Description: Jerry Seinfeld DVD Gift Box Set Seasons 1 2 3 Jerry Stiller Seinfeld GiftsetProduct DescriptionSeinfeld Giftset includes Seasons 1-3 DVD Limited Edition Script Monk's Salt & Pepper Shakers Playing Cards Product detailsActors: Jerry Seinfeld, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Michael Richards, Jason Alexander, Ruth CohenDirectors: Jason Alexander, Art Wolff, David Steinberg, Joshua White, Tom CheronesWriters: Bill Masters, Bob Shaw, Don McEneryFormat: Box set, Color, Dolby, Full Screen, Subtitled, NTSCLanguage: English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo), French (Dolby Digital 2.0), Spanish (Dolby Digital 2.0)Subtitles: English, Spanish, French, PortugueseDubbed: French, SpanishSubtitles for the Hearing Impaired: EnglishRegion: Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)PLEASE NOTE: Some Region 1 DVDs may contain Regional Coding Enhancement (RCE). Some, but not all, of our international customers have had problems playing these enhanced discs on what are called "region-free" DVD players. For more information on RCE, click .Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1Number of discs: 1Rated: NR Not RatedStudio: Sony Pictures Home EntertainmentDVD Release Date: November 23, 2004Run Time: 896 minutesNothing? Seinfeld is a show about everything! It's about the appeal of the posse and coma etiquette. It's about importing and exporting. It's about sneaking a peek, and seeing the baby. It's about this, that, and the other. TV Guide ranked Seinfeld the best TV series of all time. It has become the master of its syndication domain. Its most devoted fans can quote each episode chapter and verse; their absorption of each scene's minutiae anything but a trivial pursuit. With such fervent devotion to the show, and demand for its DVD release, series creators Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David could have easily just OK'd a bare-bones set containing nothing but the episodes. Not that there would have been anything wrong with that, but instead, the creative team came together to create extensive and encyclopedic features that make this four-disc set buy-worthy. The candid and revealing audio commentaries and interviews, deleted scenes and original episode promos, and optional "Notes About Nothing" pop-ups are as irresistible as a Drake's coffee cake.It's always fun and instructive to return to the humble beginnings of a series that became a pop culture benchmark. Here are Kramer's first not-so-grand entrance, Jerry's first contemptuous "Hello, Newman," and Elaine's first "Get Out!" shove. But what is most revelatory about the episodes from the first two seasons is what Jason Alexander, during his commentary for the episode "The Revenge," calls a "sweet quality" that somehow redeems these characters' more base instincts. The third season's--for want of a better word--the charm. The show has found its misanthropic voice (by season's end, a fed-up Elaine tells herself, "I gotta get some new friends"), the ensemble has a firmer grasp of their characters, and the writers rise to the occasion with episodes that have entered the Seinfeld pantheon, including the Seinfeld equivalent of a Very Special Episode, "The Boyfriend," with Keith Hernandez and the J.F.K. parody, "The Library," featuring Philip Baker Hall channeling Jack Webb as library bookhound Bookman, "The Pez Dispenser," and "The Keys," with an L.A.-bound Kramer winding up on Murphy Brown. Michael Richards, especially, comes into his own this season as Kramer. The first two seasons built up the mystique of this "man-child"/"parasite." So while he was absent in season 2's now-classic "The Chinese Restaurant" (in which Jerry, George, and Elaine wait in vain for a table), he is now out and about with the close-knit, albeit dysfunctional, trio. Julia Louis-Dreyfus has some of her giddiest golden moments, zonked on painkillers in "The Pen," or, as a bored party guest in "The Stranded," telling an obnoxious bride-to-be that "Maybe the dingo ate your baby." And don't get us started on Jason Alexander as George, series co-creator Larry David's neurotic and angst-ridden alter-ego. To paraphrase what Julia Roberts said of Denzel Washington, we don't want to live in a world where Alexander doesn't have an Emmy.The "Inside Look" episode intros offer fascinating insights into this singular show that subverted sitcom convention. We learn that even the most outrageous episodes, such as "The Pez Dispenser," were inspired by real-life events. Especially telling is Alexander's observation that Jerry never really socialized with the other ensemble members. This has extended to the commentaries: Seinfeld pairs with David on some episodes, while Alexander, Richards, and Dreyfus team up on others. They are gracious to the guest stars and extras, and mostly mum on Jer. All of this, of course, is yadda yadda yadda to Seinfeld fans, whose patience for the show's DVD debut has been amply rewarded. As Elaine screams in the third-season episode, "The Subway," "It's not nothing, it's something!" --Donald LiebensonSeinfeld Giftset. Condition is Brand New.Comes with 40 episodesLimited Edition ScriptSeinfeld Playing CardsMonk’s Diner Salt&Pepper Shakers“High definition” “Best Quality Sound”Original from 1989-1992 Castle Rock Entertainment
Price: 119.99 USD
Location: Montpelier, Virginia
End Time: 2024-02-13T22:04:00.000Z
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Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Format: DVD
Season: 1, 2, 3
DVD Edition Year: 2004
Edition: Box Set, Collector's Edition
Actor: Jerry Seinfeld
Studio: Sony Pictures
Release Year: 1989
Movie/TV Title: Seinfeld
Genre: Comedy