Good Wife 2

Good Wife 2




⚡ ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻

































Good Wife 2
Pushing aside the betrayal and crushing public humiliation caused by her husband, Peter, Alicia Florrick starts over by pursuing her original career as a defense attorney. As a junior associate at a prestigious Chicago law firm, she joins her longtime friend, former law school classmate and firm partner Will Gardner, who is interested in rekindling their former relationship.
Genres Drama Subtitles English [CC] Audio languages English
By ordering or viewing, you agree to our Terms . Sold by Amazon.com Services LLC.
Torn between her passion for Will and her marriage to Peter, Alicia is forced to make her choice.
Cary tries to stack the deck against Alicia during the trial of an Army reservist accused of murdering his wife. Meanwhile, Childs resorts to dirty tricks in an effort to mar Peter's campaign.
A multi-million dollar malicious prosecution suit leads to an explosive confrontation between Alicia and Glenn Childs. Meanwhile, Alicia's brother, Owen, visits after his questionable remarks about Peter goes viral online and makes Eli apoplectic.
Alicia risks disbarment when Childs' office suspects her of an ethics violation, which could also ruin Peter's political campaign. Meanwhile, a third candidate is revealed in the campaign for state's attorney.
Alicia and the partners must decide whether to take on the case of a VIP massage therapist who accuses a Nobel Peace Prize winner of sexual assault. Meanwhile, Peter and Eli try to figure out what Wendy's candidacy means for their campaign.
Alicia, Diane and Will must regroup when they're caught off-guard by a brilliant disabled attorney, Louis Canning (Michael J. Fox), who uses his condition to sway a jury during a test case for a huge class action suit against a pharmaceutical company.
Alicia is on the road to successfully arguing that her teenaged pop star client, Sloan, is innocent of a DUI, until Cary drops a bombshell that could ruin the starlet's career and life. Meanwhile, Peter's campaign hits a snag when the Democratic Committee tells him to drop out of the race.
When the government accuses an alderman of taking a campaign bribe from a Muslim extremist group, the team reviews hours of wiretap evidence to mount his defense, and Alicia is startled to discover that some of the tapes pertain to her.
When Alicia gets a vague tip from a courthouse clerk in the appeal case of a death row inmate, the law firm races to secure a stay of execution. Meanwhile, Peter Florrick prepares for his first debate with Glenn Childs and Wendy Scott-Carr.
Alicia and her colleagues face a moral dilemma when they must try to turn a client's son against his girlfriend, after both are accused of murder. Meanwhile, Diane asks Alicia to make a tough decision regarding the company's split.
When Will fears his client is not getting a fair trial because the judge is biased toward him, the law firm hires a jury consultant, who claims to predict a case's outcome by reading people's expressions. Meanwhile, Will uncovers information about Bond's intent for the firm.
When Alicia's client confesses under duress to murdering a fellow prison inmate, Cary's team seeks to challenge by uncovering an unlikely connection between the two inmates. Meanwhile, Wendy Scott-Carr threatens to expose a Florrick family issue in hopes of forcing Peter to drop out of the race.
As Alicia races against Louis Canning to round up the most clients for an Erin Brockovich-style class action lawsuit, a mole is detected in the law firm who seems to be working for Canning. Meanwhile, Diane and Will must put their coup on hold as Derrick brings in a Super PAC as a client.
Will and Diane take on a defamation case from a young Internet billionaire, who is suing the film studio for depicting him in a negative light. Meanwhile, Alicia confronts Will about the message he left on her voice mail.
Diane represents her on-again, off-again love interest, ballistics expert Kurt McVeigh, when he is sued for testimony he gave in the murder trial of an accused cop killer who was recently exonerated. Meanwhile, Eli has a personal interest in Natalie Flores, Wendy Scott-Carr's illegal nanny.
The law firm of Lockhart, Gardner and Bond sues a social networking site on behalf of a Chinese dissident, who posted an anonymous blog about democracy in China, and was jailed and tortured by the Chinese government when the site failed to protect his anonymity and turned over his IP address.
