The L Word 2004 123movies

The L Word 2004 123movies

Jan. 18, 2004
Your rating: 0
5 1 vote

Seasons and episodes

1Season 1 Jan. 18, 2004
2Season 2 Feb. 20, 2005
3Season 3 Jan. 08, 2006
4Season 4 Jan. 07, 2007
5Season 5 Jan. 06, 2008
6Season 6 Jan. 18, 2009

Video trailer

Synopsis

Watch The L Word 2004–2009 123movies, Full TV Series Online – ‘The L Word’ follows the lives and loves of a group of lesbian friends living in Los Angeles. The main character, Jenny, is a recent graduate of the University of Chicago, who moves to Los Angeles to live with her boyfriend Tim and begin a professional writing career. Jenny’s life is turned upside down when she attends a party hosted by Tim’s next-door neighbors, Bette and Tina, a lesbian couple who are about to take the step into parenthood after being together for seven years. A brief encounter at the party with Marina, the owner of the local coffeehouse, suddenly has Jenny thrust into a whole new world that makes her question her own sexual orientation. Other friends of Bette and Tina include Dana, a professional tennis player who is shy but eager to meet the right woman; Alice, a magazine writer who has a brief relationship with a self-identified “lesbian” man; and Shane, a hairstylist who can’t stick to just one woman, and Kit, Bette’s half sister who struggles with alcoholism..
Plot: A group of lesbian friends struggle with romance and careers in Los Angeles.
Smart Tags: #lesbian #lesbian_couple #african_american_lesbian #lesbian_mother #black_lesbian #interracial_lesbians #lesbian_relationship #lesbian_culture #lesbian_sex #sexual_awakening #seduction #female_frontal_nudity #2000s #tennis #female_protagonist #closeted_homosexual #love_triangle #cafe #trying_to_get_pregnant #androgyny #lesbians_wanting_child


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Ratings:

IMDB7.7/10 Votes: 26,936 | IMDB
Rotten TomatoesN/A | Rotten Tomatoes
MetacriticN/A | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: N/A Popularity: 37.668 | TMDB

Reviews:

Normal Defined: “L” is a soulful, beautiful pure character drama
Network: Showtime; Genre: Drama; Content Rating: TV-MA (for nudity, simulated sex, graphic sexual dialog and profanity); Available: DVD; Classification: Modern Classic (star range: 1 – 5)

Seasons Reviewed: Complete Series (6 seasons)

Llene Chaiken’s “The L Word” is an ensemble melodrama that plunges us into the world of a tight-nit group of lesbians including Bette (Jennifer Beals) and Tina (Laurel Holloman), a long-time couple trying to start a family, bi-sexual creator of “the chart” Alice (Leisha Hailey , inspired as the comic relief), grating, tortured newcomer Jenny (Mia Kirshner), sex-magnet and hair-stylist to the stars Shane (Katherine Moennig) and celebrity tennis player Dana Fairbanks (Erin Daniels). Once the show starts rolling, the characters sink their teeth into you and don’t let go.

If HBO is the standard setter, Showtime has carved out a niche “answering” HBO. A niche series played so specifically to a sliver demographic it could only work on Showtime, “L” is a strong-fisted answer to “Sex and the City” – though different in every possible way. Stripping away the romanticized fairy tale of the relationship show, “Word” runs on pure, naked authenticity. While it lacks “Sex’s” intellectual pontification, everything – everything – about “Word” feels real. A gay marriage coupled coupled with a gay divorce, the excitement of new love coupled with the misery of a cheating partner, and sex is sometimes a beautiful expression of companionship and sometimes a meaty, awkward, disgusting mess. “L” has a late night Showtime inclination to titillate, but often the sex scenes and plentiful gratuitous nudity are the dullest part. You don’t need a man to ruin your life, these women make each other miserable all on their own. The dramatic outbursts are raw and, at their best, difficult to watch. The performances are precise and jump boldly and with full commitment through each flaming hoop and some sloppy writing.

