| Genres: | CrimeDramaMyst |
| Actors: | Daniel Roberts, Paul Tassone, Caroline Craig, Dieter Brummer |
| Director(s): | Caroline Craig, Paul Tassone, Daniel Roberts |
| Year: | 2011 |
| Country: | Australia |
| IMDB Rating: | 7.9 out of 10 (1834 votes) |
| Storyline | nderbelly is a 13-part Australian television mini-series that retells the real events of the 19952004 gangland war in Melbourne, and is first series in the larger Underbelly Franchise. It depicts the key players in Melbournes criminal underworld, including the Carlton Crew and their rival, Carl Williams. The series is based on the book Leadbelly Inside Australias Underworld, by The Age journalists John Silvester and Andrew Rule, and is produced by the Australian Film Finance Corporation, in association with Film Victoria. The executive producers are Des Monaghan and Jo Horsburgh. |
We have taken some photos of "Underbelly - Season Four".
They represent actual movie quality.
Now firstly I can't help but to roll my eyes at reviewers slating theseries having not watched the whole series! I can think of plenty ofseries that didn't grip me with the first episodes but I gave it a go &it was splendid.I moved to Australia 9 months ago so I didn't know any of the historyof the gangland wars beyond seeing on the news here that they wereextraditing Tony Mokbel for murder after his dramatic escape to Greece(series 2 perhaps?).I've watched the whole series & it was bloody excellent. I live inMelbourne & it was interesting to see the locations I recognised. Nowwhat really made this great imo is that I've met people who wereexactly like the characters portrayed, they were believable everydaypeople - therefore it felt realistic.Perhaps it's not as slickly produced as the Sopranos but I'd imaginethe budget is rather different. "Underbelly" - being set in Australiahad an entirely feel - a real Aussie vibe compared to US vibe whichmade it interesting. Both series are excellent in their own differentways.Highly recommended viewing!
I loved watching every episode of the underbelly series. The moment youfinish one episode, you cant help yourself but to start the next one.Amongst all the characters being played my favorite was AlphonseGangitano played by Vince Colismo. He was too good. The series picks upmomentum again with the introduction of Benji. I loved performance ofGyton Grantley throughout the series portraying Carl Williams. Irecommend watching this to all. In all it is a great fun.The series islike a ticking time bomb and gets you involved with every episode.Though a lot of characters were in and out at short intervals, mypersonal opinion is the characters of Alphonse Gangitano, Jason Moran,Carl Williams, Roberta Williams, Benji were portrayed very well.
Just wanted to respond to some people's comments on how bad Underbellyis, well it completely hooked me in! I was quite hesitant at firstbecause I often don't go for Aussie dramas, but saw half of the firstepisode by chance and am officially addicted.Others have been saying it's like watching an episode of Neighbours,well maybe that's because so many of the actors in it had their startsin Neighbours or Home and Away. That's not to say the acting is as badas in these soap operas. I was pleasantly surprised with the actor'sabilities and portrayals of the characters. I was impressed with howmany of the actors looked very similar to the people they wereportraying.
OK, Underbelly is banned in part of Australia(Victoria) and I'm notgoing into any of the details, so just forget the hype surrounding thisshow and look at it for what it is.For starters, it's only the beginning. This is a 13 part epic saga,which so far only 2 of the parts were played, and I'm already hearing alot of complaints about this show that there either wasn't enoughviolence or that it just didn't lived up to the hype. Well I say thosepeople probably don't follow the news, because if you knew anythingabout the past 10 years of crime in the Melbourne Underworld you wouldnot only want to see more after just 1 episode, but you would have alittle more respect and at least let the series play out before youstart firing guns prematurely like a mad Alphonse Gangitano. Speakingof which, actor Vince Colosimo was outstanding in his role of theprince of Lygon street. If anyone says otherwise they should go back towatching "Home and Away", because they obviously cannot appreciate abrilliant Australian actor when they see one. You also have atremendous ensemble of many established Australian actors with a fewfresh faces.With only seeing the pilot and with my knowledge of what is about tohappen, I know this is going to be an epic saga and will be rememberedI hope for being a gem in goldmines of the Australian film industry,and not for its controversy. Of course, so long as the poor Victoriansget to see it. Lastly I won't spoil anything so long as you watch thenews, so we should all know Carl Williams is the last man standing inthe end. But right now he is just the "Underbelly".
