






desertcart.com This boxed set contains six episodes of The Simpsons: "There's No Disgrace Like Home" (the Simpsons shock each other at a shrink's office); "Life on the Fast Lane" (Marge takes bowling lessons from--and nearly is seduced by--Albert Brooks as a French bowling pro); "Bart the General" (Bart plays Patton in his effort to beat bully Nelson Muntz); "Moaning Lisa" (Lisa's jazz hero, Bleeding Gums Murphy, is introduced); "The Crepes of Wrath" (Bart is a foreign-exchange student and winds up as a slave in France); and "Krusty Gets Busted" (Sideshow Bob frames Krusty the Clown for robbery in order to take over his show). --Marshall Fine Review: Relive the magic of The Simpsons' first season - with extras - I was one of those fans who watched The Simpsons from the very start; back in those days, even at college, all we had were rabbit ears to pick up the less than clear local Fox station - some folks back then, in 1989, still did not even have a local Fox station. Things have changed a whole lot since the thirteen-episode first season of this classic comedy, but in many ways The Simpsons has not. As I write this, the show's still going strong and building upon the work done all those years ago. While there was a bit of experimentation back in the early days, the characters emerged fully formed from the very first show. It's quite a treat to be able to watch these first thirteen episodes in order again and to reflect back upon the controversy and instant impact this animated show immediately made on popular culture. I was amazed at how vibrant and familiar these first shows seemed; it seems like only yesterday that I was introduced to Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa, Maggie, and all the denizens of Springfield. Every episode here is a classic. Watching There's No Disgrace Like Home, the third episode, I was unexpectedly taken back to the very beginning of Simpsons mania as I watched the Simpsons repeatedly administer shocks to themselves to the consternation of family therapist Marvin Monroe. And who could forget the terrible ordeal Bart endured at the hands of two French cretins (or little Adil Hoxha, foreign exchange student from Albania - a legend in the lore of Simpsons trivia) in The Crepes of Wrath. In terms of pure hilarity, look no farther than Homer's Night Out, in which Homer becomes the swingingest swinger in town and elicits a plea for help in the ladies' department from none other than Mr. Skinner himself. The first memorable guest performers also lended their special magic to the show early on: Penny Marshall as the baby-sitting bandit in Some Enchanted Evening, Kelsey Grammer as Sideshow Bob in Krusty Gets Busted, and Albert Brooks as the RV salesman in Call of the Simpsons and Jacque, Marge's French admirer and bowling instructor in Life On the Fast Lane. I could write a paragraph about every single episode, as each one is a classic. The commentary for each episode is fabulous, as a whole gaggle of the geniuses who brought the show to life come together to laugh at the best bits, talk about the show's genesis and evolution during this experimental first season, and provide fans with all kinds of trivia and juicy tidbits about the whole Simpsons phenomenon. You can clearly see the show develop with each passing episode, particularly in terms of the level of detail in the animation and, to some degree, the voices. With the help of the commentaries, you get a whole new perspective on Homer and the gang. One can't help but be impressed by the way each character was developed early on, the chemistry that quickly emerged between all the characters, and the way in which serious issues were explored in such a comedic manner. Gosh, you had Marge and Homer's marriage on the rocks in a couple of episodes, Bart's deportation to France for his excessive shenanigans at school, the capture of Bart and Lisa by a wanted criminal, the framing and imprisonment of Krusty, the problem of illiteracy, etc. This show really had it all, right from the very start. I don't know why I waited so long to add The Simpsons Season One to my DVD collection, but I can't wait to get all of the seasons on DVD. After 15+ years, it's easy to take this show for granted, but this Season One DVD with all of its extras has reawakened my old passion for this incredible television show. Speaking of extras, you get a look here at the first animated version of the show, and it's just as horrible as Matt Groening and the other Simpsons bigwigs said it was. You have to see it to believe it. After seeing that, you realize more than ever how lucky we are to have The Simpsons in our lives. Review: The Simpsons Seasons 1-9, absolutely great! - DOH! Why didn't I order these years ago? But MMMmmmmmm... Simpsons BEST! I'm so glad to be watching them now that I have them. I watch one every day or two, and I've moved through four entire seasons and a smattering single episodes in some of the other seasons. I've seen the ones that once made me laugh till I fell off my chair. Now, my chair has arms, and it prevents me from falling out, but I'm still laughing all the way. This is the humor that changed animation and made us ask "wow... can they do that on TV?" I've read criticism of the boxes, the packaging, the disks, the inserts, the format, and the Simpsons in general, but when these arrived I realized that either those people got something else or they're probably annoyingly picky about trivial matters. I'm not here to buy the slickest DVD boxes, though these look like they'd be contenders for the title. I think the inserts are creative, fun, and informative, but again, I'm not here for those. I'm here for what's on these DVDs, and I couldn't be happier with what they've provided us. Commentary, deleted scenes, stills, advertising, and extras unique to each season, this set has everything I want, and probably a lot more