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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Friends? No comparison!!,
By
This review is from: Coupling - The Complete First and Second Season (DVD)
I have not seen the DVD version but I have seen every episode. This is our favorite British Comedy!!! I enjoy Friends but I never laugh this hard. My husband almost hurt himself laughing at poor neurotic Jeff doing his blindfolded strip tease for his "surprise" birthday party!!! Much wittier than Friends could be. The storylines in each episode are great!!! They are so convoluded with twist and turns. The American/NBC version was absolutely painful for us to watch..we wrote to NBC to complain! PLease don't compare the American version to the original - they are apples and oranges. The original is fantastic and I've ordered mine!! Can't wait til Christmas on this one!
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the most hysterical shows ever!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Coupling - The Complete First and Second Season (DVD)
I am an avid BBC America viewer - this program hooked me the first time I watched it. I made my husband watch it and he was instantly hooked too. It is funny beyond belief! Both men and women can relate to it, and gives you inside glimpses into the minds of the opposite sex.This isn't Friends...this isn't even the NBC version of Coupling. Even though they used almost the exact same script, the actors and director of the NBC version did not hit the mark even remotely. The British cast and director hit the mark square in the center every time. The characters are likeable, even with their flaws - and it's their flaws that make them hysterical. One thing - this is not something to watch in front of kids - this is very adult humor. This is comedy at it's best. You will hurt yourself laughing. We enjoy it so much, we're getting this set to give to friends of ours for Christmas.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I am in love with Coupling,
By chrisbean (Cambridge, MA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Coupling - The Complete First and Second Season (DVD)
This is beyond fabulous. Perfect enough that I find myself making excuses to stay home and watch it in its 10pm Friday night time slot. Beyond raunchy enough that I was terribly embarrassed at making my dad stop channel-flipping to watch an episode when I was visiting my parents last weekend. So universally funny that he laughed more than, and loved it at least as much as, I did. I love poor, awkward Jeff, and all of the delightfully horrific things that come out of his mouth. He's probably the only character on television that I can watch make a total idiot of themselves without cringing, becoming terribly self-conscious, and having to change the channel.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very Funny,
By Eltizon "eltizon7" (Yuma , Arizona USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Coupling - The Complete First and Second Season (DVD)
I caught this show on the local PBS station and immediately fell in love with it. Baudy without being vulgar it is a laugh riot from start to finish. The only drawback is the number of episodes. Evidently, British TV does not run on a strict new episode every week format. So both season one and two together have fewer episodes than one season of a typical American TV show. But it does make up in quality what it lacks in quantity.
I highly recommend the seris
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Britain 10, America 0,
By
This review is from: Coupling - The Complete First and Second Season (DVD)
NBC has pulled off a real miracle -- lifting almost verbatim the funniest script ever to air on television, putting it in the hands of an American cast, and producing the biggest turkey in recent sitcom history. Thank goodness for BBC America, without whom the current sitcom wasteland on American TV would expand beyond the horizon.
When it comes to almost any aspect of sex, the line between sublimity and absurdity is scarily thin and easily crossed. Sometimes the line can be crossed simply by voicing what occasionally crosses all of our minds. Every episode of this BBC series is a smorgasbord of dashes, stumbles, and retreats back and forth across this line. (Perhaps it's the voicing of these silly, sometimes taboo, thoughts that makes the British version work so brilliantly and the American version fail so miserably. The British actors simply bring better voices to the game -- not in terms of accents, but in terms of more earnest delivery, more abandon as actors, more sincere perplexity at the foibles of human sexuality, and less self-consciousness about airing it all.) Take, for instance, the dinner party from hell. Jane (the meat-eating vegetarian) shows up for dinner with her psychiatrist in tow, whom Steve mistakes to be Jane's lover. Through a series of gaffes that cannot be explained with mere words, he winds up trying to backtrack from suggesting she grows two extra breasts when she gets excited. And all this while the hors-d'ouvres are still going around. By the time the main course is served, Steve is deep into a forced exposition of the artistic merit of "Lesbian Spank Inferno", his favorite porn flick which he inadvertently left in the video player for his girlfriend to find. Now come on. Which of us hasn't wondered how we'd explain ourselves if caught red-handed with one of those movies everyone has, everyone knows everyone has, and to which no one will freely admit? It's just so wonderfully liberating to find that porn, properly defended, can be explained after all to one's dinner guests. Assuming your guests have the tolerance for ribaldry at the Sex and the City level, this is a series to be played at your next party. It's just to good to do it alone.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Giggle loop, sock gap, nudity buffer, bucket of women ears,
