a pleasure to see.

    5) The direction and concept. It is a 23-episode per season show. Now, when many series are restricted to less than 12 episodes per year, The Good Wife keeps the fantastic habit of producing lengthy seasons, with time enough to develop both short-time and long-time parallel stories and create loyalty among fans.

    I really like this show. It never bores me, it always delivers, it keeps surprising me but not to the point of losing the essence. I remember watching the first episode 6 years ago without great expectations, just to give it a try, and I came to love it and wait for each new season with renewed enthusiasm. Kudos for Ms. Margulies who works the magic in such a natural way! And long life to this superb show!
  • I have not been watching any of the law-firm based dramas such as Law & Order. Therefore I decided to give this show a try. I had already seen Julianna Margulies' excellent role in "City Island",which also featured the underrated Andy Garcia.

    I was expected Margulies' portrayal of Alicia Florrick to bear a more victimized expression. What I saw instead was a strong female character - a character not stereotyped as a woman out to give a free vasectomy to every man who comes in her way. She holds her own, and does so without trying to bulldoze anyone who disagrees with her even remotely. Even the minor characters such as her children and mother are developed in satisfying detail.

    I have only watched 9 episodes so far, but I definitely like what I see. Each episode has a definite conclusion, usually a happy one. It is possible to see the episodes out of sequence without feeling like you missed something. I give this show 10/10.
  • I wouldn't say it's a perfect drama but it sure is entertaining and manages to capture my attention from beginning to end in every episode. Margulies is a great actress, no doubt about that, this show gives her the platform to showcase her acting prowess. The writers have done a good job inter-connecting the law and politics elements of the show, plus there's complicated relationships and family issues thrown in. The characters are all equally brilliant and interesting, my favorite is Panjabi's character the cynical private investigator Kalinda for which she deservingly won an emmy for. Do hope the writers keep up the good work would be a shame to see this be a 1 season wonder.
  • Initially before you watch this show you may believe that The Good Wife is just another legal/political drama but it is so much more. It actually is very witty, intelligent and well researched. The subject matter is also very relevant to today's society. You get an insightful view into the corrupted world of politics and the daily moral struggles lawyers must face.

    As the seasons progress and the storyline develops the show is getting stronger. It allows you to be more involved with the characters and share their personal journey. Everybody can relate to the problems and issues they face in one way or another. This is definitely a must watch series.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Well i started watching this show recently.I was intrigued while watching pilot episode-very interesting and somewhat different then most of "lawyer" shows.It's not only about cases it has also back story regarding alicia and her unfaithful husband.Season 1 us full of twists and turns and engaging.we get a very good character development.Characters grow with the time..and by the end of season another love story emerges.It;s between alicia and will,her boss and her friend,who gave her chance to work,after 13 years not working.I think that actor playing will gardner did great job,and chemistry between him and alicia is portrayed very well.Noth did great job as Peter Florrick,and so did Baranski playing Diane Lockhart.All in all acting is pretty well.Season 2 is also great and this one is concentrated on Alicia and Will,their relationship-also very engaging and interesting.However from season 3 i felt something's changed.I felt like they are retelling us the same story again with a minor differences.Now Peter is running for governor.Some of the characters were no more interesting to me,for instance Kalinda-who was such an interesting character in first 2 seasons.Even Alicia,the central character lost something-i felt like the character development stopped here and now we are going back and forth with no particular reason.In my opinion this show could have had 2 or 3 great seasons and then end.All in all it's interesting lawyer show but it starts getting repetitive after a while.But i'd gladly watch again first 2 seasons though.
  • I have to say that I simple love The Good Wife. When I first saw previews of the show when it was starting, I was a little hesitant to watch it. Thank Goodness I watched it! I LOVE it. I am a mother of 3, and (lets say age 40+), but when I get ready to watch this show I feel like a teenager again. I wait until it is on Demand after it air on Tuesday nights, and I watch it all alone the next day. But I have to definitely wait until my husband and children are asleep. I do not want anyone to talk to me, nor answer the phone when I watch The Good Wife. This show is so great! It is not only interesting in sense of court cases of great interest, but also has awesome personal issues & interests. When my oldest daughter sees me watch the upcoming previews on occasion if she is watching TV, and I say that I LOVE this show and cant wait to watch it when everyone is asleep, she laughs and says it sounds like a stupid show or soap opera. She says the title alone. But she has no idea how great this show and writers, actors & actresses are. I love all the cast, each and everyone one of them. My personal feelings towards the relationship side to the show: I wish Alicia works things out with her husband and just moves on from this. She already proved to everyone that she can get herself out there, work on a great professional level, and let nothing interfere with what happen with Peter. She holds her own. I love Alicia. I like Will also, but I rather see them as co-workers and friends only. I think if the writers put them together it will change the show entirely-as referring to its title. I also love Ely Gold! His character is so great. He can do anything he sets his mind to do. I love when he told Zack's friend Becca off and threatened her when she was putting things out there and hurting Zack's family. He set her straight, I laughed at that one. He seems to be everywhere when needed. Please let him be a regular to the show, and please make him remain loyal to Peter. I also love Kalinda. I am not sure why she hated Blake the first time she set eyes on him. Kalinda has a way of getting things done as well-she is great! I love Diane, and was sad when she revealed to Ely that she will be starting her own firm-I would hate to see them all split apart. On another note, I crack up to myself when they have that lady judge who insists that both parties answer their pleas & comments by saying: "In my opinion". I laughed at that one, and enjoy her ruling the courtroom on those days. Well to end this: "In My Opinion" this is one of the BEST shows on television. The Good Wife has GREAT: entertainment, drama, suspense and surprises around each corner and always has awesome endings.You also learn a few things when watching each court case. I am never bored when watching any scene, whether is the courtroom, the law firm, Alicia's home or even when they on occasion go for drinks: This is of course is "IN MY OPINION" LOL. Please writers, if you read this extra long review: Keep up the good work! AAA+ Show - Simply Love It!
  • I keep under-estimating this drama; perhaps because there are no big names associated with the production of it - my mistake! This drama continues to capture me hook, line and sinker every week. I am loving it to the point that it has become one of my 'must see' TV shows.

