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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The End Of The Creek, 3 Feb 2006
Despite suffering a dip in quality around the fourth season (although some argue earlier), "Dawson's Creek" remained a fairly solid TV show throughout its six season run, the last of which is presented here in its entirety.Dawson, Joey, Jen, Pacey, Audrey and Jack (and Grams!) return from their summer - Pacey and Audrey are a couple, Jack and Jen are free and single (and enjoying it!), Dawson is off to work as a personal assistant for a director, having spent the summer at home, with Joey, although they haven't spoke much. Throughout the season, the group grow further apart, each dealing with their own traumas - Jen gets a new boyfriend (CJ), as does Jack (David), Pacey works for "the man," and Dawson and Joey grow the furthest apart. The series (and season) culminates in a 2hour series finale, set 5 years later than the rest of season 6, which ties everything up and gives, in my opinion, a satisfying ending to the love triangle of Dawson, Pacey and Joey, that has run consistently throughout the series. Back on writing duties for the first time in a few seasons, is the creator, Kevin Williamson, and it shows in the finale, returning it to the feel of the earlier seasons. The DVD features unfortunate music changes on the English language soundtrack that has been standard for box sets of "Dawson's Creek" since season 2 (the English track comes direct from the USA releases, where the tracks were changed to save money on royalties - incidentally, if you switch to the French or German tracks, you can hear the original broadcast music a lot of times), including the original international theme tune change, instead of "I Don't Wanna Wait," which was present on the broadcast version of these episodes (again, if you switch to French or German you can hear "I Don't Wanna Wait" instead of "Run Like Mad"). Also present is the extended version of the series finale, that is also available on a separate DVD, alongside the commentary that was present on the disc, as opposed to the broadcast version. Despite a few hiccups here and there, "Dawson's Creek" was a very solid TV series throughout it's 6 year span, and the DVDs provide a fitting momento. If you were ever a fan of the show, it's worth picking up the last series to see how the character arcs were completed - a recommended purchase.
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