By
This review is from: Coupling - The Complete First and Second Season (DVD)
Those are a few of the many baffling and hilarious "Jeffisms" featured in seasons one and two. Coupling is one of my all-time favorite shows, with brilliant writing and a solid cast. The actors have come to really own their characters, increasing in emotional depth with each episode (be sure to check out season three, coming out soon). Over and over, I have enjoyed...-Steve's rants ("You do not need padding to tackle upholstery!") But best of all is Jeff, a charmingly neurotic Whelshman who is capable of attracting women, yet becomes terrified when he does. Many of the phrases that come out of his mouth make me cringe and slap my forehead, while rolling on the floor laughing. Some of his romantic disasters include smiling at a co-worker and destroying a water cooler in the process ("She thinks I'm a mute with a balance problem"), telling an Israeli woman that he collects women's ears in a bucket, telling a woman on a train that one of his legs was amputated ("I've met the woman of my dreams, and I can't take my trousers off!"), getting tricked into joining a three-way with Patrick and his girlfriend Linda, complimenting his boss/future girlfriend Julia in an elevator ("You have the eyes of ten women...not in a jar or anything, I'm not accusing you!"), and of course, the famous striptease in a room that was, unbeknownst to him, full of his coworkers, friends, and his parents. Overall a classic character, and one of the funniest I've seen in a long time. And yet, Jeff is just part of a whole, where all the acting, the writing, and the direction come together to form a TV show that is a masterpiece. It's a shame there are only 22 episodes broadcast so far, but I could happily watch them over and over for years to come. As far as the DVDs themselves go, there are pros and cons. I like the menu design and interviews with the cast and staff. The bad news is that there are no subtitles, and commentaries are only on episodes three through nine in the second season. And the "Play All" option is only on the second season DVD. Nevertheless, this whole series is well worth owning on DVD. I think the fourth season will be broadcast on BBC America next month, and I can't wait!
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Funniest show EVER!,
By E Sinclair (Seattle, WA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Coupling - The Complete First and Second Season (DVD)
I got hooked on this show watching BBC America in its first season and it quickly became my favorite show of all time. Unfortunately, the American copy didn't work at all, but this DVD is a must have in any comedy enthusiast's collection. The comparison to a cross between 'Friends' and 'Sex and the City' doesn't do it justice. This series is fresh, witty and sometimes a little raunchy, but I've never laughed so hard! The writing and cast are superb and I can't wait for Series 3 on DVD!
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This show made me jealous that I wasn't British too!,
By
This review is from: Coupling - The Complete First and Second Season (DVD)
If even you were to watch these episodes out of order, there is no way you could possibly get lost! You could start in the middle of Season 2 and still find your way back to the start; all of it still making perfect sense! That's the brilliance of Steven Moffat! This show is a breath of fresh air in all aspects of a sitcom. Steven Moffat has been very creative about the way each episode is shot, and giving the viewer the sensation of almost being in that position yourself. He take's our mundane day to day activities from men and women and makes me look at things in a wetting your trousers perspective or pissing myself silly with laughter! Seasons 3 & 4 are ingeniously well written and shot cinemetography speaking. The plot line is just as funny and he hasn't missed a beat yet! Steven Moffat's my idol!
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Coupling: best British comedy since Fawlty Towers,
This review is from: Coupling - The Complete First and Second Season (DVD)
When someone asked me about Coupling, I told them, "It's like Friends plus Sex in the City, only funny." A snide remark, I know, but what can you say? American sit-coms give us gags; British sit-coms give us wit, humor, and outrageous laughter.
I fear, though, that Coupling is over. The original six actors were, taken together, perfection - like the various strains of point and counter-point in Bach or Mozart. But then, tragically for the fans, Richard Coyle (Jeff) left the series. The remaining five, plus the new character, "Oliver," kept it up bravely and well, but, in the end, Coyle's departure, depriving us as it does of Jeff, removed an absolutely essential 1/6th of the recipe. Oliver is good, don't get me wrong, but Jeff somehow was essential. To Richard Coyle, all I can say is "OH, Jeffrey!!" To potential collectors, you won't regret buying any of these seasons, though.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Too bad we do not have a sitcom as funny as "Coupling",
By Lawrance M. Bernabo (The Zenith City, Duluth, Minnesota) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (COMMUNITY FORUM 04) (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)
This review is from: Coupling - The Complete First and Second Season (DVD)
The American version of "Coupling," the British comedy that is their version of "Friends," was a big disaster, which only goes to prove Shavian adage that the Americans and British are a people separated by a common language. Yes, when you start watch the first episodes you will quickly figure out which character on "Coupling" matches up with who on "Friends," but that takes about five minutes.
