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Weeds - The Complete First Season
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Weeds - The Complete First Season List Price: $29.98
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Features
 Closed-captioned
 Color
 Dolby
 DVD-Video
 Full Screen
 Subtitled
 NTSC

In Theaters : 07 August, 2005
DVD Release : 11 July, 2006
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Weeds - The Complete First Season description
With its fantastic comedy series Weeds, cable network Showtime finally gave up its also-ran status to HBO and found itself with a controversial, buzz-worthy show that was as hilarious as it was dark, one about a truly desperate housewife. A recent widow with two growing sons, Nancy Botwin (Golden Globe winner Mary-Louise Parker) looks like a typical resident of the affluent Southern California suburb of Agrestic. She keeps a clean, upscale house (with the help of a live-in maid), attends PTA meetings, goes to her kids' soccer games, makes frequent stops at the local coffee franchise.... and sells marijuana in order to make it all possible. Left with no way to support herself after her beloved husband's fatal heart attack, Nancy turns herself into the "suburban baroness of bud," dealing to her neighbors in the area, with the help of her supplier Heylia (Tonye Patano) and point man Conrad (Romany Malco). Nancy's clients run from the local councilman (Kevin Nealon) to the just-barely-legal students at the local community college, but many in Agrestic are still in the dark as to how she keeps her family afloat, including her best friend, the sardonic Celia (Elizabeth Perkins), a wife and mother whose blistering, withering put-downs could make Dorothy Parker cringe in fear. But like many small-business owners, Nancy yearns for more success and cash, and like her workaholic neighbors, finds keeping a balance between work life and home life to be extremely precarious at best.

While Desperate Housewives yearned to be a suburban satire with bite, Weeds was the real deal, skewering upper-middle class mores with a sharp eye, a keen wit, and a mostly forgiving heart. In episode after episode, the show's creative team (led by creator Jenji Kohan) pulled back the layers of Agrestic's superficiality to show what lies beneath the squeaky-clean exteriors and smiling faces; it turns out that hunger, fear, desire, and, yes, desperation aren't that far down. However, Weeds forsakes pulpiness and florid drama for biting yet affectionate humor--its heroine is a woman with sliding morals, but one you'll root for to the very end. The effervescent Parker, the only actress who can mix perkiness with morbidity in just the right amounts, anchored the show with her amazing turn as Nancy, who by the end of the first season had become a kind of soccer-mom version of Michael Corleone, entering a corrupt world with both trepidation and fascination--and totally enamored of the power it brought her. Also perfectly cast, Perkins found the role of a lifetime as the bitterly hilarious Celia, and entering the show in its fourth episode, Justin Kirk (Parker's co-star in Angels in America) proved to be a potent secret weapon as Nancy's brother-in-law Andy, a slacker who wasn't above peddling t-shirts to elementary school kids. As icky as these characters might appear on the surface, Weeds made them all immensely appealing and great company to be around. Don't say we didn't warn you: one hit and you'll be hooked on this show. The DVDs feature six episode commentaries with cast and crew, outtakes, original featurettes, a music video, and most enjoyably, Agrestic Herbal Recipes (for entertainment value only, we assume) and the "Smoke and Mirrors" marijuana mockumentary. --Mark Englehart

Weeds - The Complete First Season Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥ An Enjoyable Escape
I wasn't sure that this series would be to my liking at all, but surprisingly enough I liked it immensely.

The theme song sounds like someone had been reading an old John D. MacDonald "Travis McGee" novel when they wrote it. I don't remember which one off hand, but I do remember the part about ticky-tacky houses all in a row from one of the novels.

As for the subject matter, I'm not familiar with it but the economics of the situation are familiar. A woman starts a small, illegal business and finds herself with money problems. Her suppliers provide cheap merchandise, her cash flow can't be recorded, and she finds herself in competition with government sanctioned competitors. She slowly learns the ins and outs of how her business should operate.

Mary-Louise Parker does a fine job as the woman with a new "business." However, Elizabeth Perkins does an outstanding job as her somewhat questionable best friend. How these two can even stand each other is something that always keeps me watching.

Four stars out of five. It should have been five, but the DVD production leaves a lot to be desired. Why wasn't this in widescreen instead of full screen? They've been producing TV shows in widescreen since the late 1990's. Why are only commentaries that don't tell you a whole lot the only features on the first DVD? What's with all the promos that are called features on the second DVD? One can only hope that the second season will correct some of the DVD problems.
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