    The writing is strong, the acting is as good as one finds on any other hit drama show (CSI franchises, Law & Order franchises, Criminal Law, etc.) and the direction is excellent. The budget is clearly huge. Given all that, this show may not win a bountiful of Emmy's although it may win for the lead actress or the support actress.

    However, with all that is on the air these days, this is in the top 10% of all television and the top 2-3% of Drama.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I can only think of worse show ending: Dexter. The Good Wife's would be number #2. And don't get me wrong, I don't always expect happy endings. But I do expect closure, and this show became a mess after a main character left. I think the audience deserved more after so many years...

    So if you haven't seen the last episode, just don't. It will ruin the whole story for you. Just imagine a fair ending in your head and stay with it.

    I loved the show, I really hated the ending. I kept watching the boring last two seasons to get closure, and I didn't get any. I regret having seen it.
  • Across the board every facet of this show is top notch.. writing, casting, acting, directing, production values, etc., etc. It's no fluke it is regarded as one of the best programs on television today… and it can stand on its' own merit as one of the best all-time. It's extremely difficult for any show to maintain high quality on all levels from week to week.. but from season to season, it's darn near impossible. This show has well achieved this impossibility. Does it keep going.. it's hoped so.. but you get the distinct feeling that if and when it starts to slip in any category, it will come to an abrupt end. You do not want to have its' legacy in any way tarnished… it's just been too outstanding to let that happen. It would be easy to single out a couple of the actors for praise, but we all have our choice favorites. It's been said television programming has been slipping over recent years, that shows are nowhere near as good as they once were... The Good Wife shatters that argument completely. So now it has finally come to the end (after seven seasons), and it would be easy to nitpick the final episode (which seriously was pretty darn good)... but we all know we have been most fortunate to have had a front row seat to one of the best programs that TV has ever recently produced.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I just finished binge watching all 7 seasons as I never caught it on the original syndication. After a couple of episodes I was well and truly hooked and it's been a long time since I've been this emotionally invested in TV characters.

    The first 4 seasons of The Good Wife are excellent. They follow a basic but brilliant formula; a legal procedural with quality background content. Each episode revolved around the law firms cases, but also had Alicia's issues with Peter and Will to add layers. Then came seasons 5.

    The show really started to go pear shaped when Josh Charles decided to leave the show, but was made worse by the writers decision to kill off the character of Will, rather than simply have the character leave. Charles was signed on for 15 episodes of season 5, but a greater solution would have been to have him film 10 episodes in season 5, culminating in him leaving Chicago to head up one of Lockhart Gardner's new offices in LA or NY. This could have allowed 5 episodes to bring back Will when the show was wrapping up, to allow for Alicia's 'happily ever after' moment. The whole Will and Alicia story-line was enticing because it gave the viewer hope that Alicia would come through all of her heartache in a better position than she was in before. By killing off that Will, it killed off that hope. Attempts to replicate that chemistry with Finn Polmar and Jason Crouse just weren't the same (although I much preferred the Finn possibility than Jason).