As a rule although I love many an Australian actor I usually hate thewriting/production. Underbelly has changed all of that for me and I'llbe revisiting some other Aussie dramas that previously I've writtenoff. The acting is great, the soundtrack is really great, the writingmakes the whole story easy to follow. I'm seriously impressed and can'twait to see the last few episodes. I've got the book and the miniseries is fairly accurate, but it's important to remember that this isa dramatization and not a doco so some differences are to be expected.roberta is a crack up. alex dimitriades as Mr T, hooooooooot. DinoDibra, wasn't until I looked on here and saw he was on h&a that Ifigured out who on H&A and why he was so familiar, very impressive. you*SHOULD* watch it.
IMDb should actually have separate entries for each series, rather thanfiling in it as one show with three seasons. Each "season" is aseparate crime story, set in a different era with different characters.My review of 8/10 is simply for season 1. The first season was afascinating story and the series was fairly well put together, thoughit did become a fraction "soapie" at some points. Nonetheless, the toneset by the acting was well conceived and the accuracy was pretty muchthere, even though a few events and aspects were simplified. Engaging plot, engaging characters, a few well-placed humorous touches,great acting. Enormous success.Following this, we had the second year which was titled Underbelly: Thetale of two cities. This show was set in the 1970s and 1980s and was,in a nutshell, unengaging. The story was a bit thin, it was hard tofind characters to sympathise with and several mid-season episodesseemed to play no role in advancing the stories, while others coveredareas and stories that were covered in previous productions such asBlue Murder. I lost interest and its dwindling ratings throughout theseason were well deserved. The first episodes of the third "season" (The Golden Mile) has justbeen aired (at the time of writing this) and it similarly appears thatthe characters will be largely uninspired and a suspicion that materialwill run thin and ratings with dwindle.Why didn't they just leave it at the first "season" and launch othercrime stories under a separate title? Answer: unoriginal channel 9executives in Sydney!
Solid Aussie drama. All actors in good form, but top marks go to toKat, who plays Roberta - hilarious. Vince Colosimo as the Black Princewas also a standout.The direction and editing may upset the purists, I reckon its edgy andappropriate.There are some cheesy moments, like at the end when the Purana mob areall walking over the hill in slow mo to arrest Carl (scene savedhowever by an angry Roberta mouthing a slow mo "f*** off"!). Much has be written about the "reality" of the show and the gratuitoussex scenes - but all in all its crackin' good tele!Comparisons to Blue Murder and the Sopranos (and Scorsese?) are agiven, but Underbelly stands up fine on its own.PS - Loved the soundtrack.
What makes this watching (and I have a few episodes to go) is the realstory behind it, not so much the acting and production values (thoughthey vary in their quality).In terms of writing and complexity of character, or the intensity ofthe acting, this is no Sopranos, nor even the earlier brilliantAustralian crime series (also based on reality), Janus and Phoenix.Unfortunately, most of the actors playing the crims, especially VinceColossimo playing Alphonse Gangitano, draw from standard "bad guy"characterization, and as a result come across as two dimensional andcartoony. In many ways, this could be an extended episode of "BlueHeelers". It's very old school - don't give criminals any redeeminghuman values, just make them look like pantomime villains. OK, maybethat's harsh, but this is not a series which is breaking any newground.Putting those gripes aside, I'll certainly watch this through to theend - it is very watchable, and the fact that it is reality, not just"based on a true story" more than makes up for any weaknesses.
Plenty has been written elsewhere on this site about "Underbelly" sothere is no need for me to detail the plot or the relationship to realevents. My purpose is to comment on the other commentaries. A few yearsago, Screen time produced a mini-series based on the Bryce Courtenaynovel "Jessica". It was aired on the 10 Network in Australia,presumably to boost their Australian drama quota. It bombed despitebeing of excellent quality. The reason was that the Ten Networkaudience has different expectations from the ABC audience. The sameapplies to "Underbelly". Though it has certainly rated well and is thetalk of the office every Thursday morning, I can't help feeling that itwould have been even more appreciated by those whose dials are rustedon to the ABC. Those who have commented here about low productionvalues and those who have compared the show to "The Sopranos" give awaytheir expectations as typical Nine Network viewers. They like slick,tightly scripted programs, typically produced by American networks.Thank heavens "Underbelly" didn't get the "Days of Our Lives"treatment. I feel that I know the characters in "Underbelly". Theincidents and the people are straight out of the national newsbulletins. This is a dramatised documentary in many ways. "TheSopranos", popular though it may be, is candy-coated fiction incomparison. Give me reality, rough with warts, any day.
