- Think having three wives is a dream come true? Think again. HBO presents the new contemporary drama series that tells the story of Bill Henrickson (Bill Paxton), a practicing polygamist who lives in suburban Salt Lake City with his three wives and seven children. An independent businessman who runs a growing chain of hardware stores, Bill faces a myriad of challenges in meeting the emotional, roma
Think having three wives is a dream come true? Think again. HBO presents the new contemporary drama series that tells the story of Bill Henrickson (Bill Paxton), a practicing polygamist who lives in suburban Salt Lake City with his three wives and seven children. An independent businessman who runs a growing chain of hardware stores, Bill faces a myriad of challenges in meeting the emotional, romantic and financial needs of his wives Barb (Jeanne Tripplehorn), Nicki (Chloe Sevigny) and Margene (Ginnifer Goodwin) while dealing with their kids, three adjoined houses, an ever-mounting avalanche of bills, and the opening of his newest hardware store.
DVD Features:
3D Animated Menus
Audio Commentary
Featurette
Big Love, HBO’s newest buzzworthy series, recalls Groucho Marx’s blithe proposal to two women in Animal Crackers. “Why, that’s bigamy,” one of the women exclaims. Groucho responds, “Yes, and it’s big of me, too.” But Bill Henrickson’s (Bill Paxton) situation is hardly a laughing matter. Bill is a modern-day polygamist who lives in suburban Salt Lake City with his seven children and three “sister-wives”: Barbara (Jeanne Tripplehorn, never better), the more mature anchor of the household; Nicki (Chloe Sevigny), who spitefully refers to her as “Boss Lady”; and recent addition Margene (charming Ginnifer Goodwin), insecure and childlike. A series that puts a human face on polygamy is brimming with prurient possibilities. Big Love‘s first two episodes are veritable commercials for Viagra, as Bill struggles to keep up with the demands of his spouses, with whom the sleeping arrangements are strictly scheduled. But once this more sensational aspect of “plural marriage” is dealt with, Big Love moves on to focus on the emotional, spiritual and financial pressures that beset Bill and his families. As the dreamlike opening credit sequence (scored to the Beach Boys’ ethereal “God Only Knows”) illustrates, Bill is a man on thin ice. He is carrying mortgages on three adjoining homes. A home-improvement store entrepreneur, he has just cut the ribbon on his second store and is planning a third. His wives, not immune to jealousies, vie for dominant position. And then there’s Roman (Harry Dean Stanton; and any series that puts this venerable character actor and hipster saint in our homes on a weekly basis deserves our big love), the sinister leader of an outlaw fundamentalist compound, who has an escalating disagreement with Bill over the repayment of his loan that helped Bill build his fledgling empire (“There’s man’s law,” he states ominously, “and there’s God’s law”).
There are further complications that make Big Love so compelling. Bill suspects that his raw-nerved mother (Grace Zabriskie) may be poisoning his father (Bruce Dern). Nicki is a shopaholic accruing nearly $60,000 in credit-card debt. Overtures by new neighbors threaten to expose Bill’s unorthodox and illicit living arrangements. The polygamy factor puts a subversive spin on traditional matrimonial melodrama. When Nicki plans her son’s disastrous birthday party, her list of “immediate family” tops 150. When Roman, who is Nicki’s father, arrives, Bill proclaims he is not welcome in his “homes.” As with Rome, Big Love may require a little patience. But this fascinating portrayal of a shadowy subculture, the intelligent writing, and the estimable ensemble will soon make you feel like part of the families. –Donald Liebenson


March 18, 2008
#1
I actually live in Salt Lake City, and HBO’s fictionalized version of Salt Lake, is nothing like the actuall city. True the Mormon Church is very dominant in the state of Utah ( but are not all weird freaks like this show wants you to think), however Salt Lake Valley is less than 40% Mormon, that’s right the majority of the valley is not even Mormon, oh and on top of that, I am yet to meet even 1 fundamentalist Moromom ( Or any one who has more than one wife). As far as I know, most of Fundamentalist Mormons do not even live in Utah.
March 18, 2008
#2
I started to watch this series when it started, but it was SO boring that after 4 episodes I didn’t watch it any more and actually would like to retrieve the time I did spend watching it (if that were possible). It could have been SO much better. I didn’t care about any of the characters in the series at all. Personally, I liked Bill Paxton in Twister and a couple of other movies, but not much in this series. As for the actresses who played the wives, I didn’t like any of them. I’d give Big Love 0 stars if that were an option.
March 18, 2008
#3
I would just like to say that my seller handled this problem very poorly and with no consideration about the fact that I didn’t receive what I paid for. Upon opening the DVD set, I found that I was completely missing one of the discs. When I contacted the seller about it, he gave no ideas for a solution – he basically informed me that it wasn’t his problem. TERRIBLE SERVICE. I will never buy from this person again!
March 18, 2008
#4
“Big Snooze” would have been a more appropriate title. I give most HBO “original programming” at least a chance. Fact is, I never would have watched the Soprano’s had I not given it at least a few episodes. This one, I gave even more than that. I kept peaking in during the enitre season’s run hoping my initial reactions were inconclusive. The first couple episodes, though they necessarily laid the groundwork, weren’t very compelling. Even two of my favorite actresses, Jean Tripplehorn and Chloe Sevigny, weren’t enough to maintain my attention through mundane dialogue and, “who the heck cares” plot lines. Bill Paxton proves why he’ll always be on the B list of actors, and perhaps hoped that this show could resuscitate a not too aspring acting career. It doesn’t. I suppose if one likes the “excitement” of something like, say, “Desperate Housewives”, they may find this yawner of a program appealing, perhaps even moreso given cable’s ability to take network ideas to unedited levels. I don’t. This could be one of the most boring, most reaching for originality programs HBO ever produced. And I give HBO lots of latitude. This show had lots of casting imagination, but that’s where the creativity ends. A program has to have some characters you care about. I suppose for the briefest of moments even this show has at least that much. But that’s all I can say about it. Even the occasional romps in the hay, particularly those with Sevigny that cater to some male demographics, are few and far between. In fact, I imagine that was the idea around the table when HBO execs were coming up with the idea for this show- “let’s make use our cable outlets to one-up the networks steamy programming.” Otherwise, I can’t quite nail down what demographic this show is reaching for, those who accept bad television? Those who love day or night time soap operas?
March 18, 2008
#5
I’m very dissappointed, as I didn’t receive the product. Right now, I’m in the process of getting my money back. Hopefully, I will…..