Find Movies & TV
Home
Live TV
On Demand
Discover
Explore
Movies & TV Shows
Most Popular
Leaving Soon
Categories
Action
Animation
Comedy
Crime
Descriptive Audio
Documentary
Drama
En Español
Horror
Music
Romance
Sci-Fi
Thriller
Western
Explore
Browse Channels
Featured Channels
ION
BET x Tyler Perry Comedy
MythBusters
Categories
Hit TV
Drama TV
True Crime
Reality
News
Sports
Game Shows
History & Science
Comedy
Daytime TV
Movies
Sci-Fi & Action
Chills & Thrills
Classic TV
Food & Home
Black Entertainment
Kids & Family
Lifestyle
Music
Nature & Travel
Anime & Gaming
En Español
International
Sign In
The D.A.
Season 1
Add Show to Watchlist
The men and women of the Los Angeles County district attorney's office battle the usual array of moral and ethic problems.
More
Where to Watch Season 1
There are no locations currently available for this title
4 Episodes
The People vs. Sergius Kovinsky
E1
The People vs. Sergius Kovinsky
Episode 1
The People vs. Patricia Henry
E2
The People vs. Patricia Henry
Episode 2
The People vs. Oliver C. Handley
E3
The People vs. Oliver C. Handley
Episode 3
The People vs. Achmed Abbas
E4
The People vs. Achmed Abbas
Episode 4
Cast of Season 1
J.K. Simmons
Dep. Dist. Atty. Joe Carter
Bruno Campos
Mark Camacho
Steven Weber
DA David Franks
Felicity Huffman
Charlotte Ellis
Michaela Conlin
Jinette McMahon
Sarah Paulson
Lisa Patterson
Peter Outerbridge
Jerry Weicker
Season 1 Reviews
People Magazine
People Staff
[Steven] Weber's Franks is an interesting anti-hero, but the makers of the series evidently felt the audience needed a thorough good guy to stand up to the D.A. and prick his conscience.
Variety
Brian Lowry
It's pretty good in an old-fashioned sort of way, down to the back-office bickering and notion of justice being dispensed through the filter of political expediency.
Deseret News (Salt Lake City)
Scott D. Pierce
It looks and feels so much like so many legal dramas that have gone before that it hardly seems like a new series at all.
New York Times
Virginia Heffernan
The show induces mild and meaningless anxiety and then placates it.
Chicago Tribune
Rachel Sklar
Less about the law than the backroom political dealings of a Machiavellian district attorney, there's plenty of drama wrapped up in the interoffice intrigue of competing political agendas.
Orlando Sentinel
Hal Boedeker
[Steven] Weber is overacting as a hothead engaged in a tough re-election campaign. He doesn't get my vote.
Los Angeles Times
Carina Chocano
Exuding a vaguely familiar, sincere, almost old-fashioned air, right down to its just-the-facts title, the new drama feels sturdy and reliable, if by and large unremarkable.
Chicago Tribune
Steve Johnson
This look at the nastiness of big-city politics is more interesting than its parts would indicate.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Rob Owen
There are some intriguing political skirmishes in "The D.A.," but the show's plotting is ham-handed and confusing, which really blunts its effectiveness as a compelling drama.
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Melanie McFarland
The show's plots swerve into more far-fetched territory with each episode.
South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Tom Jicha
The new legal drama is intelligently written, complex but not confounding. The characters are vividly drawn and multi-dimensional, heroic yet deeply flawed.
Houston Chronicle
Mike McDaniel
The episodes are self-contained, meaning the cases are solved within the hour... But the political intrigue carries over and builds from week to week, and politics is the most compelling reason to watch.
New York Magazine/Vulture
John Leonard
There are enough twists to the corkscrew plots to keep the brain in a swivel.
Honolulu Star-Advertiser
Joanne Weintraub
Its above-average actors are cast shrewdly and entertainingly against type.
Buffalo News
Alan Pergament
Truth is "The D.A." is better than average because its characters are all as political aware as the staffers on "The West Wing."
Take Plex everywhere
Watch free anytime, anywhere, on almost any device.
See the full list of supported devices
Home
Live TV
On Demand
Discover