Only mild spoilers ---- I was looking forward to Underbelly for many weeks. The advertisingcampaign was fantastic and the banning in Victoria definitely helpedthis. With all respect to the parties involved in the currentlitigation, I am only commenting on the artistry of this project morethan anything related to the events it represents.Underbelly is correctly based on a true story about the ganglandbattlegrounds of Melbourne Victoria. This is quite a powerful story andquite possibly something that will be marked for the crime library ofAustralian history.This is only a comment on the pilot episode, so I'm unsure of how therest of the series is going to be. I understand that it is wrong insome cases to even begin to comment on an entire series just on thestrength of a pilot so I will only comment for the pilot.The opening of this series felt weak. So weak that it was almostembarrassing. It was only thanks to Vince Collosimo's performance, thatit held together. Even so, with dialog that was undoubtedly written bya soap opera professional, it was amazing to see that all of thisalmost worked. The violence was not that violent considering the camp"Terminator SCC" was on immediately afterwords and left it for dead.The sexual content is about as sexy as a bad hand-job. I don't knowwhat the tabloids are trying to enforce because the Direction on theseareas were mild. Doesn't matter much on this point though, we know thatthis kind of thing doesn't make up for a good story. Now, a lot of theintroductions to these characters were almost comical, like a lockstock and 2 smoking barrels kind of slating for gang members. This feltcheap, it looked cheap and it was unintimidating in any way. If thiswas an attempt to make us aware of a possible "coolness" to come fromthese characters, then it just wasn't right.One begs to wonder whether this series needs or now needed a betterDirector and a better cinematographer or should I say a videographer.(Well, it felt like that anyway) Maybe even a better writer, because alot of our actors here deserve way better than this. I think some ofthe most unfortunate and lifeless work was lingering around the gangmeeting scenes at the sports arena (or was it a racecourse?) But apartfrom this, there are definite believable and smooth moments. I hopemore of these moments occur and I must say I am somewhat interested inseeing more of Gyton Grantley who looks exactly like Carl Williams inreal life. There are more episodes to come and I look forward to eating my ownwords. For a TV mini series, it's not over till the fat lady sings -but so far, I'm hearing a scratchy record loop.
On one level, this second UNDERBELLY series is a promising characterstudy of Terry Clark (Newton), who is portrayed as ruthless andunrepentant. Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the narrative ishis relationship with Alison Dyne (Hutchinson), a kindergarten teacherhe seduces and who becomes, in effect, Clark's right-hand figure in themanagement of his importation and distribution activities. A notoriouswomaniser, Clark's gift for manipulation seems to have enabled him tosuspend what some Freudian psychoanalysts call the "third object" Âhumans' inner awareness that a relationship between two people existsalso in relation to external realities. This type of analysis of A TALEOF TWO CITIES is, at least on its own, far too generous. Mostly, theseries relies  unnecessarily  on the populism of pornographicvoyeurism. In what can only be a kind of slant-eyed nod to the screenculture of the 1970s, most of the young female characters appeartopless and in prolonged sex scenes, and sections of dialogue-drivenplot detail take place in strip clubs so that viewers with lessinterested in the finer details of the storyline  what little there is can admire the 'scenery'. 23-year-old former Power Ranger Hutchinsonmanages to appear nude or semi-nude in most of her scenes in theseries' first half. Far more disturbing than the soft-core stuff is thefrequent intersplicing of sex, nudity and extreme violence: more thanonce we are treated to scenes of graphic murder cut with bedroomscenes, presumably to hammer home a point about Clark's seemingly splitpersonality, or the fact that his use of women  for pleasure andbusiness  is driven by the same sadism as his propensity forretributive homicide and mutilation. There is often a fine line betweendramatisation and glorification, but with its consistent and deliberateuse of televisual devices which are aimed at the carnal elements inhuman nature it is fairly clear this series tends strongly to thelatter. New Zealand journalist Pat Booth, whose investigative workhelped crack the heroin ring featured in the series, was reportedly"sickened" by its glamorisation of criminals and confirmed that it is"riddled with fiction and omissions". It is a shame that Screen timeand other creators went for cheap thrills over substance (though thenotoriously low-brow Australian commercial TV industry would hardlyhave had it otherwise). Billing's own motivation for taking the role ofAussie Bob was the 1995 death of his 20-year-old son Simon who,suffering symptoms of schizophrenia Billing believes was triggered byhis use of marijuana and other "recreational" drugs, suicided bystepping off a building roof in Auckland. Some fans have laudedUnderbelly as an Australian version of The SOPRANOS  the US serialwhich kicked off the recent wave of long-run cinematic televisioncrime-drama which includes THE WIRE - but A TALE OF TWO CITIES lookscheap and nasty by comparison. Viewers would be better advised to turnto much earlier, local experiments in long-run TV crime such as thebrilliant PHOENIX.
