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White Collar is a USA Network television series focus on Neal Caffrey, a skilled forger and thief. With a few months left on his four-year sentence, criminal mastermind Neal Caffrey escapes from maximum security prison to save his relationship with his girlfriend. FBI Agent Peter Burke, the man who had chased him for years and had finally caught him, is called in to track him down. He easily finds Neal at his girlfriend';s apartment, deflated and defeated. She has completely disappeared.
The brisk pace and easygoing chemistry between White Collar's stars, Matt Bomer and Tim DeKay, is something that can't be faked for very long. These guys just seem to work well together.
If you like a good con artist yarn, enjoy the tone of USA Network's other original programs and can suspend your disbelief a little, you'll really enjoy White Collar.
The chemistry between Bomer and DeKay is strong, and playing Burke's dogged sense of fairness against Caffrey's "you take what you can get" attitude gives White Collar some amusing tension and just the barest hint of a theme.
In terms of the pilot episode and the potential this series has from the start, White Collar is exciting, intelligent, humorous and all around good TV.
So far so familiar. But buried in the premise is a crisp script and Dragnet-with-humor repartee between the two winning leads, backed up by an excellent support cast.