Lost First Season Disc 2

31
Jan/10
0

  • Lost
  • J.J. Abrams
  • Emilie de Ravin
  • Adventure
  • ABC’s Hit Series

Product Description
This disc includes the following episodes: “White Rabbit,” “House of the Rising Sun,” “The Moth” and “Confidence Man.”

Lost First Season Disc 2

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Lost First Season Disc 4

30
Jan/10
0

  • Lost
  • J.J. Abrams
  • Josh Holloway
  • Adventure
  • Tv Series

Product Description
This disc includes the following episodes: “Hearts and Minds,” “Special,” “Homecoming” and “Outlaws.”

Lost First Season Disc 4

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Lost First Season Disc 6

29
Jan/10
0

  • Lost
  • Adventure
  • ABC Show
  • Matthew Fox
  • J.J. Abrams

Product Description
This disc includes the following episodes: “The Greater Good,” “Born to Run,” “Exodus (Part 1)” and “Exodus (Part 2).”

Lost First Season Disc 6

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Lost First Season Disc 3

21
Jan/10
0

  • Lost
  • J.J. Abrams
  • Matthew Fox
  • Hit ABC Show
  • Adventure

Product Description
This disc includes the following episodes: “Solitary,” “Raised by Another,” “All the Best Cowboys Have Daddy Issues” and “Whatever the Case May Be.”

Lost First Season Disc 3

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STAR TREK FIRST CONTACT

4
Jan/10
0

  • DIVX

Product Description
DIVX

STAR TREK FIRST CONTACT

Star Trek: First Contact

16
Dec/09
5

Amazon.com
Even-numbered Star Trek movies tend to be better, and First Contact (#8 in the popular movie series) is no exception–an intelligently handled plot involving the galaxy-conquering Borg and their attempt to invade Earth’s past, alter history, and “assimilate” the entire human race. Time travel, a dazzling new Enterprise, and capable direction by Next Generation alumnus Jonathan Frakes makes this one rank with the best of the bunch. Capt. Picard (Patrick Stewart) and his able crew travel back in time to Earth in the year 2063, where they hope to ensure that the inventor of warp drive (played by James Cromwell) will successfully carry out his pioneering warp-drive flight and precipitate Earth’s “first contact” with an alien race. A seductive Borg queen (Alice Krige) holds Lt. Data (Brent Spiner) hostage in an effort to sabotage the Federation’s preservation of history, and the captive android finds himself tempted by the queen’s tantalizing sins of the flesh! Sharply conceived to fit snugly into the burgeoning Star Trek chronology, First Contact leads to a surprise revelation that marks an important historical chapter in the ongoing mission “to boldly go where no one has gone before.” –Jeff Shannon

Star Trek: First Contact

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Fringe: The Complete First Season

8
Dec/09
0

Product Description

Includes exclusive bonus disc with 45 minutes of content from the Paley Festival and more!

Teleportation. Mind control. Invisibility. Astral projection. Mutation. Reanimation. Phenomena that exist on the “Fringe” of science unleash their strange powers in this thrilling series, co-created by J.J. Abrams (”Lost”, “Alias”), combining the grit of the police procedural with the excitement of the unknown. The story revolves around three unlikely colleagues – a beautiful young FBI agent, a brilliant scientist who’s spent the last 17 years in a mental institution and the scientist’s sardonic son – who investigate a series of bizarre deaths and disasters known as “the pattern.” Someone is using our world as an experimental lab. And all clues lead to Massive Dynamic, a shadowy global corporation that may be more powerful than any nation.

Fringe: The Complete First Season

Star Trek VIII: First Contact

25
Oct/09
0

Product Description
Studio: Paramount Home Video Release Date: 09/22/2009 Run time: 111 minutes Rating: Pg13

Star Trek VIII: First Contact

Star Trek The Original Series – The Complete First Season

19
Oct/09
5

Description
STAR TREK – THE COMPLETE FIRST SEASON features the adventures of the U.S.S. Enterprise under the command of Capt. James Kirk (Shatner) and his first officer, Lt. Cmdr Spock (Nimoy) during the 23rd century. They are on a mission in outer space to explore new worlds, where the Enterprise encounters Klingons, Romulans, time paradoxes, tribbles and genetic supermen. All 29 first-run episodes on eight discs: The Man Trap, Charlie X, Where No Man Has Gone Before, The Naked Time, The Enemy Within, Mudd’s Women, What Are Little Girls Made Of? Miri, Dagger of the Mind, The Corbomite Maneuver, The Menagerie Part I, The Menagerie Part II, The Conscience of the King, Balance of Terror, Shore Leave, The Galileo Seven, The Squire of Gothos, Arena, Tomorrow is Yesterday, Court Martial, The Return of the Archons, Space Seed, A Taste of Armageddon, This Side of Paradise, The Devil in the Dark, Errand of Mercy, The Alternative Factor, The City on the Edge of Forever, Operation: Annihilate!

