Tuesday, 17 July 2012

Preview:White Collar Season 4, Episode 2 Most Wanted Free Online

White Collar is about the unlikely partnership of a con artist and an FBI agent who have been playing cat and mouse for years.Free Download Video White Collar 17th July 2012 Episode On ABC Family Tv Online Tv Live Streaming Video. Online Watch White Collar Full Episode Watch Stream HD Video on Internet TV.Neal Caffrey (Matt Bomer), a charming criminal mastermind, is finally caught by his nemesis, FBI Agent Peter Burke (Tim DeKay). When Neal escapes from a maximum-security prison to find his long-lost love, Peter nabs him once again. Rather than returning to jail, Neal suggests an alternate plan: He'll provide his criminal expertise to assist the Feds in catching other elusive criminals in exchange for his eventual freedom. Initially wary, Peter quickly finds that Neal provides insight and intuition that can't be found on the right side of the law. Neal, who has been working for the FBI agent who busted him — Tim DeKay’s Peter Burke — cut the anklet that monitored his probation. He and Mozz then sold an expensive piece of recovered stolen Nazi art and boarded a plane to an island that has no extradition treaty with the U.S. This kind of scrambles Neal’s gig, not to mention making it tricky to put the whole premise of the show back together.

So the first thing that happens this season is that things get complicated further. A ruthless FBI agent, played by guest star Mekhi Phifer, decides to score some points by tracking Caffrey down. This threatens to blow the whole “island paradise” plan after only a few weeks.

Peter wants to find Neal, too, for more humane reasons, and Peter’s wife, Elizabeth (Tiffani Thiessen), who also likes Neal, gets to join in the hunt.

We won’t spoil things except to say viewers should not necessarily expect the immediate untangling of a knot this complex.

We can reveal, however, that the hunky Bomer briefly sports a goatee and that while he’s on the island, he buys a new hat.

The questions to where Neal ran to, the repercussions Peter might face, and if Neal can ever return to work with the FBI are answered in the fourth season.

Since the genre itself starts off very close to satire, it's easy for a show to devolve into parody and idiocy - remember when David Addison turned into a freaking frog on Moonlighting? Luckily, White Collar hasn't gone in that direction.

In fact, it is funny, clever, well written, the cast is great, and they have obviously made a clear choice to focus on character relationships and not to obsess over getting all the real-life details exactingly accurate.

If you want heavy, serious drama you should watch The Wire; if you want silly comedy, watch Chuck; but if you want something smart and funny, but light, try White Collar. You can think of it as Burn Notice's older, more mature, brother.

(For the record, I like and enjoy every show mentioned in this review - except for maybe that frog episode.)

All of this is intentionally unsettling, but that only serves to deepen our interest in the characters and their personal as well as professional relationships. One of the many smart things about "Covert Affairs" is that the writers have always dangled Annie and Auggie's romantic possibilities before us, but without detracting from the international intrigue that remains the show's primary focus.

But the smartest thing of all about "Covert Affairs" is the casting. Perabo and Gorham are terrific, and much more than just a couple of pretty faces. They each possess a kind of retro classy-sleek quality, faintly evocative of Grace Kelly and Cary Grant, but convincingly updated to the 21st century.

The rest of the cast is just as good. The relationship between the Campbells is fascinatingly complicated, which suggests there's still a lot more for the writers to mine there.

"Affairs" could and should go on for years, and we'll be happy to go along for the ride.