The life of a young teenager beautiful and smart girl named Tessa Altman, who enjoys her life with her friends in New York, has been changed completely when her father forces her to move into a new town of Chatswin, the thing that makes her struggle against coping with the suburban life there. A new season begins with Tessa who struggles against returning to Chatswin, as she was singing the holiday with her grandma.
Strike Back is much more than well-choreographed firefights and blood-chilling terrorist atrocities. Where it truly excels is in showing the emotional costs paid by the super soldiers doing their jobs and by the witnesses and/or victims of all the mayhem.
Lots of location shots give Strike Back an unusually acute sense of realism, and the show wisely spends more time with the boys in the field than with the command unit back home.
It's a show without pretensions. It knows exactly what it is and doesn't apologize for that, but simply aspires to be the best version of itself that it can be.
It's the absurdly over-the-top machismo of countless firefights and explosions and high-body-count carnage that makes Strike Back such a cheese-tastic guilty pleasure.