features than I'll ever have time to watch (but I'm trying). One packaging caveat: each box had a printed sheet attached to the back with those sticky-dots. I didn't like that they made the boxes feel cheap, so I carefully pulled them off and rolled off the sticky-dots. I folded the printed sheets and stored them inside with the other inserts within each season's box. What lay beneath those attached backs is FAR more attractive, and the boxes now feel worthy of displaying where visitors can pick them up and look. I'm just a few years younger than Matt Groening, and I was a big fan of Life In Hell, his alternative weeklies strip long before the Simpsons ever aired. For many years I avoided The Simpsons, thinking it was a "Flintstones" version of Life in Hell. When I finally watched it, I was instantly hooked for life. Now I'm seeing all the shows that I missed. Not having a TV, I've seen almost all my Simpsons episodes on YouTube or iTunes, with a season or two that I saw with my kids back when we had a TV, before I said "no more TV" and kicked it out. That leaves a lot of these 9 seasons which are totally new to me. This is great! The image is clear and the colors true. The format fills the height of my monitor, but of course is not as wide. I don't know the exact ratio of these, but it's the one that appears most natural on my Apple Cinema Display. Sound is true to the original. I'm not a DVD connoisseur, but I'm pretty critical of movies and content; these DVDs have made me happy every time I've watched. I'm so glad to finally have all these seasons!
| ASIN | 6304561873 |
| Actors | Simpsons |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (1,671) |
| Date First Available | October 25, 2006 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Package Dimensions | 7.32 x 4.19 x 1.12 inches; 6.08 ounces |
| Release date | September 16, 1997 |
| Studio | Twentieth Century Fox |
D**Y
Relive the magic of The Simpsons' first season - with extras
I was one of those fans who watched The Simpsons from the very start; back in those days, even at college, all we had were rabbit ears to pick up the less than clear local Fox station - some folks back then, in 1989, still did not even have a local Fox station. Things have changed a whole lot since the thirteen-episode first season of this classic comedy, but in many ways The Simpsons has not. As I write this, the show's still going strong and building upon the work done all those years ago. While there was a bit of experimentation back in the early days, the characters emerged fully formed from the very first show. It's quite a treat to be able to watch these first thirteen episodes in order again and to reflect back upon the controversy and instant impact this animated show immediately made on popular culture. I was amazed at how vibrant and familiar these first shows seemed; it seems like only yesterday that I was introduced to Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa, Maggie, and all the denizens of Springfield. Every episode here is a classic. Watching There's No Disgrace Like Home, the third episode, I was unexpectedly taken back to the very beginning of Simpsons mania as I watched the Simpsons repeatedly administer shocks to themselves to the consternation of family therapist Marvin Monroe. And who could forget the terrible ordeal Bart endured at the hands of two French cretins (or little Adil Hoxha, foreign exchange student from Albania - a legend in the lore of Simpsons trivia) in The Crepes of Wrath. In terms of pure hilarity, look no farther than Homer's Night Out, in which Homer becomes the swingingest swinger in town and elicits a plea for help in the ladies' department from none other than Mr. Skinner himself. The first memorable guest performers also lended their special magic to the show early on: Penny Marshall as the baby-sitting bandit in Some Enchanted Evening, Kelsey Grammer as Sideshow Bob in Krusty Gets Busted, and Albert Brooks as the RV salesman in Call of the Simpsons and Jacque, Marge's French admirer and bowling instructor in Life On the Fast Lane. I could write a paragraph about every single episode, as each one is a classic. The commentary for each episode is fabulous, as a whole gaggle of the geniuses who brought the show to life come together to laugh at the best bits, talk about the show's genesis and evolution during this experimental first season, and provide fans with all kinds of trivia and juicy tidbits about the whole Simpsons phenomenon. You can clearly see the show develop with each passing episode, particularly in terms of the level of detail in the animation and, to some degree, the voices. With the help of the commentaries, you get a whole new perspective on Homer and the gang. One can't help but be impressed by the way each character was developed early on, the chemistry that quickly emerged between all the characters, and the way in which serious issues were explored in such a comedic manner. Gosh, you had Marge and Homer's marriage on the rocks in a couple of episodes, Bart's deportation to France for his excessive shenanigans at school, the capture of Bart and Lisa by a wanted criminal, the framing and imprisonment of Krusty, the problem of illiteracy, etc. This show really had it all, right from the very start. I don't know why I waited so long to add The Simpsons Season One to my DVD collection, but I can't wait to get all of the seasons on DVD. After 15+ years, it's easy to take this show for granted, but this Season One DVD with all of its extras has reawakened my old passion for this incredible television show. Speaking of extras, you get a look here at the first animated version of the show, and it's just as horrible as Matt Groening and the other Simpsons bigwigs said it was. You have to see it to believe it. After seeing that, you realize more than ever how lucky we are to have The Simpsons in our lives.
