---
product_id: 133584216
title: "Moonlight - The Complete Series"
price: "₹ 6854"
currency: INR
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reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.in/products/133584216-moonlight-the-complete-series
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region: India
---

# Moonlight - The Complete Series

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## Description

A thoroughly entertaining series that lasted just one season, Moonlight tells the story of a sexy vampire who wants to do good. (Think along the lines of Angel from the Joss Whedon series of the same name.) Mick (Alex O'Loughlin, August Rush ) became a vampire in the 1950s when his beautiful vamp bride Coraline (Shannyn Sossamon, A Knight's Tale ) created his new incarnation. Shunning that lifestyle and turning against his wife when she attempts to add a little girl to their family, Mick creates a new identity for himself as a private detective. The job has its perks. Mick, who normally shuns fresh human blood, doesn't feel as badly partaking from the fluids of a criminal. Though Coraline would actually make a more intriguing ongoing love interest for Mick, he falls in love with Beth (Sophia Myles, Underworld ). The two have a history together, too, though Beth doesn't remember it right away (Mick saved her from Coraline some 20 years ago); now, they're working together. O'Loughin and Myles make a handsome couple, but they don't share the type of chemistry that makes his scenes with Sossamon so intoxicating. Moonlight originally aired on CBS during the 2007-2008 television season. The season was truncated to just 16 episodes due to the Writers Guild Strike. Because of that, the series at times feels unresolved--especially in the finale. But Moonlight is well-crafted and has beautiful production value. Mick at times utters groaners like, “Being a vampire sucks,” but the Aussie actor makes it work. The series in some ways is debating the age-old question of whether eternal life is a blessing or a curse. The answer depends on who--or what--you are. --Jae-Ha Kim Any private eye knows a lot about other people's secrets. L.A. private eye Mick St. John (Alex O'Loughlin) has a secret of his own. He’s a vampire, dwelling in a covert netherworld complicated by friendship with an undead finance honcho (Jason Dohring), memories of the alluring ex- wife (Shannyn Sossamon) who turned him into a vampire, and a relationship with a human (Sophia Myles) he feels drawn to protect – and maybe to love. But no matter how tempting, Mick knows a vampire-human romance is eternally dangerous. This 16-episode, 4-disc set of the series voted the 2008 People's Choice Award for Favorite New TV Drama is a sure entertainment bet for all who like their vampire stories sleek, intense and passionate.