It is called the Australian Sopranos. There are two problems with thistag: Underbelly is not as good as Sopranos and, unlike Sopranos, it isall too real.I am a Melburnian. I have worked in Carlton for seven years. Most ofthe members of the Carlton Crew were familiar to me, although I havenever met any of them. Alphonse Gangitano was often referred to as theRobert de Niro of the Lygon Street  not after the actor, whatever hisreal personality is, but after the characters he played in films likeGoodfellas and Godfather Part 2. It was obvious to all that have knownhim that Gangitano was imitating art and this was true for the rest ofthe so called "crew". On the other side of the non-existent proverbialfence were the suburban kids that had not known a life without violence Dino, Benji, Carl Melbourne has been mentioned more than once in thepast decade as the 'most livable city in the world. It cannot be toofar from the truth. It has the most of the charms of the best cities ofthe globe  from New York to Paris to Barcelona  without theiraccompanying woes. It also has a dark side, as dark as anything thatyou would find in Detroit, Marseilles, or Bangkok. Between 1994 and2005, this alter ego of the city crept into surface of the cultured,intellectual and tolerant Melbourne. True to the title of BugsySiegel's biography 'they only killed their own' (mostly) but they didin broad daylight, in front of children, suburban mothers and 'morethan innocent'bystanders. One of the safest cities in the world wassuddenly in the spotlight as one of the most violent until the forcesof the light (played by the detectives of Purana task force) put a stopto it.What we know is that most of these hard men who lived as if there wasno law, no rules, no morals and no tomorrow, also lived life as if theywere actors in a movie. The news footage of the funerals (and therewere more than two dozen of them) could as well have been taken fromthe episodes of Sopranos. They idolized the likes of the fictionalcharacters in films such as Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, Goodfellas,Godfather trilogy, and Sopranos, because this is what drug dealers,bank robbers and career killers do between 'jobs', workouts andfornication: They watch films. It was life imitating art imitatinglife. Those, like me, who watched the whole scene unfolding in front ofthem (I used to live in the apartment building that was 200 metres fromthe club where Lewis Moran met his end) with a fascination bordering onthe perverse, wondered about the price of real freedom. Were these menreally evil or were they simply more courageous than the rest of us?Perhaps, they were both My middle-class friends looked at me withexpressions ranging from surprise to disgust when I posed the questionto them, only half joking.Underbelly is a flawed series in a number of ways. Producers'insistence on choosing actors both with local popularity and a strikingresemblance to their real-life counterparts takes its toll on thequality of the acting. It is, to say the least, uneven. So are thescripts Way too much emphasis on fornication, after the point is wellmade, and too much pondering on the popular taste formed by our, nowworld-famous, serials: Neighbours and Home and Away.Let me assure the viewers foreign to the current affairs of fairMelbourne: All the public incidents in these series have reallyhappened and their recreation is eerily similar to reality.
