Tuesday, 21 August 2012

Preview:White Collar Season 4, Episode 6 Identity Crisis Free Online

Mozzie, Neal and Peter hunt for treasure following clues Mozzie believes were left by a spy ring.Free Download Video White Collar Identity Crisis Episode On ABC Family Tv Online Tv Live Streaming Video. Online Watch White Collar Full Episode Watch Stream HD Video on Internet TV.White Collar is about the unlikely partnership of a con artist and an FBI agent who have been playing cat and mouse for years. 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. 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.

 In the TV business, achieving success can bring new challenges for young shows, and that's true for USA's hits "Covert Affairs" and "White Collar," each launching a new season Tuesday night.

How do you keep a hit show evolving without changing it so much that you endanger your fan base? "White Collar" offers one approach in the first three episodes of its new season, as it picks up the story from the cliff-hanger conclusion of the third season.

"Collar" is about a former con artist, thief and forger named Neal Caffrey (Matt Bomer) who has struck a deal with FBI agent Peter Burke (Tim DeKay) to aid the bureau in solving crimes while wearing a tracking anklet. The two men have had their issues over the years, but have not only achieved a certain level of trust but also developed a strong friendship as well.

At the end of last season, Peter was instrumental in helping Neal escape before he was rounded up by Agent Kramer (Beau Bridges) and forced to work with him instead of Peter.

At the start of the new season, Peter has to walk a fine line between protecting Neal and dealing with agent Kyle Collins (Mekhi Phifer), out to track down and capture Caffrey no matter what it takes. This time, the bureau wants to put Caffrey back behind bars.

So where is Neal? Living a life of seeming leisure on a tropical isle beyond the reach of extradition treaties, but not necessarily beyond the reach of Collins.

I disagree with this comments, Im a fan of House, Dexter, CSI Miami, etc. and I believe that White Collar has the same potential to be a TV series than any of my favorites. Today is the first time I watch the show (by the way a USA marathon) and I love it, was looking to by the first season but I see this is the first one, can't wait till comes out in stores to buy it, keep the good work USA, criticism is good, positive or negative, but listen to the people and not to just one critic.

The combination of good guy bad guy has always worked, and with such good actors and actresses White Collar has everything that is needed to become a hit, keep bringing good stories to the series, congratulations to the writer and all the team for bringing me, personally, another good TV series to talk about.

Tuesday's episode is almost a letdown. We pretty much know that Collins is going to find Neal one way or another, but things don't really start heating up until the second and third shows of the new season. It's difficult to imagine where the series can go in the future, though.

It's toyed with letting Caffrey escape and it moves closer and closer toward a complete commutation of his sentence, which would make him just another FBI agent, but, of course, smarter. This season is likely to be crucial in determining the viability of future seasons.

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.