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| Dvdivas
was founded by John Gabbard in 2000. It's purpose has been and
remains to be to provide you, the entertainment community with
the latest dvds and movie reviews. It will continue to be your
link to the most popular dvd movies. |
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“The Office
Season - 1"
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Reviewed
by: |
Brad Jones |
| Genre: |
TV Sitcom
/ Comedy |
| Video: |
1.78:1 Anamorphic
Widescreen |
| Audio: |
Dolby Digital
Stereo 2.0 |
| Languages |
English |
| Subtitles |
Spanish |
| Length |
135 Minutes
|
| Rating |
TV-14 |
| Release Date |
August 16th
2005 |
| Studio |
Universal
Studios |
| Commentary:
|
2 Different
Cast & Crew Commentary Tracks on "Pilot," plus cast and crew
on "Diversity," "The Alliance," and "Basketball." |
| Documentaries:
|
None |
| Featurettes:
|
None |
| Filmography/Biography:
|
None |
|
Interviews: |
None |
| Trailers/TV
Spots: |
None |
| Alternate/Deleted
Scenes: |
Deleted Scenes
from various episodes. |
| Music
Video: |
None |
| Other:
|
None |
| Cast
and Crew: |
Steve Carell,
Rainn Wilson, John Krasinski, Jenna Fischer, BJ Novak |
| Written
By: |
Ricky Gervais,
Greg Daniels, Stephen Merchant, Mindy Kaling, BJ Novak, Paul
Leiberstein, Michael Schur, Gene Stupnitsky |
| Produced
By: |
Teri Weinberg,
Kent Zbornak |
| Directed
By: |
Greg Daniels, Brian Gordan, Amy Heckerling, Ken Kwapis,
Ken Whittingham
|
| Music:
|
Assorted |
| The
Review: |
This American version of "The Office"
was filmed with exceeding high expectations and then put on
hold once that other American translation with high expectation
managed to bomb out after only 4 episodes aired: and that
was "Coupling." NBC bosses waited for the right time to showcase
their own version of the Ricky Gervais BBC hit, and it was
the right thing to do. This show does not need to die out
after 4 episodes, it does not need to bomb and become an embarassment.
This show needs to stick around forever and ever and ever.
If I'm 80 years old and staggering to reach my Hot Pocket,
I still want to see "The Office" on the air. I love the BBC
version, and it gets it right for completely different reason
than this show does. They both exist in seperate worlds and
that works all for the better. From the people I have talked
to who actually hate this version, it is for no other reason
than their devotation to the original. That's not the way
to go about this. There are things in this world that are
indeed above being remade, but if the original works, it works,
and if a remake works, it works. This one works so well and
succeeds at its own speed and pace, that you forget it is
actually a remake. *****
The problem with the American version
of "Coupling" was that the first 3 episodes were taken directly,
almost word for word, from Stephan Moffat's original and brilliant
scripts. It was awkward, it didn't translate well, and the
actors weren't being characters, they were doing bad impressions.
The only time in "The Office" where anything from an original
script is used is during "The Pilot" episode. And even then,
I'd say about only half of the jokes from that original script
are used, and it is padded with some genius new material.
When an actor is doing something that is from the BBC version,
it is performed with the delivery of their own character,
such as the scene where John Krasinski places Rainn Wilson's
office items in jello. In the BBC version, Ricky Gervais was
almost saddened when the character wouldn't eat it out of
the jello. In this version, the great Steve Carell is sarcastically
pissed off in a way. Both are absolutely hilarious. ******
But the key difference that we
really have here is that between Gervais' David Brent character
and Carell's Michael Scott. Brent was rude and obnoxious,
but in a way to where he knew he was being rude and obnoxious.
We've all had bosses like that, and despite all the problems
he had emotionally, he was almost charming in a way. Michael
Scott on the other hand is a terror. A man who does not know
he is loathed with a passion around the building. He is so
offensive, so smarmy, so cocky, and such the epitomy of all
that is evil (and that all works by the way), that I can remember
one boss that I had who was like that. He was fired. What
Carell does here is quite genius, in how he takes a character
who if it were played by a different actor, it would most
certainly not work about 90% of the time, and I'm being generous
there. I personally cannot see someone else playing Michael
Scott as well. Despite all of his faults, he begs you to like
him. I easily compare it with Vince Vaughn in "Made." One
step over, and the character would be unwatchable. Carell
makes sure that that never happenes. It's a brilliant performance.
