Archive pour la catégorie ‘DVD’

Click here for an unbiased review of Walker Texas Ranger: The Complete Series Pack – DVD – $182.49

Samedi 18 décembre 2010

Walker Texas Ranger: The Complete Series Pack. Walker Texas Ranger: The Complete Series Pack

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  • Amazon Sales Rank: #17552 in DVD
  • Brand: Walker
  • Released on: 2010-03-09
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Box set, Color, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 51

All The Seasons are Here (Technically 1-8)5
All of the seasons are here in this pack (Seasons 1-8), with of course the exception of the special made for TV movies. There is technically no Season 9. The reason being is because the first three episodes were « Pilot » episodes to see if the show would be a hit, which comprised a kind of pre Season 1/Season 1. Once the show took off the creators made 24 more episodes, which made up the official first season. Technically we can combine the three Pilot Episodes with Season 1, giving us a total of 27 episodes for a complete first season. I do not have the box set but do have the individual seasons that I purchased as the shows were released. If you compare the photographs of the complete box set with the individual seasons you will see they are identical. I received Season 7 today, and compared the episode list with the one found here ([...]), and they match up (with the exception of the fact that the Wikipedia list in one of the seasons reorders a few of the shows when compared with DVD jacket, a minor error on Wikipedia’s part I believe). So all in all, the complete series is here!!

Chuck Norris’ acting can cure depression!!!5
After hearing of all of Chuck’s amazing feats, I was skeptical that the series would live up to all the hype. But once I witnessed his acts myself, I am a firm believer. « The Complete Series » epitomizes the pure awesomeness that is Texas. I hope my television can survive all nine seasons of round-house kicks…

Misleading Titles1
The item claims to be a « COMPLETE SERIES PACK »; however, it is missing SEASON 8 and WALKER, TEXAS RANGER: TRIAL BY FIRE.

The pack only has SEASON 1, SEASON 2, SEASON 3, SEASON 4, SEASON 5, SEASON 6, SEASON 7, and THE FINAL SEASON (SEASON 9).

A truly complete series pack will eventually be released once SEASON 8 arrives.

Goji Berries Health Properties

Buffy the Vampire Slayer – The Complete Series Seasons 1-7 Review.

Dimanche 5 décembre 2010

Buffy the Vampire Slayer - The Complete Series Seasons 1-7

Buffy the Vampire Slayer – The Complete Series Seasons 1-7 Review.

Compare & Purchase Buffy the Vampire Slayer – The Complete Series Seasons 1-7 at Amazon by clicking here!

List Price: $339.86

Amazon Price: $305.99

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Buffy the Vampire Slayer – The Complete Series Seasons 1-7 Description:

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #69699 in DVD
  • Released on: 2005-04-12
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English, Spanish
  • Number of discs: 39

Customer Reviews:

In my opinion, the finest series in the history of TV5
Most serious fans of BUFFY THE VAMPIRE already own all of the individual sets that make up this DVD collection, so I thought I would address this review to those who own none of them and will make up the primary target for this set and focus on two questions. First, how does this set differ from the individual season collections? The answer is that they are identical. This set does not represent a new product in any way, but merely collects all of the seasons in a new, low price. If you don’t own any of the individual seasons, this is an absolutely ideal way to discover the Buffyverse. Second (and for me this is the fun part), what’s this Buffy chick all about?

What sets BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER apart from most other shows, apart from the individual brilliant scripts that graced most of the episodes, is that the show over the course of seven seasons tells a story. What the casual viewer of the show could easily miss is the semi-tragic themes underlying the series: young, happy cheerleader and inevitable prom queen is pulled away by destiny from the life she loves to unwillingly undertake the burden of being her generation’s Chosen One: a super-empowered heroine to fight against the powers of darkness. This is a responsibility she has neither sought nor desired, and one of the persistent themes of the show is that destiny basically dealt Buffy a nasty set of cards. Sure, she has super strength and agility and recuperative powers, but she also knows how she became The Slayer: someone else died. For one becomes the Slayer only by the death of another Slayer, which calls attention to the fact that she, too, is destined to die to make way for another Slayer. As she puts it in one episode, « Every slayer comes with an expiration date. » She goes from a carefree, happy young girl to someone who wonders if she will make it to the age of 25.

