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American Gothic - Complete Series
American Gothic - Complete Series

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Directors: Michael Katleman, James A. Contner, Bruce Seth Green, Elodie Keene, Mike Binder
Studio: Universal Studios
Category: DVD

List Price: $49.98
Buy New: $30.98
You Save: $19.00 (38%)



New (20) Used (11) from $26.99

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 124 reviews
Sales Rank: 20000

Format: Box Set, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Subtitled, Ntsc
Languages: English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), English (Original Language)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Number Of Items: 3
Running Time: 1002
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.4 x 0.8

MPN: D28602D
ISBN: 141706773X
UPC: 025192860225
EAN: 9781417067732
ASIN: B000ATQYXI

Theatrical Release Date: September 22, 1995
Release Date: October 25, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: NEW --- STILL SEALED --- FAST SHIPPING !!! ---- COMPLETE SERIES

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Editorial Reviews:

Description
Finally, the complete cult hit series American Gothic, produced by Sam Raimi, comes to DVD for the first time ever! Visit Trinity, South Carolina, a small town with more chills than charm. Sheriff Lucas Buck (Gary Cole) won't let anyone - including local doctor Matt Crower (Jake Weber) or the determined Gail Emory (Paige Turco) - stand in the way of his evil plans. Marking the tenth anniversary of its broadcast debut and packed with all 22 episodes, including four "lost" ones never broadcast on network television, American Gothic's eerie storylines of intrigue and suspense are sure to hold you captive!


Customer Reviews:   Read 119 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars One of TV's best, but one of Universal's worst.   October 27, 2005
 457 out of 463 found this review helpful

American Gothic is a terrific television series, canceled far too soon, and sadly mishandled by the CBS network during its run (episodes aired out of order, entire episodes unaired, etc). Now Universal has repeated CBS's mistakes with this DVD release. Sure, we should be happy to see American Gothic on DVD at *all*, but this series deserves far better.

Most offensive: the episodes on these discs are *completely* out of order. (Shouldn't the series finale be the last episode on the set? It's not. It's episode eighteen on the DVDs. Was anyone at Universal thinking when they put this set together?) American Gothic fans (Gothniks) contacted Universal prior to the release of these DVDs. They said: MAKE SURE YOU GET THE ORDER CORRECT. Universal didn't listen. Now, first time viewers of this brilliant series will likely be left *bewildered* instead of impressed.

Universal also continues to release their television programs on those absurd dual-sided DVD-18 discs, which are quite prone to damage. They easily scratch, then sputter and freeze-up. Compare Universal to Fox's releases of Angel, Millennium, etc. Fox does a far better job with the video/audio transfers, and they put the episodes on single-sided DVD-9 discs with nice artwork. (The American Gothic DVD box cover is UGLY too.) Universal can really take a lesson from companies like Fox and Shout Factory!. Good programs like American Gothic deserve better, *especially* when fans have waited so long to see their favorite programs hit DVD. Sheriff Buck would not tolerate this mess.

INTENDED EPISODE ORDER: 01. Pilot, 02. A Tree Grows in Trinity, 03. Eye of the Beholder, 04. Damned if You Don't, 05. Potato Boy, 06. Dead to the World, 07. Meet the Beetles, 08. Strong Arm of the Law, 09. To Hell and Back, 10. The Beast Within, 11. Rebirth, 12. Ring of Fire, 13. Resurrector, 14. Inhumanitas, 15. The Plague Sower, 16. Doctor Death Takes a Holiday, 17. Learning to Crawl, 18. Echo of Your Last Goodbye, 19. Strangler, 20. Triangle, 21. The Buck Stops Here, 22. Requiem



5 out of 5 stars "Someone's at the door..."   August 17, 2005
 152 out of 158 found this review helpful

This DVD set is long overdue. Loooong overdue. In our recent move from DC to Colorado, I threw out all of our recorded VHS tapes--except for the ones with "American Gothic". Now I can get rid of those as well, but for the right reason.