Text commentary by Michael Okuda and Denise Okuda on Where No Man Has Gone Before, The Menagerie Part I, The Menagerie Part II, The Conscience of the King
Featurettes: The Birth of a Timeless Legacy, Life Beyond Trek: William Shatner, To Boldly Go… Season One, Reflections on Spock, Sci-Fi Visionaries.Amazon.com
In 1966, Star Trek set out to boldly go where no series had gone before, beginning a three-year mission that led to a franchise that would last decades. Here at last is the first season of the original series all in one box, 29 episodes in their original broadcast order. That means starting with “The Man Trap,” and soon followed by “Where No Man Has Gone Before,” the second pilot filmed and the first one starring William Shatner as Captain Kirk. The many highlight episodes include “Balance of Terror” and “Errand of Mercy” (introducing, respectively, the Romulans and the Klingons), the two-part “The Menagerie” (which recycled footage from the original pilot, “The Cage,” which featured Christopher Pike as the captain of the Enterprise and is not included in this set), “Space Seed” (introducing Ricardo Montalban’s Khan character), and “The City of the Edge of Forever” (written by sci-fi giant Harlan Ellison and considered by many the best-ever episode of the series).

The first-season DVD set is supplemented by 80 minutes of featurettes incorporating 2003-04 interviews with Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, other cast members, and producers, and some 1988 footage of Gene Roddenberry. The longest (24 minutes) featurette, “The Birth of a Timeless Legacy,” examines the two pilot episodes and the development of the crew. Slightly shorter are “To Boldly Go… Season One,” which highlights key episodes, and “Sci-Fi Visionaries,” which discusses the series’ great science fiction writers (most famously in “The City of the Edge of Forever”). Shatner shows off his love of horses in “Life Beyond Trek,” and, more interestingly, Nimoy debunks various rumors in “Reflections of Spock.” As they’ve done for many of the feature-film special editions, Michael Okuda and Denise Okuda provide a pop-up text commentary on four of the episodes filled with history, trivia, and dry wit. It’s the first commentary of any kind for a Star Trek TV show, but an audio commentary is still overdue. The technical specs are mostly the same as other Trek TV series–Dolby 5.1, English subtitles–but with the welcome addition of the episode trailers. The plastic case is an attempt to replicate some of the fun packaging of the series’ European DVD releases, but it’s a bit clunky, and the paper sleeve around the disc case seems awkward and crude. Still, the set is a vast improvement both in terms of shelf space and bonus features compared to the old two-episode discs, which were released before full-season boxed sets became the model for television DVDs. –David Horiuchi

Star Trek The Original Series – The Complete First Season

Star Trek The Next Generation – The Complete First Season

14
Oct/09
5

Description
25 episodes on 7 discs: Encounter at Farpoint, The Naked Now, Code of Honor, The Last Outpost, Where No One Has Gone Before, Lonely Among Us, Justice, The Battle, Hide and Q, Haven, The Big Goodbye, Datalore, Angel One, 11001001, Too Short a Season, When the Bough Breaks, Home Soil, Coming of Age, Heart of Glory, The Arsenal of Freedom, Symbiosis, Skin of Evil, We’ll Always Have Paris, Conspiracy, The Neutral Zone. Four new exclusive featurettes: “The Beginning” (the genesis of Star Trek: The Next Generation and Gene Roddenberry’s vision), “Selected Crew Analysis” (first-season cast members discuss their roles), “Making of a Legend” (first-season production staff reminisce about their favorite episodes), “Memorable Missions” (cast and crew discuss key episodes and events of the first season). Amazon.com
Warping into syndication in 1987, Star Trek: The Next Generation successfully launched its seven-season “continuing mission” of the starship Enterprise, and this classy DVD boxed set gathers the show’s inaugural season in crisp picture clarity and dazzling 5.1-channel sound. A ratings leader with a sharp ensemble cast, this revamped Trek honored series creator Gene Roddenberry’s original Trek concept, nurtured by returning veterans like producer Robert H. Justman and writers D.C. Fontana and David Gerrold. Several first-season episodes have original-series counterparts, and while the season was awkwardly inconsistent for all involved (including Roddenberry’s heir apparent, producer Rick Berman), in retrospect the series began on remarkably solid footing.

Patrick Stewart was perfect as Enterprise Captain Jean-Luc Picard, while Marina Sirtis struggled with a wretched hair bun and an ill-defined character, eventually blessing Counselor Troi with delicate nuance. Denise Crosby made a strong but underutilized impression as Security Chief Tasha Yar, and left the series before season’s end, allowing writers to develop Klingon Lieutenant Worf (Michael Dorn) into a fan favorite. Brent Spiner transcended Spock comparisons with his triumphant portrayal of the android Lieutenant Commander Data; and while Jonathan Frakes was accepted as First Officer Will Riker, fans ultimately rejected Wil Wheaton as ensign Wesley Crusher, the teenaged son of the ship’s doctor (Gates McFadden). Still, these 25 episodes laid a firm foundation for subsequent seasons, and highlights include the Raymond Chandleresque “holo- novel” of “The Big Goodbye,” Data’s backstory in “Datalore,” the Klingon rituals of “Heart of Glory,” and a Romulan encounter in “The Neutral Zone.” The DVD supplements (all on the seventh disc) are good enough to make anyone wish for more: four featurettes recall myriad first-season challenges, filled with insider perspective and enough NextGen trivia to satiate all but the most obsessive Trekkers back on Earth. Looking back, it’s easy to see why NextGen lived long and prospered. –Jeff Shannon

Star Trek The Next Generation – The Complete First Season