When Sophie is implicated in the theft of a valuable painting, Nate must use all his skills as an investigator to find the real culprit and clear her name.Download Video Wilfred (US) Resentment Episode On ABC Family Tv Online Tv Live Streaming Video. Online Watch Wilfred (US) Full Episode Watch Stream HD Video on Internet TV.Meet Nathan Ford, a former insurance investigator who spent his professional career dedicated to the company that he recovered millions in stolen goods for. This same insurance company would refuse a medical claim for his son that would take the life of the innocent child. Unemployed and teetering on the edge, Nate is approached about a Robin Hood-like scheme. He enlists the help of the best thieves and grifters in the business, and with their help, he steals from the rich and gives to the poor to help balance the crooks in high power positions. He and his team help provide... leverage.Adam Baldwin, Cary Elwes, Matthew Lillard, and Treat Williams are some of the guest stars on the fifth season of the drama that sees the crew moving their base of operations from Boston to Portland, Oregon (where they actually film the series).
That is to say, it’s business as usual for a cool, fast-paced and thoroughly pleasant hour of summer television.
All you really need to know is that Nate Ford (Timothy Hutton) and his team tackle the case of a high-level corporate cowboy whose weakness is that he will do anything to fly the Spruce Goose.
For those of you born later than 1930, the Spruce Goose is one of the all-time real-life legends of the airplane game.
It was built in the 1930s by Howard Hughes, back when he was a movie mogul and high-profile rich man of the world. Before he became better known as a recluse and nut job.
Hughes was fascinated with planes, so he commissioned a huge wooden plane with a wingspan almost as big as a football field.
There are many stories of what he really intended to do with it, but in the end it was only flown once, by Hughes himself. He set her down and ever since then she’s been on the ground, an object of wonder rather than a working bird.
The premise of “Leverage,” for those who already enjoy its pleasures, is that Hutton’s team works on behalf of people who have been hurt by the rich and the system.
The team includes grifter Sophie (Gina Bellman), tech guy Alec (Aldis Hodge), second-story woman Parker (Beth Riesgraf) and Eliot (Christian Kane), who can find things.
Collectively, they conceive and execute schemes that range from mildly preposterous to the one Sunday, which flies so far off the charts that all the viewer can do is savor the ride.
The path to that admirable goal goes through the Spruce Goose, it turns out. We even get to experience a Spruce Goose flight along the way. Plus all the other stuff that makes “Leverage” fun, like geek banter and the fact the team is now based in Portland, Ore., where it rains a lot.
Gina complains about this, for which she is reminded that it also rains all the time in London.
To that she replies, “No, it’s foggy in London. Fog is mysterious. This rain just ruins my hair.”
It usually takes me about three episodes of a new series to decide if it's worth continuing to watch. With "Leverage" I was hooked after the first 15 minutes. I think it's because it seemed to be an amalgam of some of my favorite TV shows of the past.
This includes "The Equalizer" (righting wrongs using unconventional methods), "Mission Impossible" (the TV series)(putting a great team together to work towards a common goal), and "Banicek" (solving seemingly perfect crimes).
That is to say, it’s business as usual for a cool, fast-paced and thoroughly pleasant hour of summer television.
All you really need to know is that Nate Ford (Timothy Hutton) and his team tackle the case of a high-level corporate cowboy whose weakness is that he will do anything to fly the Spruce Goose.
For those of you born later than 1930, the Spruce Goose is one of the all-time real-life legends of the airplane game.
It was built in the 1930s by Howard Hughes, back when he was a movie mogul and high-profile rich man of the world. Before he became better known as a recluse and nut job.
Hughes was fascinated with planes, so he commissioned a huge wooden plane with a wingspan almost as big as a football field.
There are many stories of what he really intended to do with it, but in the end it was only flown once, by Hughes himself. He set her down and ever since then she’s been on the ground, an object of wonder rather than a working bird.
The premise of “Leverage,” for those who already enjoy its pleasures, is that Hutton’s team works on behalf of people who have been hurt by the rich and the system.
The team includes grifter Sophie (Gina Bellman), tech guy Alec (Aldis Hodge), second-story woman Parker (Beth Riesgraf) and Eliot (Christian Kane), who can find things.
Collectively, they conceive and execute schemes that range from mildly preposterous to the one Sunday, which flies so far off the charts that all the viewer can do is savor the ride.
The path to that admirable goal goes through the Spruce Goose, it turns out. We even get to experience a Spruce Goose flight along the way. Plus all the other stuff that makes “Leverage” fun, like geek banter and the fact the team is now based in Portland, Ore., where it rains a lot.
Gina complains about this, for which she is reminded that it also rains all the time in London.
To that she replies, “No, it’s foggy in London. Fog is mysterious. This rain just ruins my hair.”
It usually takes me about three episodes of a new series to decide if it's worth continuing to watch. With "Leverage" I was hooked after the first 15 minutes. I think it's because it seemed to be an amalgam of some of my favorite TV shows of the past.
This includes "The Equalizer" (righting wrongs using unconventional methods), "Mission Impossible" (the TV series)(putting a great team together to work towards a common goal), and "Banicek" (solving seemingly perfect crimes).