    After Will died the whole direction of the show changed. The legal procedural side of the show took a backseat to Alicia's political campaign, Cary's time in prison and the never ending merry-go-round of law firms and partners. The show lost the focus and stability which had previously been it's strength. There's a reason why some shows last longer than others. Think Law & Order: SVU or NCIS. They've got a winning formula and they don't mess with it. When shows go off track and try to change what they are, it alienates the viewer. Another example of this happening recently was with Criminal Minds; as soon as that show started focusing on one story arc (Mr Scratch and Reid's false imprisonment) it became boring and arduous to watch, resulting in its recent cancellation.

    The series finale of The Good Wife also feels like a rip off. We've spent 7 seasons following Alicia's journey, only to see her right back where she started; standing by her disgraced husband and being alienated by her friends. I think the viewers deserved more than this.

    I felt emotionally invested in Alicia's journey, and the ghostly re-appearance of Will broke me more than it should have. It was a giant reminder of where the show could have and should have ended.

    The first 4 seasons of The Good Wife are a solid 10/10, but the remaining 3 are more like a 6/10.
  • Ex-governor Blago of Illinois, watch this series. You can certainly relate to it. Imagine, it takes place in Illinois. How coincidental.

    A state attorney is busted for corruption. Married with 2 children, he has also tied up with a hooker. Off to prison with him as his embittered wife goes back to work as an attorney.

    She inherits an impossible case as a defense attorney. It appears quite obvious that the defendant is guilty but a mistrial was declared due to an off-the-wall juror who actually thought she was innocent.

    Our girl really shows her meddle in investigating the case. David Paymer appears as the judge ready to dump all over since he hated her husband. Then there is Christine Baranski as a head honcho of the law-firm. From the looks of things, Baranski will be definitely gunning for a best supporting actress Emmy next year.

    Women,whose husbands have disgraced them, have become a major theme today. They're back in the workplace using that higher education they got to good use.
  • Good story(s), well played, great actors and even the end of the show is great storytelling. Will Gardner is one of the coolest characters ever. The sequel, The Good Fight, is amazing too.
  • Pretty obvious that this show had no beginning, or a middle and an end, but a this series full of pace and adrenaline that provides viewers each episode the Wow effect. the "good wife" has an outstanding plot . The global ADHD we all suffer from makes it difficult for people to commit. The ego wants a commitment, the body wants quick fulfillment. "It's not harassment, this inefficiency," says one of the officers to the hapless Carrie Agus in the beginning of sixth season. the series producers are effective in making viewers mouth gape in shock and ensure that they return the next chapter. Highly recommended for anyone who loves a scandal, courts and both of them together.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    First of all, I loved this series and have watched all 156 episodes; completely brilliant, until the end!!!

    Julianna Margulies (Alicia) is magnificent as 'The Good Wife' and holds everything together, simply a stellar performance. There's suspense, intrigue, insights to the darker machinations of American politics and the corruption that emanates from all of this. There are wonderful characters that are woven into the fabric of this drama, Archie Panjabi (Kalinda Sharma) stands out as an example. I came into this epic saga late but was enraptured; there are so many great performances!

    I've read many reviews regarding Alicia's character and most seem to resonate with negativity as the years roll by. WHAT? Yes, she is a privileged person because she is intelligent and articulate, hence her job, BUT she stands by her flawed husband for years and, for the most part, allows her life to be in a state of limbo; other than holding down a difficult job and caring for her teenage children whilst her philandering husband has his nefarious liaisons!

    Finally she has found love, following tragedy when love was almost realised, but still has to 'stand by her man' (really?) because she is 'The Good Wife'. 155 episodes of varying excellence is finished off with the 156th being a total let-down; yup, a bit of a slap in the face!

    Bet the writers thought that Julianna Margulies would be drawn into the spin-off series so it was worth the risk; oh well, they were wrong. Finish a great story properly for goodness sake; it just feels as if the end of this fantastic series was ultimately being used as a vehicle to promote the new spin-off. Very disappointed...but Julianna Margulies was always dazzling.
  • wisewebwoman7 May 2015
    Warning: Spoilers
    I positively loved the first 4 seasons of this series and couldn't wait for the next. However, Season 5 has left me cold. I found it clichéd and bordering on slapstick at times as if the writers had run out of steam. I've got my fingers crossed it doesn't "Jump the Shark".

