EPISODE
SEASON
Ray Donovan - Season 2
Ray runs afoul of a corrupt FBI chief, gets too close to a nosy reporter from Boston who is trying to expose him, and becomes the hired fixer for a sadistic self-help guru; Mickey is forced to go on parole and schemes to make it big; Abby meets a man who is willing to do almost anything for her; Bridget's clandestine relationship with teen rap sensation Marvin Gaye Washington takes a surprising turn; Terry wants to sell the Fite Club; Bunchy struggles to find love.
22 March 1982, Lamar, Colorado, USA
25 March 1982, Queens, New York, USA
16 April 1960, New York City, New York, USA
28 January 1967, USA
5 June 1986, Ocala, Florida, USA
3 November 1930, Topeka, Kansas, USA
September 10, 1953 in Louisville, Kentucky, USA
6 March 1997, Oslo, Norway
31 October 1936, Seattle, Washington, USA
30 June 1971, Katy, Texas, USA
14 March 1968, Yonkers, New York, USA
July 11, 2014
Ray Donovan is in the remarkable position of being a show that appears to be built entirely of moments that are gratuitous, provocative, and emptily thrilling.
July 13, 2014
Luckily, the show has Schreiber around to continually save it from the kind of embarrassing scrapes Ray is repeatedly asked to fix for his lawyer boss (Elliott Gould).
July 11, 2014
Ray Donovan is a sun-bleached noir and a character actor's paradise.
July 11, 2014
Gritty, moody, raw, Ray Donovan is a two-fisted drama packed with sensational players handed marvelously crafted roles.
July 14, 2014
From the first scene in Ray Donovan Season 2 Episode 1 until the last, Liev Schreiber commands attention with his portrayal of the titular character.
July 11, 2014
Ray Donovan... continues to find its way.
July 14, 2014
Overall, it made for pretty decent television and I look forward to covering the second season of the show.
July 11, 2014
Ray Donovan remains somewhat limited in its appeal -- featuring colorful characters, yes, but at times constricted by Ray's cowboy nature, which includes a professional knack for finding weak spots and exploiting them.
September 22, 2014
Jon Voight's performance as the pathetic patriarch is awe-inspiring, and the machismo on display by Liev Schreiber is transfixing.

