Judging Amy

Judging Amy

The cast
Format Serial drama
Created by Amy Brenneman
Bill D'Elia
John Tinker
Starring Amy Brenneman
Dan Futterman
Richard T. Jones
Kevin Rahm
Marcus Giamatti
Jessica Tuck
Karle Warren
Jillian Armenante
Timothy Omundson
Tyne Daly
Country of origin United States
Language(s) English
No. of seasons 6
No. of episodes 138
Production
Running time 60 minutes
Production company(s) CBS Productions
20th Television
Broadcast
Original channel CBS
Original run September 19, 1999 (1999-09-19) – May 3, 2005 (2005-05-03)

Judging Amy is an American television drama that was telecast from September 19, 1999, through May 3, 2005, on CBS-TV. This TV series starred Amy Brenneman and Tyne Daly. Its main character (Brenneman) is a judge who serves in a family court, and in addition to the family-related cases that she adjudicates, many episodes of the show focus on her own experiences as a divorced mother, and on the experiences of her mother, a social worker who works in the field of child welfare. This series was based on the life experiences of Brenneman's mother.

After six seasons, Judging Amy was canceled by CBS on May 18, 2005. In the United States, re-runs were telecast on the Turner Network Television cable TV channel for about four years, but this series was replaced by others in the schedule for the fall of 2007. Its final telecast was on August 31, 2007. Starting July 17, 2011 Gospel Music Channel (GMC) began telecasting the show, starting with the pilot episode. GMC aired the show with edits to some of the language, out of order, and some episodes missing.

Contents

Plot

Amy Gray (Brenneman), a young New York attorney, after separating from her husband, returns with her young daughter to her childhood home in Hartford, Connecticut. She becomes a judge on that city's family court at age 34 and eventually gets a divorce. Her mother, Maxine Gray (Daly), with whom Amy lives, is a caseworker for the Department of Children and Families. In the series finale, Amy quits the judiciary to run for the U.S. Senate.

Critical reception

Several reviewers have suggested that the show took inspiration from the formula established by Providence.[1] Reviewers also cite the relationship between Brenneman and Daly's characters as the selling point of the show.[2]

Amy Gray makes reference to "Providence" in episode 3.18, "The Justice League of America." In this episode, Amy is attending her Harvard Law School class' tenth reunion, and her old friends can't seem to remember that Amy has moved to Hartford, Connecticut. They are stuck in the rut of thinking that she still resides in Providence, Rhode Island. Finally, Amy is pushed to state, "It's Hartford, David. Providence is a whole other universe."

However, the series has been largely criticized for "an abundance of clichés in the show's structure", its "shallow examinations of moral issues",[2] and "little substance".[3] Philip Michaels, writing for TeeVee.org, criticized the show's formula: "The emotional tenor of the legal cases that carry most of the narrative load run the gamut from maudlin to preachy, and back to maudlin again, by way of manipulative." However, Michaels acknowledged that, "Judging Amy isn't watershed television, but then, it doesn't purport to be [that]."

The Characters

Main characters

Secondary characters

Amy's love interests

Maxine's love interests

Murdered cast member

On October 21, 2005, 16-year old Tara Correa-McMullen (who played Graciela Reyes in the show) was shot to death outside an apartment complex in Inglewood, California. Suspected gang member Damien Watts, 20, was charged with her murder on March 1, 2006; he was convicted on January 23, 2009.[5] When charged, Watts was already in custody for a separate shooting.[6] Watts was sentenced on February 27, 2009 to life imprisonment, with no chance of parole.[7]

Location

Judging Amy takes place in Hartford, Connecticut. Although the show often shows the Hartford Judicial District Court as having the address of 1265 (street unknown), the actual address of the Hartford Judicial District is 95 Washington Street, family matters are heard on 90 Washington Street and the Superior Court Juvenile Matters of Hartford is in 920 Broad Street, Hartford, CT 06106.[8]

International

Judging Amy is internationally broadcast by the following stations under the following names:

Country Name Translation Station
Australia Judging Amy Judging Amy Seven Network, Network Ten, 111 Hits
Austria Für alle Fälle Amy Amy in any case ATV+
Belgium (Flanders, Dutch) Judging Amy Judging Amy VijfTV, VTM
Brazil A Juíza The Judge Fox
Bulgaria Съдия Ейми Judge Amy Hallmark Channel
Bosnia and Herzegovina Amy u sudnici Amy in the Courthouse FTV
Canada (Québec, French) Amy Amy Séries+
Croatia Sutkinja Amy Judge Amy Hallmark Channel, HRT, RTL
Czech Republic Soudkyně Amy Judge Amy Hallmark Channel, ČT1
Denmark Amys ret Amy's court TV 2
Estonia Kohtunik Amy Judge Amy Kanal 2
Finland Amyn lailla Like Amy or With Amy's law Nelonen, liv
France Amy Amy Téva
Germany Für alle Fälle Amy Amy in any case VOX
Hungary Amy-nek ítélve Judging Amy Hallmark Channel
India Judging Amy Judging Amy Hallmark Channel
Ireland Judging Amy Judging Amy TV3
Israel המשפט של איימי Amy's Trial Channel 2
Italy Giudice Amy Judge Amy Canale 5, Rete 4
Republic of Macedonia Судот на Ејми Judging Amy A1
Malaysia Judging Amy Judging Amy Hallmark Channel
Mexico Judging Amy Judging Amy Fox, American Network
Netherlands Judging Amy Judging Amy Net 5
New Zealand Judging Amy Judging Amy Prime TV
Norway Judging Amy Judging Amy TV2
Panama La Juez Amy Judge Amy FETV Channel 5, Fox
Philippines Judging Amy Judging Amy Hallmark Channel, club tv
Poland Potyczki Amy Amy's Clashes Hallmark Channel
Portugal A Juíza The Judge SIC Mulher
Romania Amy Amy Hallmark Channel
Slovenia Naša sodnica Our Judge POP TV
South Africa Judging Amy Judging Amy SABC 2, Sony Entertainment Television
South Korea Judging Amy Judging Amy Alice TV
Spain (Galicia) A xuíza Amy Judging Amy Televisión de Galicia
Spain (Catalonia) Jutjant l'Amy Judging Amy TV3
Spain La Juez Amy Judge Amy Cosmopolitan
Sweden Vem dömer Amy? Who judges Amy? or Whom does Amy judge? TV4 Plus
Thailand Judging Amy Judging Amy Hallmark Channel
Turkey Judging Amy Yargıç Amy TNT
UK Judging Amy Judging Amy Living TV, Hallmark, Channel 4, CBS Drama

DVD release

Judging Amy has been released on DVD in Scandinavia and Australia. All Season One episodes are available from retailers in these countries. All releases contain subtitling in Danish, Norwegian and Swedish.

Season Region 1 Region 2 (Denmark & Norway) Region 2 (Sweden) Region 4 (Australia)
Season 1, Volume 1 N/A February 25, 2010 May 19, 2010 N/A
Season 1, Volume 2 N/A February 25, 2010 May 19, 2010 N/A
Season 1, Complete Season N/A N/A N/A May 5, 2010

Although all discs on the Australian set are encoded to Region 4, the first three discs menu (episodes 1 - 12) shows Season One Box One, whereas the last three discs menu (episodes 13 - 23) shows Season One Box Two. This is exactly the same as the split season Scandinavian releases.

Ratings

References

External links