Product Description
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Get more Big Bang for your buck when you bring home this
hilarious collection of 14 Family Guy episodes, in which Peter
needs a new kidney, Lois becomes a boxing champ, Chris finds a
new hobby, and Brian and Stewie unravel the space-time continuum
in an effort to save the universe. Travel to a new cosmos of
comedy with Family Guy!
.com
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Seth MacFarlane, the boyish, enthusiastic, prolific, and
incorrigibly naughty creative mind behind Family Guy, is sort of
an acquired taste. But judging by the long-running popularity of
Fox's animated series (11 seasons and counting), lots of people
have made that particular acquisition. He still has plenty of
detractors, many of them loyalists of The Simpsons who still
believe that Family Guy is a subpar rip-off. But after so many
years, those objections have pretty much been shouted down by
those who appreciate the anarchic farce and often surrealistic
stream-of-consciousness comedy of the Quahog, Rhode Island,
Griffin clan: Peter, Brian, Stewie, Lois, Chris, and Meg.
MacFarlane holds a tight reign on the show, which literally
couldn't be produced without him since he provides the voices for
those first three Griffins. Their family dysfunction is nothing
close to realistic, but there are still remnants of inspiration
from classic '70s-era sitcoms that MacFarlane has credited as
influences. The big difference is all the rudeness and crudity,
as well as the sometimes borderline-offensive teasing of real
celebrities or social issues that MacFarlane always holds in open
season. That said, the show is absolutely an equal rtunity
offender in which no person, political issue, illness, point of
view, or handicap is sacred. MacFarlane has heard all the
criticism and his response has always been a cheerful "lighten
up!" and a twinkly eye. This three-disc package is not season 10,
rather it is the remaining 14 episodes from season 9 with a
handful of filler material. To single out a few episodes of note,
"Brian Writes a Bestseller" is pretty close to classic with Brian
the dog going on a tour to promote his self-help book, "Wish It,
Want It, Do It," while the 1-year-old Stewie acts as his
publicist. Brian caps his tour with an appearance on Real Time
with Bill Maher, where he gets smacked down by the cartoon
version of the actual host. It speaks to how beloved and popular
Family Guy has become that so many actual celebrities open
themselves up to whatever may come by putting in cameos playing
themselves. (The best-known recurring names are Adam West as
Quahog mayor Adam West and Patrick Stewart, who sometimes plays a
well-elocuted character named Patrick Stewart.) Another standout
episode in the set is "Road to the North Pole," an extended
musical Christmas special in which Stewie and Brian set off on a
holiday journey to assassinate Santa Claus. Then there's "German
Guy," the saga of young Chris Griffin befriending a seemingly
nice old neighbor named Franz who turns out to be a former Nazi.
Creepy old ert tries to warn Chris away from his new friend,
and the story builds to the slowest and perhaps most inspired
fight scene ever staged. The episode is fodder for the set's best
special feature: "ert and Franz: The Making of an Epic Fight
Sequence," in which the writers show how they acted out such a
ridiculous and hilarious situation in order to bring it to
animated life. Other features include a segment about the care
that went into the musical compositions for "Road to the North
Pole," a handful of commentary tracks, animatic diagrams of how
select episodes were developed, and the public ceremony for Adam
West's star placement on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. It's a nice
package that shows Family Guy fully in its stride as one of the
most popular animated TV shows ever created. --Ted Fry