S**E
The Simpsons Seasons 1-9, absolutely great!
DOH! Why didn't I order these years ago? But MMMmmmmmm... Simpsons BEST! I'm so glad to be watching them now that I have them. I watch one every day or two, and I've moved through four entire seasons and a smattering single episodes in some of the other seasons. I've seen the ones that once made me laugh till I fell off my chair. Now, my chair has arms, and it prevents me from falling out, but I'm still laughing all the way. This is the humor that changed animation and made us ask "wow... can they do that on TV?" I've read criticism of the boxes, the packaging, the disks, the inserts, the format, and the Simpsons in general, but when these arrived I realized that either those people got something else or they're probably annoyingly picky about trivial matters. I'm not here to buy the slickest DVD boxes, though these look like they'd be contenders for the title. I think the inserts are creative, fun, and informative, but again, I'm not here for those. I'm here for what's on these DVDs, and I couldn't be happier with what they've provided us. Commentary, deleted scenes, stills, advertising, and extras unique to each season, this set has everything I want, and probably a lot more features than I'll ever have time to watch (but I'm trying). One packaging caveat: each box had a printed sheet attached to the back with those sticky-dots. I didn't like that they made the boxes feel cheap, so I carefully pulled them off and rolled off the sticky-dots. I folded the printed sheets and stored them inside with the other inserts within each season's box. What lay beneath those attached backs is FAR more attractive, and the boxes now feel worthy of displaying where visitors can pick them up and look. I'm just a few years younger than Matt Groening, and I was a big fan of Life In Hell, his alternative weeklies strip long before the Simpsons ever aired. For many years I avoided The Simpsons, thinking it was a "Flintstones" version of Life in Hell. When I finally watched it, I was instantly hooked for life. Now I'm seeing all the shows that I missed. Not having a TV, I've seen almost all my Simpsons episodes on YouTube or iTunes, with a season or two that I saw with my kids back when we had a TV, before I said "no more TV" and kicked it out. That leaves a lot of these 9 seasons which are totally new to me. This is great! The image is clear and the colors true. The format fills the height of my monitor, but of course is not as wide. I don't know the exact ratio of these, but it's the one that appears most natural on my Apple Cinema Display. Sound is true to the original. I'm not a DVD connoisseur, but I'm pretty critical of movies and content; these DVDs have made me happy every time I've watched. I'm so glad to finally have all these seasons!
ๆธก**ๅพณ
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B**S
Ignore the bad reviews here. If you're looking at the first season of The Simpsons, you should probably expect that it isn't going to look or sound anywhere near as good as the more recent seasons- it was the very beginning of the show, after all! For a DVD of an animated show that was produced in the 1980s and aired in 1989 and 1990, this is an excellent production and more than worth the $7.99 price tag. The video and sound quality is quite acceptable given the time it was made, and contrary to what other reviewers have said, the episodes have been cleaned-up for this release, and look amazing given the year they were animated. The menus are fluent and work quite well, despite being fairly basic. My only complaint about the menu would be the lack of a 'Play All' option. It also would have been nice, given this is the first season, if all 48 of the original animated shorts of The Simpsons were included on a bonus disc, since most of them aren't available to buy on DVD. Physically, the exterior box could use a bit of work. The back label on my copy was rather poorly attached, and it would have been nice if a hard slipcase was used to protect the inner folder instead of a cardboard box that you have to open every time. This season comes on four DVDs, which are all securely stored inside four separate plastic page-style trays. Not everybody is going to like the age and style of these older episodes, but if you're a fan of The Simpsons or can appreciate the early style of the show, it's a steal at the price!
R**Z
Questo prodotto anche seconda mano era in buonissima condizione e siamo contenti con il nostro compro. Pronto cercheremo la seconda stagione in DVD! Grazie
J**N
Great quality and great season. One of the best special features is the commentary on every episode
R**D
Funny
Trustpilot
1 month ago
3 weeks ago