Like "Firefly", "American Gothic" is a unique, outstanding series never given a chance by its network (CBS, in this case). It was also probably the most chilling and disturbing series ever to air, a stark morality tale with Gary Cole as the Devil incarnate (or a close kin), disguised as Sheriff Lucas Buck of the small town of Trinity, SC. Buck rules over his little kingdom with morbid humor and playfulness, setting up moral pitfalls and dilemmas for the town's inhabitants, and dispensing his own brand of justice or vengance or just plain meanness--which often involves ruin, insanity, dismemberment, or death.

Opposing Buck is young Caleb Temple (played by Lucas Black), an orphan who talks regularly to his dead sister Merlyn and who has powers of his own--and who may or may not be Buck's son. Buck wants Caleb to follow him; Merlyn wants Caleb to resist; and the rest of Trinity gets caught in the crossfire, so to speak.

The writing, acting, and directing are all outstanding. You'll never look at Gary Cole the same way again. Or, for that matter, Shaun Cassidy--yes, the "Hardy Boys" teen heart-throb [thanks for the corrections, everyone!]--who conceived and produced the show, along with Sam Raimi ("Evil Dead", "Army of Darkness", "Spider-Man").




5 out of 5 stars Important - the episodes on the dvd aren't in order   November 26, 2005
 71 out of 72 found this review helpful

Shaun Cassidy has a hit series on his hands right now with the alien-thriller Invasion, but ten years ago it was a harder row to hoe with his demonically-inspired weekly show American Gothic. At the time, CBS didn't give the series its due - they not only dropped entire episodes out from the middle of the story-line without ever airing them, they often preempted the show for weeks on end. After slapping the viewers' faces time and time again, CBS found that fans turned their TV attentions elsewhere.

When it was airing, American Gothic was one of my favorite shows. And I've never quite forgotten it; it's one of those series like Twin Peaks or Carnivale - it's flawed but so compelling it haunts the memory for years. The story takes place in darkly wooded Trinity, South Carolina and centers on the imposing Sheriff Buck (Gary Cole) and his orphaned, (secret) illegitimate son, Caleb Temple (Lucas Black). The story-line is not especially unique but everything just gelled so perfectly with the actors and their characters, American Gothic qualifies as a classic.

But how does it hold up? Despite some rather dodgy special effects and the occasional heavy-handedness, American Gothic holds up very well. It's much bolder and far more addictive than Cassidy's current Invasion, as a matter of fact. Some of the greatest little signature touches about the show include the catchphrase, "Someone's at the door"; or the way Sheriff Buck always just shows up out of the blue as if dropping from the sky (or maybe coming up from someplace else); and Caleb's ever-furrowed brow and the way he said "Daay-dy".

One of the best shows early on in the DVD is "Meet the Beetles" - it's a standalone episode and will remind many of an X-Files episode. The opener of the show is a bone-rattling bang when Caleb and his friend Boone are looking through the charred ruins of what was once Caleb's family home - a skeletal hand seemingly latches onto the boys' ankle and tries to pull him underground. Throughout the episode, Caleb is haunted by visions of his own grave.

It turns out the remains belong to Hack Weller and that, even though he's been reduced to bones, the philandering husband has been dead for only two or three days. Much to the pithy Sheriff Buck's consternation, the State Police send square-jawed Lt. Drey (Bruce Campbell) in to solve the mysterious and potentially deadly case. It's an episode that will keep on "bugging" you even after the final fade.

The actors would later go on to do other remarkable roles - Cole in Office Space; Black in Sling Blade; and Jake Weber in TV's Medium - but it's the genre-blending American Gothic that discerning horror fans will always remember them for.

The DVD features deleted scenes and commentary on pilot episode from Cassidy and producer David Eick. Cassidy admits he hasn't seen the series since it aired 10 years ago, and too often it shows - there are some rather unfortunate long lapses of silence as he watches the show. There are a very interesting tidbits revealed; for example, Cassidy reveals that the "Someone's at the door" scene sold the pilot as he acted it out for CBS execs.

The pair jokes about the prominent Elvis pillowcase shown in the pilot, and they complain about the stock music they were forced to resort to in certain sequences. They also mention wannabe Prez Bob Dole's then-ongoing anti-violence-on-TV campaign a few times, then they never utter a word about Dole during a scene in a which a certain character is found dead with an expensive writing instrument thrust into his windpipe (remember Dole's trademark pen?).

