Chicago PD Complete Seasons Sydney Shelf

Chicago PD Complete Seasons Sydney Shelf

Chicago P.D., Dick Wolf's Intelligence Unit procedural, aired its first season on NBC in January 2014 and has run for twelve seasons As of June 2026. Seasons Two through Five (2014–2018) represent the show's narrative sweet spot—Voight's team at peak moral ambiguity, Jason Beghe's gravel-voiced command cemented, and the One Chicago crossover universe humming. These Universal preloved DVD sets deliver 88 episodes of blue-collar Chicago police work without the streaming subscription fatigue.
  • Chicago P.D. premiered on NBC on 8 January 2014 as the second series in Dick Wolf's One Chicago franchise.
  • Jason Beghe plays Sergeant Hank Voight, the Intelligence Unit commander whose methods occupy the grey zone between effective and unlawful.
  • Season Two (2014–2015) introduced Jay Halstead (Jesse Lee Soffer) as a series regular after his crossover debut in Chicago Fire.
  • Seasons Two through Five aired consecutively from September 2014 to May 2018, totalling 88 episodes across four broadcast years.
  • Universal released these seasons on DVD in Region 4 (Australia/New Zealand) shortly after each season's broadcast conclusion.

Chicago P.D.: Season 2 — Universal

The season that locked in the formula. Season Two expanded the Intelligence Unit roster and deepened Voight's morally flexible playbook—23 episodes of interrogation-room intimidation, wire-tap stakeouts, and the occasional evidence-planting shortcut. Jay Halstead graduates from recurring guest to full team member, Erin Lindsay's complicated loyalties get messier, and the crossover episodes with Chicago Fire remind you these shows share a universe (and a budget for pyrotechnics). The DVD preserves the broadcast edits, so expect network-standard violence and the occasional pixelated tattoo. Explore our current copy of Chicago P.D.: Season 2 or browse more Crime books at Patina.

Chicago P.D.: Season Three — Universal

The midpoint pivot where character arcs got heavier. Season Three (2015–2016) is where Chicago P.D. stopped pretending Voight's unit operates within departmental guidelines and leaned into the consequences—Internal Affairs investigations, Lindsay's relapse triggers, and a back-half arc involving a mole that actually lands. Twenty-three episodes maintain the case-of-the-week structure but layer in serialised tension; the finale's cliffhanger is genuinely nasty. These Universal pressings ship in the standard plastic keepcase with episode synopses on the sleeve—functional, unglamorous, exactly what a procedural deserves. Explore our current copy of Chicago P.D.: Season Three or browse more Crime books at Patina.

Chicago P.D.: Season Four — Universal

The season that weaponised Voight's past. Season Four (2016–2017) digs into Voight's pre-series corruption and forces him to reckon with old enemies resurfacing—23 episodes of chickens coming home to roost. Lindsay's departure arc threads through the latter half (Sophia Bush left the show citing a hostile environment, which adds uncomfortable subtext to her character's burnout storyline). The Intelligence Unit's methods get darker; the show's moral compass spins like a Chicago alley wind vane. Region 4 DVDs include closed captions but skip the behind-the-scenes fluff—these sets assume you're here for the episodic grind, not the DVD extras. Explore our current copy of Chicago P.D.: Season Four or browse more Crime books at Patina.

Chicago P.D.: Season Five — Universal

The post-Lindsay rebuild with Upton stepping up. Season Five (2017–2018) introduces Detective Hailey Upton (Tracy Spiridakos) as Lindsay's replacement and recalibrates the team dynamic—22 episodes of procedural comfort food with occasional gut-punches. The Intelligence Unit tackles sex trafficking rings, cartel violence, and a dirty-cop subplot that actually sticks. Voight's relationship with his estranged son Justin provides the season's emotional spine before a mid-season tragedy resets the board. These Universal pressings ship with the same no-frills packaging as Seasons Two through Four—plastic case, episode guide insert, zero commentary tracks. Explore our current copy of Chicago P.D.: Season Five or browse more Crime books at Patina. As of June 2026, Patina's Crime collection includes these four consecutive Chicago P.D. seasons plus the 2002 musical Chicago on DVD (Renee Zellweger, Catherine Zeta-Jones, cell block tango—completely unrelated but alphabetically adjacent on the shelf). The P.D. sets represent 88 episodes of Dick Wolf's Chicago procedural machine at cruising altitude—morally compromised cops, serialised arcs threaded through episodic cases, and Jason Beghe's voice doing things gravel shouldn't be able to do. If you're stocking a Blue Mountains Airbnb DVD library or building a One Chicago franchise archive, these Universal Region 4 pressings deliver the broadcast edits without the streaming subscription creep. Shop all Crime books at Patina Paperbacks →

Where can I buy Chicago P.D. complete seasons on DVD in Australia?

Patina Paperbacks stocks preloved Universal Region 4 pressings of Chicago P.D. Seasons Two through Five—88 episodes spanning 2014 to 2018. We ship Australia-wide from Sydney, free over $29. As of June 2026, these four seasons represent our current Intelligence Unit holdings; Season One occasionally surfaces but isn't currently on the shelf.

Are Chicago P.D. DVDs region-locked for Australian players?

Yes—Universal released these as Region 4 (Australia/New Zealand) discs, which play on Australian DVD players and PAL-system TVs without modification. Region 1 (US/Canada) imports require a region-free player. The sets Patina stocks are local pressings, so compatibility is guaranteed for Australian hardware.

Do the Chicago P.D. DVD sets include special features or just episodes?

Universal's Region 4 releases are bare-bones—episodes, closed captions, episode synopses on the sleeve, nothing more. No deleted scenes, no commentary tracks, no behind-the-scenes featurettes. These pressings assume you're here for the 22–23 episodes per season, not the DVD extras Dick Wolf procedurals rarely bother producing anyway.

Is the 2002 Chicago musical DVD related to Chicago P.D.?

Not even slightly—Chicago (2002) is Rob Marshall's Prohibition-era musical starring Renee Zellweger and Catherine Zeta-Jones, adapted from the 1975 Kander and Ebb stage show. It shares a city name and a crime-adjacent plot (Roxie Hart shoots her lover, hires a celebrity lawyer, becomes tabloid famous) but zero narrative connection to Dick Wolf's 2014 police procedural. Patina shelves them together under Crime because alphabetical shelving makes strange bedfellows.

Can I stream Chicago P.D. instead of buying DVDs in Australia?

As of June 2026, Chicago P.D. streams on Stan and Binge in Australia, but both require active subscriptions and catalogue rights shift unpredictably. DVDs guarantee access regardless of licensing negotiations—you own the episodes, the streaming platform can't revoke them, and there's no buffering when the Telstra NBN node decides to take a smoke break. Physical media is the long game.

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