Ultimately, however, the show isn’t about a girl with super powers, but about taking responsibility for one’s life, for accepting the cards that life has dealt one and making the most of that. Over the course of seven seasons all of the major characters struggle with this precise issue. All of them continually have to face up to the demands of the moral, and what is unusual for a genre show, they all have to work hard to be better people. More than about fighting vampires, the show is ultimately about the fighting of one’s inner demons, with the external monsters being mere metaphors for that which lies within. As a result, all of the major characters changed dramatically over the course of seven seasons.

A second great theme of the show is that of community. The show actually contains a bit of a lie in the famous opening words that introduced the show in the first season: it says that unto each generation a Slayer is born and that SHE ALONE possesses the strength to fight the vampires and demons. Only, that isn’t at all the case on the show. In fact, Buffy becomes less, not more, effective when she becomes a loner. As Spike, an evil vampire who has killed two Slayers in the past, said at the beginning of Season Two: « A Slayer with family and friends. That sure as hell wasn’t in the brochure. » And it isn’t! Says so right at the beginning of the show. The Intro should read « She and her extensive support network » will fight the demons. And showing that no one understands this better than Spike, in Season Four he attempts to help a demon destroy the Slayer by sowing discord among the Scoobies, as the demon fighting buddies referred to themselves (this was before Sarah Michelle Gellar’s unfortunate forays into the SCOOBY DOO movies). He fails when the four key members respond by forging a stronger bond than ever.

Over the seven seasons, Buffy struggles constantly against her destiny, initially fighting and resisting it, gradually accepting it, frequently resenting it, and eventually embracing it before the magnificent resolution in the final episode. While there is always only one Slayer (though on Buffy, there are two, but that is a different though very interesting story), there are always many potential Slayers. In the final episode of the series, Buffy realizes how they can make all the potential Slayers into actual Slayers, and after they do so they are able to defeat the baddies and save the world from evil, again. In literally the last five seconds of the series, Faith, the other Slayer, asks Buffy what she’s going to do now that she’s no longer the only Slayer. In a beautiful resolution of the central tragedy in the series, a blissful, contented, expectant smile breaks out over Buffy’s face. Her life has been given back to her. The expiration date has been repealed.

Those who have only occasionally dipped into the show will not be able to appreciate how brilliantly written the show is. It is as if every individual writer knew every other line ever written in the show, and the result is a self-consciousness in the series that is highly unusual for TV. At the very end of Season Six, for instance, Buffy’s best friend Willow utters the words, « Bored now, » which is not merely a reference to something she said in Season Three, but brilliantly explains where her character is at that point in the show. The scripts are, in my opinion, simply the best TV has ever seen. They are dramatic, they are believable (astonishing in a show about vampires), they are profoundly emotional, and they are funny. In fact, the show really did manage to be several things at once. I think this ability to stride several fences is one of the reasons why BUFFY, though easily the finest show on television for most of its run, never won or even received an Emmy nomination for Best Show. Should it have been nominated as Best Drama or Best Comedy? (The complete neglect by the extraordinarily conservative Emmys of BUFFY has inspired Salon to create a new TV award, the Buffy, for the most unjustly neglected show on TV, with THE WIRE as the first recipient.)

The writing really was the key. I don’t want to imply that other things weren’t done as well. Though not one of the great casts in TV history, all of the actors did a great job and there were some truly memorable characters, from Buffy to Willow, Xander, Spike, Giles, Cordy, Anya, and Angel (who went on to star in his own spin off). The sets were always first rate and it was one of the few shows on TV to have its own utterly unique look, merely from the lighting and camerawork. Speaking of camerawork, few TV shows have ever taken so much care with the way scenes were shot. There was even their own unique blend of camp. For instance, fighting vampires is tough work, but Buffy inevitably went on patrol wearing some incredibly stylish outfits. My favorite is when she goes to the graveyard in Season Six wearing an ankle length white cashmere duster. I’m sure anyone about to engage in physical combat would decide to wear such an expensive and delicate item. But as good as all of these elements were, it all came in the end back to the writing. The show was brilliantly written on multiple levels. Many of the episodes were astonishingly good, but within them the individual lines were simply astonishing. I have many shows that I love, but in the history of television there are only two that contains dozens of lines that I can recall with ease: MONTY PYTHON and BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER. But apart from the individual episodes and the huge panoply of memorable lines, the seasons were almost always well conceived and executed. And even when individual seasons contained flaws in their, such as Seasons 4 and 7, these were more than made up for by the way they all fit into a larger story.

