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| Dvdivas
was founded by John Gabbard in 2000. It's purpose has been and
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the latest dvds and movie reviews. It will continue to be your
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“Seinfeld:
The Gift Set Seasons 1, 2 & 3”
|
 |
Reviewed
by: |
Wayne A.Klein |
| Genre: |
Comedy |
| Video: |
1.33:1 Full
screen |
| Audio: |
Dolby Digital
Surround 2.0 |
| Languages |
English |
| Subtitles |
English |
| Length |
942 minutes
|
| Rating |
NR |
| Release Date |
11/26/04
|
| Studio |
Columbia
Tristar Home Video |
| Commentary:
|
Larry David
& Jerry Seinfeld on “The Stake Out” “The Deal”, “The Pen”, “The
Pez Dispenser”; Jason Alexander, Julia Louis-Drefus and Michael
Richards on “The Revenge”, “The Busboy”, “The Subway” and “The
Boyfriend 1 & 2”; Writer Larry Charles on “The Heart Attack”,
“The Baby Shower”, “The Library” and “The Limo”, Producer-director
Tom Cherones and production designer Tom Azzari on “ “ The Parking
Space” and “The Parking Garage” |
| Documentaries:
|
“How it Began”
|
| Featurettes:
|
“Kramer vs. Kramer: Kenny
to Cosmo” |
| Filmography/Biography:
|
None |
|
Interviews: |
“Inside Looks”
|
| Trailers/TV
Spots: |
None |
| Alternate/Deleted
Scenes: |
Deleted scenes,
opening stand up footage shot but never aired |
| Music
Video: |
None |
| Other:
|
Two version of the pilot episode,
Copy of Larry David’s original script, salt & pepper shakers
from Mork’s Diner, collectible playing cards, “Tonight Show”
footage, promos, outtakes & bloopers, “Notes About Nothing:
Trivia Tracks” |
| Cast
and Crew: |
Jerry Seinfeld, Jason Alexander,
Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Michael Richards, Richard Fancy, Estelle
Harris |
| Written
By: |
Larry David, Jerry Seinfeld, Bobby
Farrelly, Peter Farrelly, Larry Charles |
| Produced
By: |
Larry David & Jerry Seinfeld, Andy
Ackerman |
| Directed
By: |
David Steinberg,
Tom Cherones, Jason Alexander, Joshua White |
| Music:
|
Jonathan
Woolf |
| The
Review: |
Get Out! “Seinfeld” on DVD? He’s
already the Master of His Domain why would be need to release
it on DVD? Because the fans demanded it and justice can only
be served if one of the most popular and best sitcoms can
be viewed, uncut and with lots and lots of background material
on this groundbreaking show. When “The Seinfeld Chronicles”
(the original title) first aired as a limited series no one
suspected it would be the next big thing. Seinfeld and his
collaborator/co-creator/co-producer and frequent co-writer
Larry David pushed TV comedy to its boundaries and then demolished
them. They’d then establish new boundaries and demolish those.
That’s groundbreaking, important television. It’s also what
made “Seinfeld” unique. Sure, “Who’s The Boss?” could be funny
but it had to be about something where someone learned something
in every episode. Seinfeld’s and David’s mantra “learn nothing
and be about nothing” proved that TV touching on the absurdity
of real life could be funnier than TV where the characters
learned valuable lessons and became better people. In truth,
that rarely happens in the real world and the fact that Seinfeld
made fun of and played with that convention made it important.
It helped that it was damn funny as well. ---
|
| Image
and Sound: |
Looks like
something here in a marvelous high definition transfer from
Columbia-Tristar. The good news is that even though the show
was videotaped, the quality of the picture and sound for most
of those analog episodes continues to look great. The blacks
are solid for a videotaped program and the colors are as real
and true as they appeared over a decade ago. --- |
| The
Extras: |
For a show
about nothing this boxed set spends plenty of time and space
talking about the something special that made this an outstanding
show. The hour long documentary has interesting, revealing
tidbits including a shocker from Julia Louis- Dreyfus—she
never saw the original pilot episode. In fact, she didn’t
see it until she prepped for the commentary tracks and interview
for this boxed set. Larry David’s acerbic dry fatalistic sense
of humor (which informs his terrific show “Curb Your Enthusiasm”
on HBO) along with the witty, informed but ultimately wacky
observations of the rest of the cast and crew make this a
marvelous documentary. Unlike the featurettes or documentaries
on a lot of TV shows (any of the “Sex and the City” ones for
example), to invert a famous quip by a famous writer, “there’s
there there”. Substance for a show about nothing what an ironic
twist but in reality “Senfield” was about something. It was
about the absurd little moments that populate our lives but
a little more twisted. ***
“Kramer
vs. Kramer” allows the real life inspiration for Cosmo Kramer
to comment on his fictional counterpart. Kenny Kramer comes
across as wacky and weird as Cosmo but a little scarier in
that he occupies real space. We also get outtakes, bloopers
(watch Jerry and the cast screw everything up and make the
screw ups almost as funny as the scripts) and deleted scenes
from episodes that ran a little but too long. “Master of His
Domain” features the stand up material that introduced much
of the first and second season (before it was ultimately seen
as unnecessary) that was shot but never featured in the show.
You can well imagine which episodes they were intended for
and guess pretty accurately without seeing any info on the
subject. “Sponsored by Vandelay Industries” features the funny
promo ads and trailers that NBC ran to promote the show. “Inside
Looks” provides a glimpse behind-the-scenes as to what was
really happening when various episodes were shot. There’s
also some discussion about improve on the set, what inspired
the various episodes and the chemistry that the ensemble cast
had together. We also have the chance to see trivia about
the various episodes but, more importantly, two slightly different
versions of the pilot episode that play a bit different as
well. It’s like entering the Bizarro Universe from Superman
at times. ***
The boxed
set of the first three seasons is the way to go. There’s really
not a bad episode among them and “Seinfeld”, like “Star Trek:
The Original Series” literally hit the ground running. Yes,
the series developed but it’s frightening how good and sure
these first three seasons are. That’s rare in TV. There’s
also a copy of Larry David’s script for with comments about
the script, playing cards and, more importantly, replicas
of the salt and pepper shakers from “Monk’s”. It’s pricey
but, really, it’s the best bargain. ---
|
| Commentary:
|
Sharp, witty
and frequently funny observations pop up in the 15 commentary
tracks for the episodes from the first three seasons. While
all of them are good, those featuring David, Seinfeld and the
rest of the cast work best. Why? Because we are familiar with
all of them and it’s like inviting friends into your living
room to comment on their own home movies and embarrassing photos.
|
| Final
Words: |
Yada-yada-yada,
yabba-dabby-doo, get out! |
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