
THIS
IS THE COMPLETE SERIES
Buffy the Vampire Slayer The Complete Seasons 1-7 DVD Collection
39 DVD's
THIS IS NTSC FOR USA AND CANADA
ORIGINAL ENGLISH - REMOVABLE ENGLISH SUB-TITLES
Region 1
Comes in a Beautiful Collector's Box Set

Info:
Format: Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC
Language: English
Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD Formats)
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Number of discs: 39
Studio: 20th Century Fox
DVD Release Date: August 1, 2006
From its charming and angst-ridden first season to the darker, apocalyptic final
one, Buffy the Vampire Slayer succeeds on many levels, and in a fresher and more
authentic way than the shows that came before or after it. How lucky, then, that
with the release of its boxed set of seasons 1-7, you can have the estimable
pleasure of watching a near-decade of Buffy in any order you choose. (And we
have some ideas about how that should be done.)
First: rest assured that there's no shame in coming to Buffy late, even if you
initially turned your nose up at the winsome Sarah Michelle Gellar kicking the
shit out of vampires (in Buffy-lingo, vamps), demons, and other evil-doers.
Perhaps you did so because, well, it looked sort of science-fiction-like with
all that monster latex. Start with season 3 and see that Buffy offers something
for everyone, and the sooner you succumb to it, the quicker you'll appreciate
how textured and riveting a drama it is.
Why season 3? Because it offers you a winning cast of characters who have fallen
from innocence: their hearts have been broken, their egos trampled in typically
vicious high-school style, and as a result, they've begun to realize how
fallible they are. As much as they try, there are always more monsters, or a
bigger evil. Despite this, or perhaps because of it, the core crew remains
something of a unit--there's the smart girl, Willow (Alyson Hannigan) who dreams
of saving the day by downloading the plans to City Hall's sewer tunnels and
mapping a route to safety. There are the ne'r do wells--the vampire Spike (James
Marsters), who both clashes with and aspires to love Buffy; the tortured and
torturing Angel (David Boreanz); the pretty, popular girl with an empty heart
(Charisma Carpenter); and the teenage everyman, Xander (Nicholas Brendon).
Then there's Buffy herself, who in the course of seven seasons morphs from a
sarcastic teenager in a minidress to a heroine whose tragic flaw is an abiding
desire to be a "normal" girl. On a lesser note, with the boxed set you can watch
the fashion transformation of Buffy from mall rat to Prada-wearing, kickboxing
diva with enviable highlights. (There was the unfortunate bob of season 2, but
it's a forgivable lapse.) At least the storyline merits the transformations:
every time Buffy has to end a relationship she cuts her hair, shedding both the
pain and her vulnerability.
In addition to the well-wrought teenage emotional landscape, Buffy deftly takes
on more universal themes--power, politics, death, morality--as the series
matures in seasons 4-6. And apart from a few missteps that haven't aged
particularly well ("I Robot" in season 1 comes to mind), most episodes feel as
harrowing and as richly drawn as they did at first viewing. That's about as much
as you can ask for any form of entertainment: that it offer an escape from the
viewer's workaday world and entry into one in which the heroine (ideally one
with leather pants) overcomes demons far more troubling than one's own. --Megan
Halverson