In the end, no series that I know of had a better story to tell than BUFFY. As much as I loved THE X-FILES, the series was always better on the individual episode level than it was as a whole. Lone episodes of THE X-FILES are as good as any in the history of TV, but the deep back story by the end of the series ended up being more than a little muddled and incomplete. When BUFFY ended, there was a single brilliant and marvelously develop tale of a young girl who was forced to give up her life for the greater good, but who in the end managed to get her life back again. I honestly believe that BUFFY will be the gold standard for television shows in the future. It has raised the bar for what can be done and should be done on television, so in the end Buffy might not have saved the world from the powers of evil; she just might have saved television as well.

Looking forward to a great collection5
A friend got me hooked on Buffy earlier this year by loaning me her season-by-season sets (seasons 1-6, still waiting for 7). I was skeptical, and season 1 didn’t do much to move me–clever dialogue, yeah, but the monster-of-the-week format didn’t seem like anything special. But by the third episode of Season 2, I was hooked. I was watching two and three episodes of Buffy a night, watching the characters grow and change in fast-forward.

There are websites that dissect the occasional flaws and inconsistencies of fact, but what I was amazed at was how consistent it was at heart. The characters change and grow, they have good weeks and bad, but they all grow in ways consistent with their characters as we first meet them.

And we come to care about them, deeply–to feel for their pains and losses, to grow frustrated with their weaknesses and blind spots. Yes, the series is full of humor and adventure and scary demons, but ultimately, it is full of these rich and complex characters, their trials, their fears, the dilemmas–big and small–that they must wrestle, and the internal demons they must face.

The first person to review this box says that « this set does not represent a new product in any way, but merely collects all of the seasons in a new, low price. » I’m hoping that that’s not precisely the case. Yes, the discs will hold precisely the content of the seven individual season collections. however, while there is no picture for this collection as I write this, on Amazon’s site in the UK, there are pictures of a nice single vertical box with an embossed seal on the outside and each season in its own CD-sized package. The spines of the season packages stack up to assemble an image of Buffy. While the UK package is a limited edition (10,000 copies), I’m hoping that the US packaging for this complete collection will be equally unique and attractive (and compact). [UPDATE: Unfortunately, this was not the case. I bought this set, and I'm not at all disappointed by the quality of the discs or the series, but I really would have preferred a more compact and unified package for the entire series, and I think Fox Video is being quite stupid by offering that delicious looking package to just 10,000 Brits and not to American fans.]

Great Series – WAIT FOR LIMITED EDITION!5
Great series.

BUT DON’T BUY THIS RELEASE! The entire series is being released November 15 for only 199! You’ll get the previously released 7 seasons of Buffy (39 discs), plus a special bonus disc containing a brand new documentary featuring Joss Whedon. Each box will be individually numbered, and will contain a signed letter from Joss Whedon, and a comprehensive book filled with episode listings and memorable Buffy quotes.

Do yourself a favor. Don’t buy this. Just wait. You’ll be glad you did.

Electric Cigarette Review

Seinfeld – The Complete Series Lowest Price!

Vendredi 10 septembre 2010

Seinfeld - The Complete Series

Seinfeld – The Complete Series Lowest Price!

