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Ally McBeal - Season One - Episodes 4-7 [VHS] [1997] [1998]
 
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Ally McBeal - Season One - Episodes 4-7 [VHS] [1997] [1998]

Calista Flockhart , Courtney Thorne-Smith    Suitable for 12 years and over   VHS Tape
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Actors: Calista Flockhart, Courtney Thorne-Smith, Greg Germann, Peter MacNicol, Gil Bellows
  • Producers: David E. Kelley
  • Format: PAL
  • Language English
  • Classification: 12
  • Studio: 20th Century Fox
  • VHS Release Date: 7 Aug 2000
  • Run Time: 176 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00004TXHL
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 38,967 in Video (See Top 100 in Video)

Product Description

4 episodes from the hit 1990's tv-show, Ally McBeal, starring Calista Flockhart, Courtney Thorne-Smith, Greg Germann, Lisa Nicole Carson, Jane Krakowski with Peter MacNicol & Gil Bellows. Episodes are; ONE HUNDRED TEARS AWAY, THE PROMISE, THE ATTITUDE, DRAWING THE LINES. * Guest stars include; Dyan Cannon, Brenda Vaccarro, Sandra Bernhard.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Wow! 18 Jun 2003
Format:DVD
All I can say is: WOW! I was not going to buy this second part to the first series, but after buying the first half to find out how it all began, I could not resist! I thought that the first boxset was good, but this series just gets better as it goes on; I cannot wait to start watching the second. Ally Mcbeal is everything you could want from a television show: dramatic, funny, sad (sometimes simultaneously!) However, it is the comedy that shines above the rest; this is one funny show! If, like me, you're a fan of John 'The Biscuit' Cage, you will be pleased to know that he appears much more in these later episodes than some of the earlier ones. I'll say it again: Wow!
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pleased 3 Jan 2012
By flossy
Format:DVD
was so pleased how quick delivered , quality and have played it lots since :) would recommend to friends as very pleased with this dvd as been looking for it for while :)
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By K. Gordon TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:DVD
I had forgotten that the early episodes of this series were a bit creaky. and at first Ally seemed
so young, goofy and nervous that she felt more like a teenager than a smart 27 year old lawyer.

But by episode 5 or the show and the character finds it's stride. And if it doesn't quite measure
up to the best 'grown up' TV of today, it still deserves praise for being one of the series that broke
the mold of what a TV show was supposed to be in the US.

It had an openness to complicated tones that seamlessly mixed wild, sometimes surreal humor,
more subtle humor and drama, to long story arcs and not easily solved once a week problems,
and to being more about character than event, making TV a more novelistic and sometimes
cinematic medium in the process.

Certainly Ally McBeal wasn't the first show to do any of these things, but it was one of the first
shows that was a big success with these new approaches, and that helped paved the way for
many of the best dramas dramadies and comedies on American TV in the years since.

I'll admit, with years of even braver shows since, Ally McBeal no longer feels quite as special, and
in fact now feels a little limited. Especially with DVDs allowing more than once a week viewing,
a certain sameness to Ally's constantly fearful, broken heart and her funny/sad attempts to overcome
it starts to plague the show.

But there's still a lot to enjoy here. The performances are terrific from top to bottom, and every
'silly' character is given their serious and moving moments, and every 'serious' character is allowed
to be laugh-out-loud funny at times. Special mention has to be made of Peter MacNichol's 'The Biscuit',
one of the oddest, funniest characters to actually work brilliantly in any series.

The writing is sharp and full of wit and pathos. The music is integrated in a way that was rare for
TV before, but much imitated since, with montages to songs played and sung by Vonda Shepard
(a great voice) who often also appears in the series as a singer at the lead characters favorite after
hours watering hole.

I do have to say, some of the music now feels, in retrospect, too on the nose. The songs chosen (or written) almost
always have lyrics that are too spot on, too obvious a commentary on the action, That good and bad
side to the music sort of sums up my perspective on the series looking at it again in 2011. I appreciate and admire
it for what it gave us and TV, I still enjoy it, but I'm no longer just blown away by it ' not in a world of Breaking Bad,
Weeds, Mad Men, Nurse Jackie, Arrested Development, etc. etc.
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