    The mother-in-laws' "tension" for one is so ridden with clichés I found it a yawn. Please. These are two intelligent women reduced to caricatures.

    And the ongoing tangle with the competing law firms? Desperado gunslingers comes to mind.

    I was enthralled with the intelligence of the first 4 series, but now? Sidetracking (the pregnant ethics consultant?)threads going nowhere are highly irritating. Even Alan Cumming is grossly underused and becoming a cliché himself.

    And Kalinda? More please but not the angsty bed hopping dialogue-less cypher she's become.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I've always loved a good courtroom drama, and for that reason alone this show had me hooked from the start. However, like so many other shows these days, after a few seasons they drifted away from that, spending countless hours devoted to interpersonal relationships and subplots. By season 5 they were hardly spending any time on actual legal cases.

    I understand the need for character development, but it should never come at a cost of the show's main premise. They took an interesting show about the law and spun it off into a never ending soap opera of who's sleeping with who, politics, back-stabbing and melodrama.
  • The name doesn't do the justice for this series. I am glad that without knowing its name I watched one episode on TV while ironing my cloths, and searched to see what it was. IMO the love triangle is a great additive to make viewers follow all the important issues including (but not limited to) politics and the need for new rules about the ever growing technology that is affecting our daily lives and is clearly becoming more and more serious every day.

    In addition to the general topics, this series had a real impact on my life. As an immigrant living alone and dealing with a divorce issue a few years back, finding this movie was a miracle for me as it helped me understand how the judicial system works and adjust the dynamics of my relationship with my lawyer, my ex, and all the legal issues that were so strange and unknown to me back then. I was lucky to find this series exactly when I needed it.
  • This show can certainly be relevant with all of the political sexual affair scandals of recent years. As many high profile politicians have been known in recent years to cheat and have affairs on their wives. To name a few you have John Edwards, Mark Sanford, John Ensign, and most memorable was Eliot Spitzer who cheated and had an affair with a hooker that's the theme that this new drama "The Good Wife" took a page from and started the book. Only later the pages turn over to new chapters of independence in which new answers and the search for justice is sought.

    Anyway it begins set in the windy city of Chicago, Illinois as a state attorney Peter Florrick(played by "Sex and the City" and "Law and Order" star Chris Noth)resigns after it is revealed that he had a sexual affair with a escort an attractive hooker type. This was paid for by state money and bribes so he's even sentenced to prison time and this has destroyed and hurt his loving and faithful wife Alicia(the attractive veteran Julianna Margulies). Talk about a woman scorned and feeling down in the dumps as she has her two children to now raise.

    However if you were expecting a weekly series of scandal, sex, and affairs, and political back stabbing this series branches off to another direction. After this Alicia decides to once again go back to working for a Chicago law firm where she tries cases of people who've been hurt and have suffered wrong doing. It's like she's using her anger and hurt to help others as she fights for truth and justice trying to prove the corrupt and special interests are wrong.

    This so far is one of the better series on TV, even though you don't have to watch it every week still it stands out for the way it branched out from political scandal it proves that from one's hurt that they can become independent and fight back against the corrupt system for others who have been wronged. And it's good to see the veteran Margulies strut her stuff as she's showcasing her independence in a classy way that seeks justice and truth.
  • This series is quite good, yet unfortunately it isn't that awesome like claimed by the most reviews here. The cast is attractive but good acting wasn't the priority in hiring. It is a big plus that there is a background plot. The cases of each episode aren't really good written and they try too hard to be heartwarming, sometimes it is even disgustingly sweet. I rated it with five stars after watching all seasons completely because it is easy going and helps to get the illusion of a better place. But if you are interested in court related series I strongly recommend The Practice and Boston Legal, maybe Ally McBeal, too. All of them are more trustworthy than The Good Wife. Without the name Ridley Scott and lots of popular actors (all of them have seen better days) it would have been less than five stars.
  • This the reference to how good TV can be.

    From the first scene on there is not a wasted moment.

    There are no wasted scenes to fill in time.

    Each episode stands alone as a story that is original, funny, emotional and thought provoking.

    But unlike most other TV there is a proper underlying story carrying you from episode to episode and season to season with the episode stories riding on top. Rather than the other way round, it's mot just a link from episode to episode.

    It is beautifully crafted: scripts, sets, costumes, hairstylist ,sound, editing and cinematography.

    It's the defining role for virtually all the actors involved- I mean when the actors are in something else they never seem as good or as right as they do in this.

    If you like this, and you will know straight away if you do, then TV will be spoiled for you, because why cant all TV be this good.
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