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List Price: $250.95

Amazon Price: $161.99

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Seinfeld – The Complete Series Description:

No show captured the eccentricities of New York like the Larry David-created sitcom Seinfeld. Helping to define America’s view of New Yorkers, the series gained endless fans over its nine season run. Though it wasn’t the first show to assert the rudeness of Gotham’s citizens, its characters are selfish to a fault–not that there’s anything wrong with that. Self-obsessed comedian Jerry Seinfeld is joined in the cast by his neurotic ex-girlfriend, Elaine (Julia Louis-Dreyfus); his chronically lazy pal, George (Jason Alexander); and Cosmo Kramer (Michael Richards), who takes the sitcom cliche of the weird neighbor to impressive new heights. Despite their faults (or perhaps because of them), they’re some of the most hilariously watchable characters in television history. The entire series is presented here.

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #707 in DVD
  • Brand: SEINFELD,JERRY
  • Released on: 2007-11-06
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Number of discs: 32
  • Formats: Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, NTSC
  • Original language: English, French
  • Subtitled in: Spanish
  • Number of discs: 32
  • Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
  • Running time: 4140 minutes

Features

  • Never Watch. Dvd New

Customer Reviews:

One of the cleverest TV shows ever made now in one boxed set5
To me, Seinfeld can basically be broken into three parts – seasons one and two where the series is just finding itself, seasons three through seven in which absolutely everything clicks due to the cast’s great on-screen rapport and the genius of Larry David, and the last two seasons after Larry David’s departure in which the focus shifted somewhat from a satirical look at the uglier side of human nature to zany comedy. Usually every episode was a stand-alone. In fact, some of the early episodes are so stand-alone as to have the audience wonder what happened. In season two’s « The Deal », Elaine and Jerry decide to try combining their current friendship (« this ») with their past by sleeping together (« that »). As George portends though, it is pretty much impossible to mix « this and that » without eventually losing both. The end of the episode shows Jerry and Elaine pretty much settling into « this that and the other » – a romantic relationship – and then the series just drops the subject like the whole episode never happened.

Occasionally Seinfeld would have a story arc of sorts. For example, in season four the show poked fun at network television executives and their decision-making process when George and Jerry wind up pitching the idea for « a TV show about nothing » to NBC. The two offer up what is essentially the script of the widely acclaimed Seinfeld episode « The Chinese Restaurant ». The network suits are unimpressed. As an alternative George and Jerry present a ridiculous plot in which a judge sentences someone who has hit Jerry’s car to be his butler. This time the suits are bowled over. Seinfeld also truly had a gift for entertaining while pushing the audience to the brink of offense. « The Bubble Boy » presents the audience with a rude and obnoxious individual as the victim of an immune deficiency disease versus the patient angels that usually play this role. « The Outing » introduced the phrase « not that there’s anything wrong with that » into American pop culture and also smartly satirized political correctness. « The Junior Mint » shows George in familiar form when he pleads with Jerry not to intervene to save an artist’s life because it would devalue the artist’s paintings he has purchased in anticipation of that same artist’s death.

The show is often absurd, and though it seems impossible that such a group of self-absorbed people could carry on even the pretense of a multi-year friendship, something about it is oddly familiar to most of us. That is at least partly because of the great interaction between the main characters in which they have both comic and straight-man duties depending on the situation, making their relationships seem real although exaggerated.

As far as the details on the set, it is a 32-disc, two-volume set offering all 180 episodes of the show along with « The Official Coffee Table Book, » a 226-page, bound anthology filled with photos, quotes, trivia from every episode, and personal reflections from Jerry. The collectible book also includes a bonus disc featuring « The Roundtable, » an hour-long round table discussion among the four cast and creator Larry David reminiscing about the award-winning show’s run on air.

9 Years of Living Haphazardly5
This box set (and by the way the TV show behind it) deserves every star it can possibly get. Offering us the long view on « Seinfeld, » from day one to day last, it allows us to see the scope of this greatest of all television shows, transmogrifying itself from Jerry-In-Red-Sweatpants at the beginning to Jerry-In-Lear-Jet at the end, like the old drawing of Darwin’s « ape-caveman-upright man » progression.

