Ties That Bind

2015

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

6.4| 0h30m| TV-PG| en
Synopsis

Allison McLean is a tough and experienced police detective, mother and wife in suburban Seattle. When she and her police partner must arrest her brother for aggravated assault, her world drastically changes as he's convicted and sent to prison, leaving his two teenagers teetering on the brink of foster care. Ultimately, she takes them into her home, ending up with four teenagers to raise.

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Trailers & Clips

Reviews

Hellen I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much
TinsHeadline Touches You
PodBill Just what I expected
Bob This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
jplusj-47941 We just picked this up on Hallmark and are bummed that there is no second season. It will leave you hanging. I can't believe they would not find a way to do season 2. It has real life situations with real answers, not having to pollute the air with bad language or stunts to keep it interesting. Bring it back!!!!
mpaxton-27942 I enjoyed this show as it isn't perfect, as is life. It proves shows can depict the gritty side of true life without being overly graphic. A perfect balance of the good and the bad. I especially appreciate the problem solving and the way the McLean family takes responsibility of the niece and nephew, giving them some stability in their lives. I also appreciate the fact that things don't always turn out the way you want them to, and there are not always happy endings, as we would like, but shows how you take what is dealt and work your way through it. I wish there were more shows like this. This show was unpredictable, and best of all, DECENT for the entire family. I get so tired of these shows where every other word is bleep, bleep bleep! Thanks so much.
Adriaan Someone opened up a can of clichés and this show rolled out. Teenagers are either sulky, angry or catatonic. Parents are either good or bad. Sprinkle with average acting and obvious plots and, voilà, there's your new TV show. It's a shame the writers haven't tried to come with stories and personalities that aren't black or white. If that wasn't clear enough, the scene where they sit around the table praying before dinner already hints that the show's creators aim not to offend anyone. The tag line of "Every line will be crossed" is therefore wildly misplaced. They won't be crossing any lines and every person in the show can be put in a well-defined box.
josephmatthew79 The show stars Kelli Williams, Jonathan Scarfe, and Luke Perry. To sum up the premise: Williams and Perry are polar opposite siblings Allison McLean and Tim Olson. Scarfe plays Matt, Allison's husband. Allison is an accomplished detective, wife, and mom. Perry, at this point, is a criminal but I'm sure as the season progresses we'll see more of his backstory and find out why he is where he is in life. In the pilot, Williams allows her brother to be sentenced to two years in prison. She does the right thing, as she believes it to be, and takes in her teenage niece and nephew to live with her family which includes her husband and her two teenage children. There's no way Allison would allow her niece and nephew to be put into foster care. But, after Tim's sentencing hearing tension rises and there's a whole lot of drama in the McLean house. What I like, no, what I LOVE about the show is how Williams plays her character in such a way that she is tough as nails and if needed will lay the smack down on anyone who pushes her buttons. At the same time, she is also tender hearted and admits she doesn't always know what to do or how to do it. One of my favorite scenes is when she and her nephew Cameron, played by Rhys Matthew Bond have an explosive argument in the police station. The way she yelled at him and put him in his place but then spoke so gently to him, it was a wonderful scene. Is there anything more enjoyable to watch than families arguing on the screen?! I LOVE IT! The show is wonderfully written and has a strong moral compass which you don't find in too much television these days. It has an element of faith as demonstrated by the family blessing their food at lunch time but it never comes off preachy. I'm the kind of writer that adores acting and actors. As a child I wanted to be an actor more than anything. One thing I really appreciate is fine acting and perfect casting. Kudos to Anderson and her team for doing an impeccable job casting the show. Everyone was wonderful and there is such a chemistry between the cast, especially among the four young adults which include: Cameron played by Bond, Mariah his younger sister played by Matreya Scarrwener (both play Perry's kids), Jeff played by Mitchell Kummen and his sister Rachel played by Natasha Calis. The tension between the Allison's kids Jeff and Rachel and Tim's kids Cameron and Mariah is so believable. The bickering, the snide comments, the awkwardness… I love it. I look forward to more and more of that bickering. Another thing that is really wonderful about the show is that it is a total hybrid of family drama/cop procedural. Throughout the episode we're seeing this amazing woman Allison McLean in these two vastly different roles: a smart and tough detective and a wife and mom trying to do the right thing even if it means alienating the very people she's trying to protect. I'm hooked already and I look forward to these next nine episodes. I also hope the show gets picked up for another six seasons. Like I said, I love family drama. And when family drama is done right it's so much fun to watch. I encourage you to tune in and give it a try. The writing is sharp and real, the acting is on par, the production value/design is beautiful and it's got the perfect mix of family drama and cop procedural. I give Ties that Bind FIVE THUMBS UP. Check it out, you won't be disappointed.