Review: An underappreciated gem, vampires and romance well done - "When darkness falls, a hero will rise . . ." Mick St. John (Alex O'Loughlin) is a private investigator in a town where there is little that surprises anyone - Los Angeles, California. But Mick has a secret that might surprise a few people - he's a vampire. Welcome to his world. The death of a college co-ed brings BuzzWire internet reporter Beth Turner (Sophia Myles) into Mick's life - she's traipsing barefoot through a freezing fountain at 2 am in order to get a photo of the corpse. And on that corpse are what appear to be two bite marks. It seems to be the work of a vampire, assuming one believes in them. Mick's and Beth's paths keep crossing, as each tries to solve this mystery, for different reasons - what more logical than that they work together? Despite the fact that Mick tells her that he works alone. Why does Mick look familiar to Beth? She swears that she has seen him before. It seems that Mick has a connection with Beth which goes back some 22 years, to the kidnapping of a 4 year old child. He protected her then from the very monster who was responsible for his being what he is - his ex wife Coraline (Shannyn Sossamon) - and he's protecting her now. He has a mentor named Josef (Jason Dohring), a 400 year old vampire who is a real wiz at business, although his people skills leave something to be desired, and Mick has a connection who works in the morgue, Guillermo (Jacob Vargas), one that supplies him with donated Red Cross blood. You see, Mick has principles, and one of them is that he will not drink human blood, voluntarily given or otherwise, directly from the source, and he will not kill humans, unless he has to. The one season series revolves around Mick and Beth and their developing relationship. She struggles to remember where she knows him from, and when she thinks she recognizes him from the time of her abduction, he leads her off on other tangents. She has a relationship with a young man named Josh, who works in the DA's office. They've been together for a while. And yet it's obvious that she feels something for Mick, something that she cannot deny. And he would do anything for her. Due to unexpected circumstances, Beth learns Mick's secret, and promises to keep it. The fact that she trusts him, and he trusts her with his secret, only serves to deepen their relationship. As the series progresses, this relationship sometimes puts her at odds with her assistant district attorney boyfriend, Josh, but she refuses to give up on Mick or their friendship, as they battle a crazed killer, a rogue vampire, a vicious ex and more. Tragedy nearly engulfs them - will what they have withstand it? Commentary: I was smitten with Moonlight from the first episode. With Mick, with him and Beth, and with their love story, not to mention with the entire series. Mick St. John is an anti-vampire vampire. He refuses to kill for the sake of killing, he is swift to protect humans and vamps alike. He does his job as a private investigator and he does it well - watching him follow the scent at any given crime scene is amazing, not to mention he moves with an elegant grace all his own - but he also holds himself aloof, away from most others, except for Josef. Mick is a very multi-layered character, and he has an intriguing story, not the least of which is his relationship with Beth Turner, whom he first rescued as a small child from a crazed kidnaper, whom we learn was his ex, Coraline. He watched her grow over the next 22 years, and protected her, and when he came face to face with her, he fell deeply in love, although he tries desperately to hide that fact. Beth is a bright, lovely ambitious young woman with a nose for news and a high sense of morality. Their mutual attraction is inevitable. Josef is a great foil for Mick - he is several times Mick's age, he's been around quite a bit, and he's very wealthy, but he does have something of an attitude problem. As Mick reminds him when he says, "I'm the only friend you have that doesn't like you for your money," to which Josef replies, "Oh yeah." One of my favorite episodes actually centers around Josef, combining a threat on his life with a trip into his past, for a very character revealing story, showing a more compassionate side of the cynical vampire. Mick's relationship with the morgue attendant, Guillermo, has definite moments of humor, as Guillermo not only supplies Mick with the blood he needs to survive, from the donor supply, but also gives him access to the bodies in the morgue, which becomes very helpful in the course of his investigations. Beth has the same relationship with him, and she and Mick meet a few times that way, by chance. During a brief respite in Mick's vampire status, Guillermo complains that he has no one to sell Mick's preferred blood to, since he isn't consuming any - and the compassionate Mick helps him out of his bind. The situation in the desert which marked the watershed of their relationship occurs in the desert, where Mick almost dies and Beth must take drastic measures to keep that from happening (naturally the desert is anathema to a vampire) A tragedy in Beth's life forces her to reevaluate her priorities and she takes a step back from Mick, blaming him not for what happened but not doing what she felt he could do about it, but of course it doesn't last. A person from Mick's past is also a threat to their happiness. Another one of my favorite lines is when Josef explains to Beth that in another life, Coraline was a courtesan, and Beth exclaims, "Oh, a hooker!" The writing is very good, and the acting is wonderful, it's an excellent cast. Although before the series began, when it was still in the talk stage, Bruce Willis had been considered for the lead. What a different show that would have been. I like Bruce and all, but he does not have the same sexy presence that Alex O'Loughlin does, not by a long shot. Over the course of the series, the writers developed their own vampire mythology, which was pretty unique as such things go. Their vamps walked in daylight, but it weakened them. Fire and silver were their enemies. Silver is generally reserved for those of the lycan persuasion - or werewolves. Fire - well, that makes sense, goes along with the whole weakened by the sun thing and heat in general. Garlic, holy water and crucifixes are no more powerful against vamps than humans. Mick does not sleep in a coffin, but in a large freezer. In the very first episode, Mick is speaking with a reporter, as if he is being interviewed, as we are introduced to him, and he actually lays all of the myths to rest in this unique and candid interview. It's a shame that there are only 16 episodes of this wonderful series, it had many places yet to go, but its death can be attributed to the writer's strike that year. It wasn't the only casualty. Hope remained that there would eventually be a revival of the series, but I think those are long extinguished, as Alex O'Loughlin is busy with his new series, Hawaii 5-0, on CBS, and doing well. But at least we have these 16 episodes to remember it by, and even if the 16th wasn't meant to be a last one, it possesses its own form of closure, as we bid Mick and Beth a fond farewell.
Review: Sexy, Smart and Entertaining - I loved this show when it originally aired. I was terribly disappointed when it was not renewed for additional seasons. I just chalked it up to my curse of liking a good show. Often, what I like gets canceled. I forgot about the writers' strike that occurred that year, another form of death for a good show. I think Hollywood should require shows affected by those strikes to get automatically renewed to give the shows a fair chance. How many good shows have been lost because of it? Anyway, the show is still as good today as it was back then. The show is sexy, smart and engaging. I fell in love with Mick all over again, not that I forgot, and Joseph is hot, too, with that barely disguised look of hunger on his face. Well, what can I say? The show is just that good, plain and simple. It should have been on air A LOT longer! The series ends well without a cliffhanger that usually leaves viewers feeling terribly anxious. However, it does leave viewers wanting, oh, so, much more!! With the right script, Moonlight easily lends itself to a sequel of some kind, a tv show, a movie, preferably with the original actors. Yes Hollywood, you can do it!