What can I say about 9's Underbelly? Best Australian TV show of thedecade, so far, for a start. Unlikely to be out done. Channel 9'sUnderbelly is the most significant piece of Televisual cinematic art tograce our tube's since Blue Murder. Comparable to a hyper active seasonof The Soprano's, it is a major classic series that depicts the 25 orso murders of the Melbourne gangland wars.At the center of the series is Carl Williams character/ real life OG,played portly and excellently by Gyton Grantley. William's is given aninteresting character arc, starting as a lowly Moran driver and slowlymoving into producing his own Ecstasy tablets and cornering the marketby under selling the competition. Into Williams life comes Roberta,played with a bravora performance by Kat Stewart. She is a gutter mouthshrew who eggs Williams on to bigger crimes and higher times. Togetherthey are the crazed heart of the show. A suburban Bonnie and Clyde.They are completely mythologized in the show. The real Carl and RobertaWilliams say they were nothing like the pair, but it doesn't matter toomuch. The on screen pair are classic gangster characters, reborn,Melbourne style late 90's... in tracky daks and pushing prams, whileplanning hits.I should say apart from a few small minor bad apples, the show isexceptionally well cast. Vince Colosimo was born to play AlphonseGangitano and gives a great opening to the show. If only we could haveseen more Vince, but as we all know the Gangitano murder sparked offthe war, so he bows out early in his designer suits and tassledloafers. Les Hill and Callam Mulvey nail the Moran brothers... all oldschool gangster machismo and violence. They are the old power inMelbourne that Williams is out to overcome and then silence after theyshoot him in the gut fatefully one afternoon. Kevin Harrington is trulysuperb as Lewis Moran, he looks and acts just like the real deal fromnews footage. As an aging gangster in over his head and torn apart byfamily tragedy, Harrington is excellent. Damian Walshe Howling iscentral also as Benji Veniaman, a hit-man with divided loyalties. Kindof like a better looking Scott Ryan from The Magician, Benji is a majorcatalyst in the war with the Carlton crew. The Carlton crew are led (inthe show!!) by what appears to be its Godfather Mick Gatto (anothergreat thesp turn by Simon Westaway, capturing the Gatto mannerisms andfront). Gatto is the mysterious man at the top of the Carlton tree. Anold school gangster, with style and a peace maker, essentially. Theviolent war shocks him and he does his best to cool the heads of theyounger hooligans. Westaway's Gatto is a man of cool respect and one onone Violence only... in the Benji confrontation scene. He is the foilto Williams wild colonial E dealer. Side kick to Gatto is MarioCondello, spot on portrayed by Martin Sacks in probably his best roleyet. Condello is a loan shark and money man forced into the big chairof the Carlton crew when Gatto is arrested for Benji's shooting and onthe run from William's endless supply of hit men. Throw in an amazingensemble, see cast list and you have gangster gold.Add to all this mayhem from the characters above the Keystone cops ofThe Purana task force. The best character is Steve Owen, who wants tobend the rules to catch these guys and stop the war and murders. RodgerCorser plays Owen as an edgy cop ready to go toe to toe (if anybodywould let him) with William's and crew. You wonder why he wasn'tallowed to? Indeed, the accusation of the Police sitting around andletting these crims bump themselves off seems somewhat validated in theshow. Many scenes where the Police know a hit is happening but fail toswoop on suspects until after the alleged murder (due to someunbelievable technical difficulty) are shown here. Sort of making themaccessories of sorts (by incompetence, generally) in the crimes theyare trying to stop. Frankie Holden's Detective Butterworth is a shortbreed eating 'by the book', discombobulated by events head of Puranaand Caroline Craig's Jacquie James, is the perfunctory female cop, alaBlue Heelers, narrator and moral compass.Its a damn shame it can't be aired on 9 locally.The shows direction has been criticised by friends and while I agree itcould have been more cutting edge... that could have made itInternationally brilliant, as good as The Soprano's. The direction iscompetent and pretty good Oz TV work, moving the story ahead, superbcasting as mentioned and lively use of cool Aussie music, etc.I must say the show is actually meaningful. Has real content. It isprofound in its portrayal of Williams as a young upstart good guy, whois slowly corrupted by ambition, his wife, drugs, legitimate threats onhis own life and other issues. Even when he becomes a killer he stillis a nice guy to friends and family, generous and caring with money,etc., this all makes the Williams character sympathetic. After he isshot in the park by Jason Moran, Williams appears to go a bit 'postal'.He soon escalates the cycle of violence for which the real Williams isnow serving his 35 years. But you can't help feel bad for theUnderbelly Williams. If he wanted to succeed and stay alive in hischosen profession, could he have acted otherwise? The journey ofWilliams in Underbelly is one of the more profound Australian tales inmany a moon. It resonates, it mostly true from the base facts of thecase. Highly recommended Oz TV. Hunt it down overseas readers.Review by MUFF director Richard Wolstencroft
i thought this might be quite rushed. However I disagree with othercomments here..Each episode drags you into the underworld of the famous ganglandkillings in Melbourne.I really like that Caroline Craig narrates. At points in this drama itdoes make you feel quite upset and also sad.There are a lot of familiar faces if you have watched AustralianTV/movies before.I am currently up to episodes 8 and it's getting better with everyepisode.I think it takes a few episodes to get into it.
