EPISODE
SEASON
The film follows complex relationships of Oz (Christian Slater), Melanie (Odette Yustman), Cash (Alphonso McAuley), Cameron Price (Bret Harrison) in a high-tech security firm. They struggle with the ups and downs in their work and their life to balance everything.
30 May 1958, Newport Beach, California, USA
12 April 1954, Cumberland, Wisconsin, USA
9 December 1970, Monterey, California, USA
13 August 1961, Brooklyn, New York, USA
15 June 1984, Bronx, New York, USA
23 August 1974, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
17 June 1975, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
30 June 1966, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
3 December 1974, Notting Hill, London, England, UK
4 February 1968, Canton, Ohio, USA
18 August 1969, New York City, New York, USA
12 March 1982, Chicago, Illinois, USA
12 May 1968, Carlsbad, California, USA
April 06, 2011
Lots of good ideas, but the execution's still lacking.
April 06, 2011
Less pander, more wit, please.
April 06, 2011
It's a happy mix, a breezy, playful half-hour that has the potential to open up into something special.
April 06, 2011
Breaking In succeeds only in being a stupendously bad half-hour of television that should be charged with breaking and entering into unsuspecting living rooms.
April 06, 2011
It's a strange little show: a lighthearted half-hour caper that purports to be a comedy but isn't really that funny.
April 06, 2011
I can see Breaking In growing into a pleasant, mildly goofy comedy that offers the light-adventure qualities of a USA or TNT show and the silly diversions of a half-decent Chuck episode.
April 06, 2011
Clever in spots and filled with pop-culture references, with its modest charms and well-trodden concept this comedic caper represents the kind of formula that has historically struggled to break out.
April 06, 2011
The plot doesn't offer a lot of possibilities. The jokes are predictable even when the delivery is hip, and none of the characters is especially likable.
April 06, 2011
If Christian Slater has proved anything over the past few years, it's that he can't draw a television audience.