Lockhart Gardner law firm represents client and drug kingpin Lemond Bishop in divorce proceedings, even though Bishop wants reconciliation. Meanwhile, Kalinda is subpoenaed for a grand jury investigation.
On behalf of the victim's daughter, the law firm sues a convicted murderer who is profiting from a song he wrote describing his crime. Meanwhile, Eli anonymously uses the firm to help Natalie Flores and her family with their legal troubles.
To Lockhart/Gardner's disbelief, Louis Canning returns to face off against Alicia once again when the firm represents families of workers who committed suicide due to miserable working conditions. Meanwhile, Cary finds out shocking information about Kalinda.
Lockhart/Gardner represents a small drilling contractor against a major oil conglomerate in a dispute that is going well until a South American dictator complicates the situation. Meanwhile, the election results are in.
Lockhart/Gardner defends a patient in a liver transplant case against rival attorney Patti Nyholm; however, the case takes a turn when Patti is fired from her law firm and asks Lockhart/Gardner to represent her. Meanwhile, Alicia deals with emotional fallout from Peter's one-night stand with Kalinda.
Lockhart/Gardner defends Stephanie Engler, the owner of an adultery Web site, after one of her users is murdered; however, the civil case turns criminal when the murder is pinned on Stephanie. Alicia goes ballistic on Kalinda about her one-night stand with Peter, causing Kalinda to contemplate leaving the firm.
Rosemary Rodriguez - director See profile
Directors Rosemary Rodriguez , Michael Zinberg , Brooke Kennedy , James Whitmore Jr. , Félix Enríquez Alcalá , more… Jim McKay , Frederick E.O. Toye , Robert King , Matt Shakman , Nelson McCormick Season year 2011 Network CBS Content advisory Substance use , alcohol use , foul language , sexual content , violence Purchase rights Stream instantly Details Format Prime Video (streaming online video) Devices Available to watch on supported devices
IowaScott2019 Reviewed in the United States on May 30, 2015
I have enjoyed The Good Wife quite a bit up through the mid point of season 5 at this point. While the stories are good (both episode and long term) and the characters and their relationships diverse and interesting I am beginning to find the theme repetitive. The show is largely what I expected as I started streaming it via AmazonPrime earlier this year I would like Alicia to win just once without some sort of crap hitting the fan. She is the main character, and while enjoying overall success it all comes with a disproportionate level of bad things and while I understand that is part of the story and why she is who she is, it just needs to work out a little more frequently (once?) without all the drama. Not drama in the story to get to the win, but to win and not have it be wrapped in a bigger picture loss. I fully expect Alicia to win States Attorney (and I haven't read spoilers) but somehow have it taken away, wrapped in scandal, or lost because Peter is a jerk. Just once want to see a win be a win period, turn the page. It is getting to the point where it is making me like the show less as I'm always waiting for the other shoe to fall. Put Michael J. Fox in an episode and I already know it is going to end on a cynical note. That is to predictable. Overall i like the show, but I have a sinking feeling in my gut that it only has a season or two left in it. It provides entertainment but is very much a Hollywood show in that it is quite a bit different than real life and real court. Attorney's are universally scum, but they are all on the same side, Money, not political positions and the likes of what is portrayed on the show. Of course there are those that don't get along, but in general it is a club in which they serve their retainers and could give a rip about who they represent. There may be a few moral good people who became attorney's, I've just never met one. One thing the show depicts well is that aspect of the profession is captured as one that Alicia hates quite well. Bottom line is it is entertaining, and since we are talking about a television show that makes it good enough as it is entertaining. It is actually more popular than I expected when I looked up the ratings. Good for the longevity of the show, but yet I didn't expect it to be quite as popular as it is based on having watched 4 years of episodes over a few months. I am at a point in the show where my opinion could change to either extreme based on how they handle this whole States Attorney storyline. I can't be writing a spoiler as season 5 has aired and I'm the one in the dark on how this plays out, but if Alicia wins and they mess it up immediately with scandal or otherwise I'm done. I've put up with the high school antics in huge legal firms through 5 seasons but if the do it to me again and get her to a point of great victory just to snatch it away then it is strike 3 and I'm done. Just as SOA was my favorite show until they wacked Tara at the end of season 6 making me HATE season 7, that will destroy my loyalty to the story as it will be one time to many of giving her something good only to dump on it. But to this point I've been entertained in a positive way and would recommend it to most.