The acting is pathetic and the series purports to be factual and it isfar from the truth. Also not only do Australians not converse asdepicted in this film nor did any of the characters in real life norwould they have.The film is full of gratuitous soft and dumb sex scenes. In additionand wealthy drug indulgence scenes of wimpy looking so calledAustralian "underworld" figures acting like absolute ponces with aarrogant conceited tones to their line delivery.The film demonstrates nothing about the human condition and thedisjointed editing and meaningless "story line" requires continualnarrative voice over to explain who is who and what is going on.The whole thing is absolute crap.
This is apparently based on true life and if it is...I find it veryhard to believe that these gangsters had any kind of hold over anyone.I am reviewing this on the performance of the pilot, which in myopinion is terrible.Gangsters engage in random violence, try to extort money, and againengage in violence....As well as have sex with women, which doesn'teven try to fit into the story.The actor who plays Alphone Gangitano is ridiculously over-hyped, andso are all the other actors. The storyline does not seem to exist, thedialog is awful, and more importantly it's very sad watching these'Gangsters' try to act like the 'Sopranos' by having random meetings inrandom places.
The connection between Sopranos and this series is not far-fetched.Like that show it shows a life of crime and how these gangsters dealwith their family. After having seen five episodes more depth is shownand it gets real clear that things will get very nasty indeed. Theacting by the cast is superb. And it was good to see Calvan Mulvey(Heartbreak High) return in a much more mature role. What I likedespecially in this show that it doesn't exactly choose sides. It is notjust about the police getting the bad guys. They also show that eventhe gangsters have their morals and aren't entirely evil as most peoplewould have us believe. But it doesn't glamorize the life of crimeeither. When necessary it does show the impact of the crimes committed.Excellent show!
This is no easy subject to film and is still restricted in itsdistribution in Australia due to possible legal issues. I found itexcellent. The cast is necessarily large and the acting exceptional.The gangsters really look evil and the blend of drugs, excessive sexand violence gives a chilling insight into this nether world ofgangland culture. It is shot on location in Melbourne. The case is wellknown locally and despite it being a dramatization it runs more like areal life fly-on-the-wall documentary. For me it out Sopranoed theSopranos and is one of the best gangster films Australia has everproduced. See it if you can. I watched all 13 episodes straightthrough!!
I'm not as far as season three of Underbelly, however i've watchedseason one and two fully and can give it a high vote due to its storylines and of course well driven action. Yes the acting is questionablebut what do you expect, the cast have mainly come from soaps over in OZand many haven't had the success most of us are used to in our TVshows. Firstly season one, which was centered around the gang war inMelbourne from 1994 to 2004 and although not fully realistic to thetrue events it did a good job in my view.Season two dealt with the past of the criminal underworld, prior toseason one. So you have quite a mix of action, from modern to past andwith some if not great but good enough acting the characters areportrayed well. I say as alike to The Sopranos, but only because of thesetting and environment. The action is hectic and violent, Underbellydoes not mince around when showing us the grim picture of the events ofthe show.For Australians, yes Underbelly is their answer to The Sopranos just asAmerica has it. For Australians this is a good show, and I never gotbored of it as I watched episode after episode. I would recommend it tofans of The Sopranos who have an open mind, and want to see organisedcrime from another country's view. This is nowhere near to the qualityof The Sopranos, The Shield or even The Wire which we all know of butits good enough television to keep us entertained and interested.
This show is incredible! It is amazingly entertaining.. The best moderncrime show ever. Its all true. compare Underbelly to Sopranos? lol comeon. Underbelly makes the Sopranos look like p*ssy non-amusing bs. Oneof my favorite shows because its just flat out entertaining. DirectTVhas a little hidden gem. Wonderful writing, crazy characters and wildTrue stories. It is not for everyone. It's the most gritty show I'veever seen. Where did this show come from? I need it on DVD. It's aswell made as an HBO or Showtime show. Mark "Chopper" Read makes anappearance. The Kane brothers are deep in the plot. Australia has somegreat crime stories. This show is far better than The Sopranos. I onlycompare the two because someone else did. The acting is swell, thedirecting is fine, the art direction and cinematography areexceptional. If one has the chance to watch this show. Give it a whirlif your not faint hearted. Wildly entertaining. I really can't sayenough or too much about Underbelly, you got to check it out. If youlike crime shows, this is for you.
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