In these PC times it is hard not to talk about a show like “L” without stepping into the middle of a political firestorm. In some ways the show brings this on, from a hyper-defensive title to some unnecessary posturing in its more manipulative story lines (a to-the-camera speech by Gloria Steinham is a low point). There is no mistaking that, “L” has an out-in-your-face feminist agenda to shake up and reshape the world’s traditional norms with the questions posed by the simple existence of the characters. What defines a marriage? What defines sex? What is art? What defines a parent/grandparent? It is all fascinating stuff. A few years ago this all may have been mind-blowingly iconoclastic material, but now with homosexuality the new media sacred cow, “L” is given a free license to do whatever it wants.

The difference between this show and others is that it takes full advantage in exploring this fertile ground. It doesn’t fall back on its identity, taking for granted an audience that is starved for intelligent entertainment, but explores and expands beyond the one-note characters of “Will & Grace” or simply identifiable caricatures of “Queer Eye”. Instead it is a multi-layered tapestry playing like a little epic, spanning the lesbian experience. I won’t say that “L” is going to “strike a civil rights blow” for “progressives”, but I will say that its sliver demographic has never been so well spoken for and the show never stops going all out to entertain.

First and foremost a relationship series, “L”s characters open the door for some truly unique plot lines – such as Alice’s relationship with a lesbian identified man, Dana’s fiancé planning the first gay celebrity wedding out from under her and, the big season 1 question, Jenny’s moral crisis over cheating on her male fiancé, Tim (Eric Mabius, given dignity few shows would allow), with another women. The weak link in the chain is Pam Grier as Bette’s heterosexual sister Kit. The show about grinds to a halt when she appears to sing or whine about her alcoholism.

The production is beautiful all around. With a little imagination the show-runners have broken the restraints of the genre, as with the surreal sequences that evolve around Jenny’s pretentious novels. The musical choice is always spot-on. The show is bathed in an atmospheric soundtrack (many remixes of the show’s fun and boisterously embarrassing season 2 theme) and, minus that, the ambient noise of passing cars and motorcycles on the LA streets. “L” washes the audience in atmosphere.

The first season climaxes in a knock-down brawl between Bette and Tina the likes of which I’ve never seen. In “Liberally” Bette’s battle with a fanatical Christian group is brought to a stirring climax. “Lonliest Number” takes the show into more surreal territory. The show’s best moments are when it lightens up and just lets the characters have fun together. In “Let’s Do It” the gang set up a sting to see if Dana’s crush is on their team. “Looking Back” finds them on a trip to the Dina Shore Invitational and recounting “coming out stories”. At the end of the day the show is elevated on the backs of the cast, their chemistry, and the honest crafting of these characters.

“L Word” could have coasted by on a lesbian theme, but it doesn’t settle for doing anything easy and becomes so much more. After the 3rd season the quality goes downhill, stories are recycled, ending in a scattershot final season and one of the most ridiculous, mis-calculated messes of a series finale I’ve ever witnessed. Still, I’m the exact opposite of the demographic this narrow-cast series is going for and I can’t get enough. The mark left by a great series is one that creates a world that you would want to live in, and “L” puts you right in its universe. “The L Word” is a soulful, addictive thing of beauty – often surreal, at times maddening – and a remarkable pure character drama.

* * * * / 5

Review By: liquidcelluloid-1

Other Information:

Original Title N/A
Release Date N/A
Release Year 2004–2009

Original Language en
Runtime 50 min
Budget N/A
Revenue N/A
Status N/A
Rated TV-MA
Genre Drama, Romance
Director N/A
Writer Michele Abbott, Ilene Chaiken, Kathy Greenberg
Actors Jennifer Beals, Leisha Hailey, Laurel Holloman
Country United States, Canada
Awards Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy. 5 wins & 24 nominations total
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Stereo
Aspect Ratio 1.78 : 1
Camera Sony HDW-F900
Laboratory Rainmaker Digital Pictures Group Ltd., Vancouver, Canada
Film Length N/A
Negative Format N/A
Cinematographic Process N/A
Printed Film Format N/A

The L Word 2004 123movies
The L Word 2004 123movies
The L Word 2004 123movies
The L Word 2004 123movies
The L Word 2004 123movies
The L Word 2004 123movies
The L Word 2004 123movies
Original title The L Word
First air date Jan. 18, 2004
Last air date Mar. 08, 2009
Seasons 6
Episodes 71
Average Duration a:1:{i:0;i:50;} minutes

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