Steve Taylor (Jack Davenport) is Ross, without the Ph.D. in paleontology, who has just started dating Susan Walker (Sarah Alexander), who certainly is more confident about living in the real world than Rachel. Jane Christie (Gina Bellman) is decidedly quirky like Phoebe, but without the loveable cuteness or the innate sense of compassion, and Sally Harper (Kate Isitt) is psychotic about her appearance the way Monica is about cleanliness. Jeff Murdock (Richard Coyle) thinks about sex as much as Joey but without any of the success because of an extraordinary ability to always say the wrong thing, which makes it odd that Patrick Maitland (Ben Miles) ends up being the Chandler figure since he is apparently a sex god (or sex "donkey"). But by the second or third episode of the first series (what we in the Colonies call a season) you should be able to deal with "Coupling" on its own terms. The biggest difference between "Coupling" and "Friends" is the preoccupation with sex. "Coupling" only had six episodes in its first series and if you took the first season of "Friends" and selectively cut it down to only six episodes it would not be as much about sex as these episodes on "Coupling." A plotline about a job interview turns into being about sex. Everybody goes to a funeral and that turns into being about sex as well. By the end of the first series you will not be thinking about "Friends" any more, but about "Sex in the City" as the more fitting comparison. The six episodes from the first series are as follows: "Flushed" has Steve trying to break up with Jane, and one of the most unusual circumstances for arranging for a date you have ever seen as Steve and Susan first hook up. "Size Matters" has Sally seeing Patrick in a new way, or, to be more accurate, hoping to see Patrick in a new way. "Sex, Death and Nudity" has the gang showing up en masse at the funeral of Jane's aunt, although exactly who is with whom and what their relationship is for public consumption is not clear. "Inferno" is about the elephant in the living room at Steve and Susan's dinner party, namely the porn tape that Susan discovered in Steve's magazine. "The Girl with Two Breasts" has Jeff successfully having a conversation with a beautiful woman who still likes him, but that is because she is from Israel and only speaks Hebrew. The first series comes to an end with "The Cupboard of Patrick's Love," where it seems one of his collection of videotapes of his bedroom activities has the name "Susan" on it. The first series almost ended on a rather sweet note, but then they went for the gag, which is the whole object of "Coupling." The second series offers up nine episodes: "The Man With Two Legs" highlights Jeff's inability to avoid saying the wrong thing to a pretty woman. "My Dinner in Hell" has Steve convinced Susan's parents are making fun of his, uh, recreation practices. Steve has a different problem in "Her Best Friend's Bottom," in which he accidentally sees Sally naked. "The Melty Man Cometh" has Steve and Jeff explaining the causes of impotence to Patrick. "Jane and the Truth Snake" has Jane taking pills after being fired, which only results in her creating a snake puppet that insists on telling the truth. "Gotcha" has Steve and Susan at a fancy dinner for their first anniversary and the question is whether Steve will pop the question. "Dressed" has Jane at a dinner party where she is wearing nothing under her raincoat and Steve upset that Susan is pretending to be Patrick's trophy wife. In "Naked," Jeff has finally found a woman who also blurts out the wrong thing all the time, but unfortunately she is a senior manager at his firm. "The End of the Line" has Steve and Susan's relationship in trouble because of a woman named Giselle and a bar in Australia that Susan thinks is named in honor of her trip Down Under (it is complicated, which is the whole point of the comic confusion). The bottom line is that I find "Coupling" funny, as in laugh out funny, which is not something I usually do (unless watching the nightly news). The fact that two series still amount to less episodes than you get with a season of an American sitcom works to the show's advantage. Basically creator Steven Moffat, who based the Steve and Sue relationship on dating his own wife, only writes scripts if he comes up with good ideas, so it is not just that the best episodes are hysterical but that the worst episodes are still at least a bit above average. Yes, this is a decidedly British situation comedy, but there is something compelling about this approach to combining sex and humor when compared to the drivel of most American comedies. |
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Coupling - The Complete First and Second Season by Martin Dennis (DVD - 2003)
$54.98 $42.99
In Stock | ||