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Contributor | Alex O'Loughlin, Jason Dohring, Shannyn Sossamon, Sophia Myles |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 1,103 Reviews |
| Format | AC-3, Box set, Color, DVD, Dolby, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen |
| Language | English |
| Number Of Discs | 4 |
| Runtime | 11 hours and 32 minutes |

## Images

![Moonlight - The Complete Series - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/91bR6XPBtwL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ An underappreciated gem, vampires and romance well done
*by J***S on December 10, 2010*

"When darkness falls, a hero will rise . . ." Mick St. John (Alex O'Loughlin) is a private investigator in a town where there is little that surprises anyone - Los Angeles, California. But Mick has a secret that might surprise a few people - he's a vampire. Welcome to his world. The death of a college co-ed brings BuzzWire internet reporter Beth Turner (Sophia Myles) into Mick's life - she's traipsing barefoot through a freezing fountain at 2 am in order to get a photo of the corpse. And on that corpse are what appear to be two bite marks. It seems to be the work of a vampire, assuming one believes in them. Mick's and Beth's paths keep crossing, as each tries to solve this mystery, for different reasons - what more logical than that they work together? Despite the fact that Mick tells her that he works alone. Why does Mick look familiar to Beth? She swears that she has seen him before. It seems that Mick has a connection with Beth which goes back some 22 years, to the kidnapping of a 4 year old child. He protected her then from the very monster who was responsible for his being what he is - his ex wife Coraline (Shannyn Sossamon) - and he's protecting her now. He has a mentor named Josef (Jason Dohring), a 400 year old vampire who is a real wiz at business, although his people skills leave something to be desired, and Mick has a connection who works in the morgue, Guillermo (Jacob Vargas), one that supplies him with donated Red Cross blood. You see, Mick has principles, and one of them is that he will not drink human blood, voluntarily given or otherwise, directly from the source, and he will not kill humans, unless he has to. The one season series revolves around Mick and Beth and their developing relationship. She struggles to remember where she knows him from, and when she thinks she recognizes him from the time of her abduction, he leads her off on other tangents. She has a relationship with a young man named Josh, who works in the DA's office. They've been together for a while. And yet it's obvious that she feels something for Mick, something that she cannot deny. And he would do anything for her. Due to unexpected circumstances, Beth learns Mick's secret, and promises to keep it. The fact that she trusts him, and he trusts her with his secret, only serves to deepen their relationship. As the series progresses, this relationship sometimes puts her at odds with her assistant district attorney boyfriend, Josh, but she refuses to give up on Mick or their friendship, as they battle a crazed killer, a rogue vampire, a vicious ex and more. Tragedy nearly engulfs them - will what they have withstand it? Commentary: I was smitten with Moonlight from the first episode. With Mick, with him and Beth, and with their love story, not to mention with the entire series. Mick St. John is an anti-vampire vampire. He refuses to kill for the sake of killing, he is swift to protect humans and vamps alike. He does his job as a private investigator and he does it well - watching him follow the scent at any given crime scene is amazing, not to mention he moves with an elegant grace all his own - but he also holds himself aloof, away from most others, except for Josef. Mick is a very multi-layered character, and he has an intriguing story, not the least of which is his relationship with Beth Turner, whom he first rescued as a small child from a crazed kidnaper, whom we learn was his ex, Coraline. He watched her grow over the next 22 years, and protected her, and when he came face to face with her, he fell deeply in love, although he tries desperately to hide that fact. Beth is a bright, lovely ambitious young woman with a nose for news and a high sense of morality. Their mutual attraction is inevitable. Josef is a great foil for Mick - he is several times Mick's age, he's been around quite a bit, and he's very wealthy, but he does have something of an attitude problem. As Mick reminds him when he says, "I'm the only friend you have that doesn't like you for your money," to which Josef replies, "Oh yeah." One of my favorite episodes actually centers around Josef, combining a threat on his life with a trip into his past, for a very character revealing story, showing a more compassionate side of the cynical vampire. Mick's relationship with the morgue attendant, Guillermo, has definite moments of humor, as Guillermo not only supplies Mick with the blood he needs to survive, from the donor supply, but also gives him access to the bodies in the morgue, which becomes very helpful in the course of his investigations. Beth has the same relationship with him, and she and Mick meet a few times that way, by chance. During a brief respite in Mick's vampire status, Guillermo complains that he has no one to sell Mick's preferred blood to, since he isn't consuming any - and the compassionate Mick helps him out of his bind. The situation in the desert which marked the watershed of their relationship occurs in the desert, where Mick almost dies and Beth must take drastic measures to keep that from happening (naturally the desert is anathema to a vampire) A tragedy in Beth's life forces her to reevaluate her priorities and she takes a step back from Mick, blaming him not for what happened but not doing what she felt he could do about it, but of course it doesn't last. A person from Mick's past is also a threat to their happiness. Another one of my favorite lines is when Josef explains to Beth that in another life, Coraline was a courtesan, and Beth exclaims, "Oh, a hooker!" The writing is very good, and the acting is wonderful, it's an excellent cast. Although before the series began, when it was still in the talk stage, Bruce Willis had been considered for the lead. What a different show that would have been. I like Bruce and all, but he does not have the same sexy presence that Alex O'Loughlin does, not by a long shot. Over the course of the series, the writers developed their own vampire mythology, which was pretty unique as such things go. Their vamps walked in daylight, but it weakened them. Fire and silver were their enemies. Silver is generally reserved for those of the lycan persuasion - or werewolves. Fire - well, that makes sense, goes along with the whole weakened by the sun thing and heat in general. Garlic, holy water and crucifixes are no more powerful against vamps than humans. Mick does not sleep in a coffin, but in a large freezer. In the very first episode, Mick is speaking with a reporter, as if he is being interviewed, as we are introduced to him, and he actually lays all of the myths to rest in this unique and candid interview. It's a shame that there are only 16 episodes of this wonderful series, it had many places yet to go, but its death can be attributed to the writer's strike that year. It wasn't the only casualty. Hope remained that there would eventually be a revival of the series, but I think those are long extinguished, as Alex O'Loughlin is busy with his new series, Hawaii 5-0, on CBS, and doing well. But at least we have these 16 episodes to remember it by, and even if the 16th wasn't meant to be a last one, it possesses its own form of closure, as we bid Mick and Beth a fond farewell.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Sexy, Smart and Entertaining
*by J***S on January 31, 2026*

