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Cast
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| Dan
Castellaneta |
Homer Simpson, Barney
Gumble, Krusty the Clown, Groundskeeper Willie, Mayor Quimby |
| Julie
Kavner |
Marge Simpson, Patty
Bouvier and Selma Bouvier |
| Nancy
Cartwright |
Bart Simpson, Nelson
Muntz, Todd Flanders, Ralph Wiggum |
| Yeardley
Smith |
Lisa Simpson |
| Hank
Azaria |
Apu Nahasapeemapetilon,
Moe Szyslak, Police Chief Wiggum |
| Harry
Shearer |
Charles Montgomery Burns,
Waylon Smithers, Ned Flanders, Seymour Skinner, Otto Mann, Reverend Lovejoy |
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Film
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The man of the house, Homer, works at the local nuclear
power plant doing the same dead end job he has done for years. In fact, Homer
holds the plant record for the number of years worked at an entry level
position. As a safety
supervisor it is proven fact that safety improves whenever he is away on holiday
or sickness - mainly because he causes most of the accidents in the first place.
He is not the brightest light in the sky, but what he lacks in intelligence he
makes up in the love for his family and food, especially donuts and Duff beer.
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His faithful housewife Marge is the youngest of three
sisters and puts up with Homers bungling
plans and personal hygiene deficiencies and her many moral crusades in
Springfield make her a pain in many peoples backsides. She has her work cut out
looking after Homer and their three children Bart, Lisa, Maggie and the advances
of Mr. Burns, Homer's boss at the nuclear power plant.
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Bart is the hell cat of the house and Marge's
"special little guy". He's a constant worry for Homer. Forever the practical joker and trouble maker, mayhem and
madness follow him wherever he goes. Not a day goes by without him getting into
trouble, especially at school where he is a particular pain in the side of the
long suffering principle Skinner. Bart also suffers from the same problem
'Simpsons' gene as his father and is not graced with the highest of IQs.
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Lisa is the black sheep of the family with a high IQ
and first-rate school grades. Hopes are high at Springfield elementary that
they'll finally get a graduate with good grades. As well be being intelligent
and a vegetarian, Lisa is musical minded and plays a mean saxophone. However, she doesn't get
much opportunity to practice before Bart starts annoying her and Homer is
shouting for her to stop making a racket.
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Maggie is the youngest member of the family and
although she has been greatly encouraged by Marge she is still yet to utter her
first word, preferring to suck on her pacifier. Together with their two pets, "Snowball II"
the cat (the first one being run over) and "Santa's little helper" the
dog, they form the family known as the Simpsons who
live in Evergreen terrace in the town of Springfield.
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Although the popularity of the series was growing at an exponential
rate the budgets still managed to remain tight for a number of years. As a
consequence of this, the overall picture
quality of the earlier seasons suffered with a relatively poor print and general
picture clarity resulting in a rather uninspiring transfer for season four. Mind
you, it is still
far superior to anything VHS could ever offer. Fortunately season four
appears to be the last year of the penny pinching from the Fox executives before
the good picture times can finally roll and do justice to the DVD format.
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In general, and given the quality of the source material, the picture transfer of each episode is good
whilst picture noise is kept to a minimum. Colours are not as
rich and vibrant as the later seasons whilst the amount of bright colours on
offer, especially the large swathes of yellow, can cause a bit of a problem with
over saturation. But no matter high a bit-rate or clean the print, the general
animation process used in the series does mean that there can be the occasional problem with artifacting.
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As the soundtrack is limited by bandwidth of the broadcast
medium there's never going to be much scope for a dramatic or dynamic
soundtrack. However, as with the previous seasons, it has been remastered into a
Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack. But to me, the series doesn't really need this and
it all seems to be a bit of an overkill and waste of time and money. Sure, the clarity of
the dialogue is a little improved, but it wasn't that bad in the first place,
whilst the remastered soundtrack is hardly adventurous in
the surround department with only the musical score finding its way to the rear
channels. This is definitely
one series which sounds just as good in the original Dolby Digital 2.0 as it
does in 5.1.
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Each disc along with pretty much each menu has its
own animated and scored character from the Simpsons to help you make your
choice. The funniest character has to be Homer who is struggling to remove a
rubber plunger from the top of his head. In some cases he'll manage to pull it
off to find a donut whilst on other occasions he'll pull the top of his head
off to reveal his brain. Other discs and menus include Bart, Lisa, Marge and
even Professor Fink and a mechanical bird careering around the menu. Great
stuff, and hurrah, there's even a 'Play all' facility too!
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Next up are a couple of short featurettes looking at some
of the controversy The Simpsons has picked up on its travels. First off is
the Bush Vs. Simpson Featurette
which, to much world wide publicity at the time,
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Also included is a bit or promotional material for The
Simpsons in the form a couple of trailers for the show and some television
advertisements for KFC and Butterfingers. I can only assume that these are heart
attack inducing products for the likes of the Simpsons be promoting them. There's also an oddly named Promotional Stuff
featurette containing interviews with Matt Groening and James L.
Brooks who talk about just why their creations are so popular the world
over.
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The shows creators clearly know that they have a limited
timeslot for the show and yet they still have to delete scenes from some of the
episodes. The deleted scenes for Homers Triple Bypass and The Front
are include here and, although they only last for
a few seconds (but probably a few days of work for the animators), they've simply
been dropped for timing purposes. The scenes are nothing special, but it is
still nice to see there reproduced here.
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Finally we come to the pointless filler material. As with The
X-Files season box-sets there seems to be some bizarre desire to include
foreign language clips from an episode. In this case it is for the season opener
Kamp Krusty, with languages such as Italian and Japanese. Whilst it may
be interesting to hear just how Homer and friends sound it different languages,
it's hardly what I'd call a standout extra.
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You could charge £1 million pounds for this box-set and
it would still be a bargain. Whilst it took a season or two for The Simpsons
to really get going, season four is really where the fun started (plus it
contains my all time favourite episode Kamp Krusty) and continued to do
so for the following three seasons. But the best part of season four is that there's not a single stinker of
an episode in this complete 22 episode collection, and that is something which
cannot be taken lightly. It's very hard to keep a series fresh and funny from
season to season, but with so many classic episodes it is something that the The
Simpsons does with ease. .
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Like the Flintstones before them The
Simpsons is one of the few animated series which is aimed at a more mature
and primetime audience. Mind you, there's certainly no reason why children
shouldn't watch and enjoy The Simpsons as, even with such a dysfunctional
family, television has no better loving family environment or parental role models
than in Homer and Marge Simpson. Why else would TIME magazine vote it the best show
of the 20th century?
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The only let down with the DVD is the fact that it appears that fans are only ever going to
be treated to the release of one season per year. Doh!!
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