Alex Nichols, author of Shadow Rock Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2019
I was happy to recently discover The Good Wife, one of those binge-worthy shows that I happily lose weeks of my life to. The basic premise is intriguing and from it the writers craft an engrossing, even enthralling, narrative. Season One had an edge-of-one's seat cliffhanger. S2 adroitly develops it. Will Alicia stay with a powerful, unfaithful man or venture off into uncharted waters? If you're looking for a conventional story, this won't provide it. What I love about the show is that it works on at least three levels. In addition to Alicia's complicated personal life, there are excellent stand alone courtroom cases and an overarching political story that unfolds in unexpected ways. My favorite episodes this season exemplify just how well-crafted this series is. In "On Tap" a voice mail that was deleted in the first episode reappears in a surprising and creative way, setting up a later significant development. In "Nine Hours" we get to see the lawyers solve an urgent case in their off-hours. In "Net Worth" Alicia goes on a road trip with her brother that leads to some surprising private revelations. And at the end of the episode, that same pesky deleted voice mail from episode one shows up albeit with a third (and different) reverberation. I love this kind of multilayered storytelling. This is a great show. I highly recommend it.
Michael Green Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2015
This show is a mix of powerfully written characters and drama that often sweep one off one’s feet, but they are combined with plot contrivances that are so implausible and impossible that eventually – if you are watching and paying attention – these undermine and corrode the show’s strengths. Eventually, one feels that one is watching Hamlet or Lear strut around in a Marvel comic book and sometimes a Looney Tunes cartoon. The Good Wife, Alicia Florrick, is married to a corrupt politician and is in her own right an attorney at a major law firm. There are few things sillier than having a major law firm (routinely) go to trial in a civil case and be surprised by testimony of the witnesses because in this tv-land drama no depositions had occurred before trial (this is supposed to create drama in the courtroom). In one episode a victim is brutally murdered and one of his blood-soaked gloves goes missing. Police forensics are said to show that the blood of the killer is likely to be on the missing glove! The core of that episode hinges on what became of the missing glove. But of course the entire premise is nonsense because police have no reason to believe that the killer shed any blood at the scene unless they found some elsewhere, in which case the glove is moot. Another episode hinges on information from a sealed deposition being leaked to the disadvantage of the two candidates for political office. The information is leaked to the chief justice of the local superior court who wants to enter the race but is prevented from doing so by blackmail of the senior partner of Alicia’s firm who has traced the leaker to the judge. So instead the judge nominates Wendy Scott Carr, one of the attorneys present at the sealed deposition and the presumptive leaker; and this goes unchallenged. In another, an undercover Chicago PD drug enforcement officer who is under investigation goes to the Feds and offers to wear a wire and turn in his dirty cohorts for leniency. He is shot dead by a drug dealer as he is first-through-the-door on a raid into the dealer’s home and the feds know someone must have tipped off the drug dealer: which of the dirty cops is it? Well, it will turn out that there are no other dirty cops. The cop who went to the feds offering to implicate his buddies was the only dirty cop on the squad (can you believe this?!). And the tip-off came from the dirty cop’s wife who called the drug dealer from her work at a nursing home (can you believe that she would have the drug dealer’s phone number? that she would know her husband was first-through-the-door? that the drug dealer would not skedaddle and instead decide to go down in a blaze of gunfire with a squad of drug cops?). Why? Well she was an abused spouse, etc. All these contrivances is so that we can marvel at the irony of a system of justice in which the spouse somehow gets a multi-million dollar settlement for something or other so silly I now forget it. I won't mention the numerous episodes where time and space are warped to allow weeks-long investigations and discovery to take place within the course of a day, or hours, increasing tension and suspense if you don't stop to think about it. Most of the episodes are riddled with problems of this sort. The show works much better if you promise yourself to watch it in suspended disbelief mode.