Eick and Cassidy also talk about how producer Sam Raimi came in with a lot of visual ideas, and how he gleefully said that yes, Buck is the Devil (while Eick and Cassidy say they wished to keep the Sheriff's identity more ambiguous - however, one of them does laughingly say during the commentary, "This is not Touched By An Angel - it's Touched By Satan!").

They don't go into too much detail about the show's cancellation, but Eick does say, "We knew we were dead early enough to be able to plan our own funeral," in regards to being able to wrap up the loose ends in the series finale.

It's absolutely wonderful to the have the American Gothic series on DVD, finally. However - be warned that the order of the episodes is not sequential and that there is nothing on the DVD package to indicate this. The four unaired episodes are piled on the last disc, but actually the show should be viewed in this order:


Pilot

A Tree Grows in Trinity

Eye of the Beholder

Damned if You Don't

POTATO BOY

Dead to the World

Meet the Beetles

Strong Arm of the Law

To Hell and Back

The Beast Within

Rebirth

RING OF FIRE

Resurrector

Inhumanitas

The Plague Sower

Dr. Death Takes a Holiday

Learning to Crawl

ECHO OF YOUR LAST GOOD-BYE

STRANGLER

Triangle

The Buck Stops Here

Requiem

[...]



5 out of 5 stars Correct viewing order   October 26, 2005
 29 out of 29 found this review helpful

One of my favourite shows ever but as stated earlier a flawed DVD release. To fully enjoy this series watch in the following order...
Episodes 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 19, 06, 07, 14, 13, 08, 20, 09, 10, 11, 12, 15, 21, 16, 22, 17, 18



3 out of 5 stars Brilliant and fascinating TV series, typically shoddy Universal DVDs - Beware!   December 29, 2005
 28 out of 28 found this review helpful

I agree with nearly all other reviewers: American Gothic is brilliant. I remember when the show debuted on TV. I was hooked from the first few episodes. But then I lost track of it (now I know why -- the network kept switching the airing days). So I was very pleased to see that it was released on DVD.

My wife and I recently bought and watched the entire set within a couple of week's time -- but only after taking it back to the store twice because of faulty discs. These double sided DVDs are crap. They skip, freeze and have a habit of getting stuck at the most inopportune times. We're now on our third set. So far, so good. It skips less, but still isn't skip-free.

Universal ought to be charged with some kind of crime for releasing such defective merchandise. Shouldn't we be contacting the Better Business Bureau about this? Shouldn't everyone who bought (and re-bought and re-bought) this DVD set lodge complaints against Universal?

Moreover, shouldn't we as consumers stop buying anything released by Universal no matter what it is? If Amazon gets the idea that no one will buy Universal products from them maybe they'll demand higher quality before placing massive orders. That would definitely hit Universal where it hurts: in the pocketbook.

Ultimately, it's not Universal's fault that they release crap. It's ours. We buy it, regardless. Amazon sells it, regardless. If Amazon and all of the consumers stopped buying Universal's defective garbage, they'd have to change its quality to be able to sell it. It's that simple.

The only consolation I can take in all of this is that Universal must have received a flood of returns from all over the U.S. Serves them right.

That said, I have to comment on the show itself. The acting is fantastic. The dialog is witty, often wry. Always very crisp. Although Gary Cole has gone on to bigger and better things in his career, I still like him best as Sheriff Lucas Buck. In this role, he is sublime.

American Gothic is a very strange slice of television. It's spooky, quirky, funny and completely engrossing. Others have described the show in greater detail. I'll let you read their reviews to discover what the show is about.

Even though I love the show, I hesitate to recommend the DVDs. If you do buy them, be prepared to return them endlessly until you chance upon a set that works.

Let's start an anti-Unversal campaign to get them to release better merchandise! (Incidentally, I had the same problems with Universal's Kolchak: The Night Stalker. Double-sided DVDs, like double-sided CDs, simply don't work.)


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