I loved this show when it originally aired. I was terribly disappointed when it was not renewed for additional seasons. I just chalked it up to my curse of liking a good show. Often, what I like gets canceled. I forgot about the writers' strike that occurred that year, another form of death for a good show. I think Hollywood should require shows affected by those strikes to get automatically renewed to give the shows a fair chance. How many good shows have been lost because of it? Anyway, the show is still as good today as it was back then. The show is sexy, smart and engaging. I fell in love with Mick all over again, not that I forgot, and Joseph is hot, too, with that barely disguised look of hunger on his face. Well, what can I say? The show is just that good, plain and simple. It should have been on air A LOT longer! The series ends well without a cliffhanger that usually leaves viewers feeling terribly anxious. However, it does leave viewers wanting, oh, so, much more!! With the right script, Moonlight easily lends itself to a sequel of some kind, a tv show, a movie, preferably with the original actors. Yes Hollywood, you can do it!

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A great supernatural detective series
*by C***W on September 27, 2010*

If you like paranormal PI's, Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel then you'll enjoy Moonlight. One of my favorite genres, I haven't been this excited since the Dresden Files went off the air on SyFy in 2007. And like the Dresden files, Moonlight got canceled after only one season, a victim of the 2007 Writer's Strike. Where was I in 2007 to not see both of these series when they originally aired? At least you have Jim Butcher's books to fall back on for your Harry fix. With Moonlight there is only the Trevor Munson novel that inspired the series--Angel of Vengence, and that won't be available until February 14, 2011. I stumbled across a re-airing of the Moonlight on the CW over the summer and enjoyed that there was an alternative to the teen vampire scene. Yes, there is Tru Blood on HBO but I just couldn't get into the Sookie Stackhouse vampire mystery series by Charlaine Harris. When Bill said that he had his "own wine celler" in dating Sookie I just felt like Sookie was a meal to him and not his girlfriend. I'm not compairing Moonlight with movies because they have a whole different bag of tricks at their disposal for the suspension of disbelief. With Moonlight you have great writing that keeps the story going (humor, drama, reflections on issues, big and small story arcs) and great acting that makes up for believeability in some of the special effects. I enjoyed how the series kept the vampire features to a minimum so you could still see the actors' expressions. As with all CBS crime series, this one has all the lastest forensic science and technological gadgets for solving crimes but you have extra tools with vampire super senses and stregnth. I also enjoyed how each episode in the series had a companion episode somewhere in the series that was either reinforced or was the show's opposite. For example in "B.C." Beth Turner gets to experience what it's like to be a vampire without becoming one. In "Fated To Pretend" Mick St. John gets to experience what it's like to be temporarily human again. Another example--the series opened with a murder at Hearst College and ended with one at Hearst but the opener tries to convince Beth there's "no such thing as vampires" while the last one, Sonata, is all about them and the risk of them being exposed. (Veronica Mars fans will cheer for the nod to Hearst College--Jason Dohring was in that show as Logan Echolls and Joel Silver produced both shows.) For me this put Alex O'Loughlin, Sophia Myles, Jason Dohring, and Shannon Sossaman on my radar of actors to watch. Here's to hoping that we'll at least get a movie from the series to have some closure of the loose ends if we can't get a second season due to other actor commitments.

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