mcp Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2016
Didn't expect to like it, but decided to watch the pilot one evening when I was bored and there wasn't much else on that looked interesting. My expectations weren't set very high, but I knew the show had been on for a few years and figured that might count for something. I was hooked after watching the pilot and have been watching it steadily ever since, having gotten midway into Season 4. I was expecting too much focus on the "poor me" aspect suggested by the title and the show's previews, but was pleasantly surprised to find a a strong character in Julianna Margulies' role who was more concerned about doing the right thing than feeling sorry for herself. When I realized the series had had as many seasons behind it as it had, I suspected that there had to be more to the show than that dynamic. Further, I enjoy finding a series that is both enjoyable and doesn't end on a cliffhanger as too many network series seem to do when the networks somehow decide they've had enough and don't care enough about leaving their audiences hanging. (I usually check to see that the series had at least some kind of conclusion, and from the reviews I have read, it appears that the writers finished the series on a note they deemed to be satisfactory. I won't know for sure whether I like the way the series ends until I watch it, but having fallen victim to too many network cancellations of good series that simply end prematurely, I'm not concerned because I like to watch at least somebody's idea of an ending. I've already recommended the series to others, and do here as well.
Robert E. Marmorstein Reviewed in the United States on July 15, 2016
Over the years watching this I ended up feeling like a mouse on one of those wheels spinning in place, not really going anywhere, making any progress toward a resolution of anything. Just a constant state of conflict after conflict tearing people apart, bringing them together only to break them apart again till ultimately the last moment of the show was a retelling of the very first moments of the show. A press conference with Peter announcing his resignation. The difference being, Alicia this time walks away instead of joining him in support. Was this telling us the 6 seasons of shows prior to that was just getting her to reconsider her original decision. BUT, in Season 2 what we lack in progress is made up for in fun and entertaining story telling. This show went nowhere but it did it with flare and ultimately enjoyable and watchable because of the talent of the actors and the quality of the writing. I give it 4/5 stars because ultimately it had no effect in the finality of events. In later seasons we get turns and changes that are not well thought out. But at some point they decided they needed to land the plane and it didn't matter if all didn't add up. After all, things that happened 2,3, or 4 years before are fleeting memories.
David Lucero Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2012
My wife told me a friend of hers at work told her to watch The Good Wife and we only caught on in the latter half of the 2nd Season. After one episode we were hooked. For Christmas I bought her the First Season and now we're on the 2nd. Only went through one disc so far, but it's entertaining to say the least. Alicia Florrick is not only a bright, sensitive woman, but she could the girl next door. The character Eli Gold is a scene-stealer and it's fun watching Alicia and Cary match wits, all the while we're left to wonder if Alicia and Peter, her husband, will ever get back together. Our favorite character is Kalinda. They throw her in subtly, but with style, and she's clearly a necessity in the firms success. You don't know whether to like or hate Will Gardner, the firm's partner who hired Alicia, but you definitely admire the woman, Diane Lockhart. She is the role model of the intelligent, people-smart woman out to make a name for herself. If you haven't already started watching The Good Wife, do so now! You won't be disappointed. by David Lucero, author of The Sandman
JohnAroundTheCornerReviews Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2015
I love this series. It gives a different perspective on the legal system. We get to see more than just the legal back-and-forth between prosecution and defense; we get to see how home life affects legal life and more. This second season lets us see Peter Florrick, the husband who wronged his wife before the first season started, run to get his old office back (Cook County Prosecutor). Meanwhile, his wronged wife, Alicia, continues her efforts on the other side of the legal fence, helping the defense. I don't know how many families there are where husband and wife are on opposite sides of the legal fence. I would imagine that most people who read these reviews already know that Alicia Florrick is a defense lawyer while her husband is State District Attorney for Chicago (Cook County). I saw most of these episodes when they were first run, and I'm thoroughly enjoying watching these the second time around. I highly recommend every season of The Good Wife.
KD Reviewed in the United States on September 7, 2011
I must admit that I came to The Good Wife late and did not start watching until the end of Season 1, but I'm so glad tha
Amateur Self Pee
Mature 49
Sex Toys Home

Report Page