But visually, this season is defined by . The showrunners leaned hard into the "Toronto the Good" aesthetic: fog rolling off the Don River, dimly lit autopsy rooms, and the rich velvet textures of Victorian fashion.

9/10 (Docked one point only because Season 3 has even better color grading).

For the uninitiated, "BDRIP" (Blu-ray Rip) might sound like technical jargon, but for fans of this long-running Canadian gem, it is the holy grail. Here is why Season 2—a pivotal turning point for the series—deserves to be seen in this pristine format. Season 2 (2009) is where the show truly found its feet. We saw the introduction of the beloved Constable George Crabtree’s wild theories, the deepening romantic tension between Murdoch and Dr. Julia Ogden, and the first major confrontation with the villainous James Pendrick.

It doesn't just show you the crime scene. It puts you inside the morgue. And in a show about seeing the details everyone else misses, that is the only way to watch.

Enter .