And we see that the ape era wasn’t so bad, after all; in fact, looked at as part of the show’s evolution, the first two seasons, while the writers and actors were finding their voices, were the truest period of all for the show. Scrambling (sometimes raging) to find something, ANYthing to make a show about, Larry David and Jerry Seinfeld plumbed the best of their depths, offering a crash course in late-20th century survival of the un-fittest. Even at its 4th-season artistic zenith, the show would never be this real.

With the whole thing here in one place, we can even see that there are periods to this show as with any longterm work. The first period (Seasons 1-2) is the most grounded in reality; the second period (Seasons 3-5) is the most artistically rich, where the show has truly found its niche and explores it like a kid in a Toys R Us with an unlimited charge account; the third period (Seasons 6-7) is the wheels-are-off-the-wagon period, where anything goes as long as it’s funny, no idea is too insane; the fourth and final period (Seasons 8-9) is just as anything-goes but it gets just a bit too manic at times, and you occasionally lose the suspension of disbelief you need to enjoy any work of fiction. Still, there is no « bad » season of this show, and no single episode is completely devoid of that brilliant « Seinfeld » wit that made this one of the most popular television shows of all time.

But scope is not all this set offers. It offers, simply, EVERYTHING. Confident that you have every episode at your fingertips, you can flip through the set for a show like you’d flip through the Bible for a quote (that’s not going too far, is it?). Pick « The Red Dot, » then pick « The Limo, » then pick « The Puffy Shirt, » then pick « The Finale. » On and on it goes, until you’ve seen so many you forget which ones you’ve seen and you start again. It’s all there. And all the extras from all the box sets, from the feature-length documentary on the creation of the show to the great « Inside Looks » and the (frankly kind of useless) commentaries.

New for this box set is a Seinfeld Coffee Table Book, which is kind of the trivia-rich « Notes About Nothing » segments rolled into a single volume. Also included is an hour-long special recorded in 2007 featuring the original four cast members and Larry David watching and commenting on various clips from the show’s nine-year run. It’s fun and interesting, but it probably won’t be watched more than once or twice. The « Inside Looks » are better for tidbits and insight into the show’s workings. Finally, the packaging simply couldn’t be better: tight, durable, compact. As always, they’ve cared enough to think of everything.

I love this show, I can watch it again and again, and it bugs me every time I hear people (even Seinfeld and co. themselves) talking about the characters as unredeemable or even vaguely sociopathic. The characters in « Seinfeld » are not anything like that. I think this misinterpretation, which is widespread even among the show’s fans, is the fault of the actors and producers themselves, who have famously said that « Seinfeld » is a « no-learning, no-hugging » show. They themselves sold the characters as unredeemable; but the fact is that the 4-way friendship portrayed in this show is the strongest friendship ever portrayed on television. To me, that’s what makes « Seinfeld » so great. What that show is REALLY about is people living in a massive, overwhelming urban environment (which, in our society of computers and malls and digital cable is everyone, even those living in small towns) who create and maintain a small outpost of human closeness, of love, in the face of that industrial anonymity we all feel closing in every day. That’s certainly why I react to it, and why I’ve watched it so often. Not just the dialogue and the unorthodox structure of the show, which is brilliant, and not just the dead-on satire of modern American culture, but the relationships. « Seinfeld » is deeper than it ever sold itself.

All in all the complete box set is everything you could ask for, assuming you already like « Seinfeld. » If you don’t, come on, you’re not plunking down two hundred bucks for this thing anyway.

Quit complaining. This DVD set is awesome!5
i had seasons 1-8 already. a couple of them i bought, but the others i asked for and received as gifts for christmas, birthdays, and even father’s day. once i saw other shows releasing complete series sets, i assumed the same thing would be done with seinfeld, and i was right. i wanted this complete series set for the book, the packaging, and the bonus disc, so today i went to best buy and bought it for $169.99 and it even came in a limited fridge pack with magnets….so to me it was worth it. i enjoyed the first eight season dvd sets, but now i’m really happy with this complete series set. however, instead of complaining like so many people seem to be doing, i’ll just put my first eight seasons on eBay, get what i can for them, and consider it as money going towards this set. i really don’t see why people are getting so worked up over this.