******
Even the supporting cast works
their charms like magic. Rainn Wilson's Dwight is that nightmare
co-worker who plots to have every single one of the co-worker's
fired in an instant, while proclaiming that he's higher up
on the job scale than he actually is. The possible romantic
relationship between John Krasinski's Jim and Jenna Fischer's
Pam is obviously taken from the BBC version, but is given
it's own level of sweetness and realism that it could exist
perfectly without even being taken from the original. Jim
is the character on the show that we all can relate to: to
guy who buys himself a mini bottle of champagne for his big
sale, and even though he doesn't win it, he considers that
day a good one when Pam falls asleep resting her head on his
shoulder. There are many quiet moments like this that make
the new "Office" the treasure that it is, and I cannot wait
for it to come back next season.
|
| Image
and Sound: |
When the
show origially aired, it was shown in a high definition widescreen
format, much like many other NBC shows are doing. That image
and sound quality is also transferred to this DVD and it is
absolutally clear as day, and with the Stereo option on your
DVD, you can actually play it all at a much higher full blast
than you can when watching it on regular TV. |
| The
Extras: |
Various
deleted scenes are featured on here, and they are one step
higher than most deleted scenes that are featured on many
DVD's. These actually could have made it on the air. Some
of them are just as fresh and funny as the material that we've
seen. The show is jam packed with biting satirical comedy
and quick cuts, that it's obvious that some would have to
be cut to make the show not go over it's running time, so
what we have here are a lot of those quick cuts, such as more
scenes of office rivalry between Jim and Dwight, plus a lot
of inner office phone conversations and water cooler chatter.
|
| Commentary:
|
Commentary
tracks are provided on 4 of the episodes. "The Pilot" gets 2
different tracks featuring different members of the cast and
crew. "Diversity Day," "The Alliance," and "Basketball" also
feature their own tracks. Carell makes appearences on all except
for "The Alliance," though Rainn Wilson and John Krasinski are
feature prominantly on this particular commentary, and that's
the way to go, seeing how that particular episode revolved mostly
around those two characters. This is obviously a series that
these people are all proud of. Their level of laughter and willingness
to talk about the series on these tracks is clear and there's
rarely a low moment without someone mentioning something insightful.
A lot of whom actually suggest different ideas in terms of the
series writing. BJ Novak who portrays the Intern on the show,
was even credited as writer for "Diversity Day." |
| Final
Words: |
Last season, the show did phenominal
on it's premiere night, but when NBC moved it to Tuesday's
to make way for more schlockfest from Donald Trump, the show
didn't score as high. The fault for that could rest on all
the websites still proclaiming that the show would still be
on Thursday nights. This is a show that deserves to be on
Thursday. Steve Carell just opened at #1 at the Box Office
with "The 40 Year Old Virgin." I hope to god that gets people
interested in this show, which deserves just as much as anything
else to succeed. The deal with NBC is that it usually appears
as if when they themselves like a show, they throw it all
the meat that it needs. I've heard them talk about this show.
They dig it, they want it to live, and that's a great thing.
In the ratings last season, "Committed" scored higher than
"The Office," and "Committed" was cancelled. I hope in all
honesty NBC continues to dig this show, because I know that
I sure as hell do. *****
The DVD is listed at a low price
for a TV show on DVD, and that's because there were only 6
episodes in the 1st season. This is a single disc DVD, and
not a box set, but even if this were a DVD listed at about
30 or 40 or even 50 dollars, these 6 episodes made up such
great and refreshing television last season, that it would
be in everyone's best interest to atleast check it out and
give it a chance. Don't be a BBC purist, watch this show with
a completely opened mind, and you'll realize that the two
series actually are two different series. In the NBC "Coupling,"
all the characters had the same names as the BBC version.
In "The Office," the names here are different. That actually
says a lot here.
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