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172 of 204 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Season 13...The Al Jean Era Begins, Halloween moves indefinitely to November, and the series starts to show its age.,
By
This review is from: The Simpsons: The Thirteenth Season (DVD)
"When did the Simpsons start to lose its steam?" Such is a timelessly debated question amongst nerds, and the responses couldn't vary more over the years, from assertions that Mike Scully turned the series into a 'cartoon,' that episodes like 'The Principal and the Pauper' nailed closed the coffin of the show, that once Dave Mirkin rolled in, the series began moving away from emotionally centered stories, even the infamous quote 'Worst episode ever," came from a blogger scribing his hatred for the episode 'Itchy and Scratchy: The Movie," from season 4; but these days most fingers start to point to Al Jean's tenure as showrunner for a clear illustration of the family's fall from demanding adventures that commanded viewing. In 2004, during the series' 15th year, Harry Shearer was infamously outspoken at what he saw was a declining quality within the series over the previous three years. With Season 13, you can judge for yourself, as that is year one of Al Jean's tenure, and would be the first of those declining shows.
Truly the Simpsons has never stopped offering funny adventures for our classic characters, however its tone has surely shifted as time has passed, but as such it has managed to keep itself capable of renewing its palate of comedy and expanding its universe. It has managed to produce great episodes even during this past decade, but in contrast to the consistency within the first ten years, the show has certainly given justification to comparative criticism. Season 13 is filled with humorous offerings and many explore mature and inspired themes like spirituality, medicinal marijuana, reality television executions, and the infamous skewering of Rio. There is a lot to like here. Many episodes are wonderful examples of the series thumping its chest with refined wit and social criticism, and most are creative continuations of various setups that have worked to great effect in the past. Apu gets a nice infidelity tale, Homer takes on the role as the new Moe, Lisa flirts with adulthood, Bart falls in love again, a clip show, and the three act offering 'Tales from the Public Domain,' which is a nice alternaverse collection of re-purposed classics, even Homer and Ned's Vegas wives return. While the 22 episodes included here are a certain source of mirth and continued adoration for the series, there is certainly more than enough room for reflection on the seasons' illustration of fans' indifference towards the show. The series has, since season 12, began to air the Halloween adventure, a long standing tradition of the holiday, on the first Sunday in November due to Fox's broadcast pre-emption by the World Series. This seemingly inane action has sadly influenced the perception of the show's urgency. Fortunately, season 21 has rectified this error, but nine years too late. Also, many episodes here feel to be the antithesis of the series' usual approach to storytelling, with nearly every episode using a broad setup that feels like traditional sitcom territory. While in said territory, the series was once reliable for reflexive comedy and biting satire, here the comedy seems to be relying on physical humor and passing sarcasm more than usual. Many episodes feel light in laughs, and our characters all seem to engage in scenarios where they learn lessons they've learned before. While there are signs that things are becoming much more mechanized in the creation of episodes, and that perhaps the days of the show as the forefront for cutting edge animated humor are now behind them, this season still manage to charm. The many voices behind the past genius of the series continue their contribution to this season. John Schwartzwelder credits five episodes to his writing credit, Jon Vitti offers two, Simpsons 'brain' George Meyer even gets in an episode with now former show-runner Mike Scully, and Ian Maxtone-Graham too. But most of the writing is credited to the new staff at the show who have since established themselves as giants in their own right. Dana Gould begins his credit on the show, and has since become perhaps the most visible of Simpsons writers, and one of the greatest comedic contributors to the series. Current regulars Matt Selman, John Frink & Don Payne, Matt Warburton, Carolyne Omine, all contribute episodes that further establish a new tone for the series. What you get here is exactly a reflection of the transitioning writing staff: many episodes have a quality that feels reminiscent to the previous six seasons but are often next to ideas and comedic passages that are distinctly new to the series. That doesn't mean that this dualist approach hurts the series, it merely creates a new atmosphere within the show, one that some may not like, but that others may find perfectly suited to the series. There is something about these episodes that makes the series feel as though it has entered a new age of sorts. What that may mean in the long term historical context of the series is uncertain. Many would say it is the beginning of the long winter before the Simpsons Movie, while others may say it is the continued illustration of the already declining urgency of the series. Certainly season 13 is a mixed collection of tales, but it is worth owning for any fan of the Simpsons. There is still a renewed energy from having a new voice in charge, and from a new writing staff excited to make its mark. There are great examples of the continued quality the series has been able to exude despite the occasional recycled plotline or brazen trudging out of a guest star. It may not be legendary, but it's better than most shows after 291 episodes. An Episode Listing: -"Treehouse of Horror XII" : Homer is cursed by a gypsy, Pierce Brosnan is a murderous computer, and the kids riff on Harry Potter. Definitely one of the better 'later' treehouse entries. -"The Parent Rap": Homer and Bart are tethered together. Marge and Homer are put in the stockades for being bad parents. And Judge Constance Harm makes her first of many appearances. The KBBL Party Penguin! -"Homer the Moe": Moe's swanky repurposed bar 'M' turns off his regular customers, so homer opens a bar/hunting club in his garage. R.E.M. guest star. It's a good Homer/Moe adventure. -"A Hunka Hunka Burns In Love": In a strange entry in the pantheon of both Mr. Burns and Snake, Mr. Burns falls in love with a cop named Gloria, who later turns out to be the ex-girlriend of Snake. Enter Homer to his aide, to help Burns win the heart of Gloria, armed with an extremely potent aphrodisiac (which leads to a truly hysterical shot of combined horror later on). Gloria has since made several returns as Snake's love. -"The Blunder Years": After Homer starts freaking out for no reason, an investigation leads to a truly wonderful flashback homage to Stand by Me with the roles recast as Moe, Lenny, Carl, and Homer. -"She of Little Faith": A Christmas episode about Buddhism that takes some nice swipes at the commercialization of Xmas. Plus this episode continues the show's trend of wonderfully sweet Lisa-centric stories. -"Brawl in the Family": Homer and Ned's Vegas wives return, Delroy Lindo guest stars as a moderator attempting to wrangle the dysfunction out of the family. "Another case of Monopoly related violence." -"Sweets and Sour Marge": Homer tries for a world record and the town gets one: World's fattest town. Sugar is banned, Homer becomes a sugar smuggler. Ben Stiller stars as a corporate junk food executive. -"Jaws Wired Shut": Homer's jaw is, you guessed it, wired shut. He communicates by chalkboard and becomes a much better father and husband because he learns to listen. Popeye parody included. -"Half Decent Proposal": The Return of Artie Ziff, and he's a billionaire (which was aluded to in season 4's the Front). Artie tries to buy off Marge's love, to which leads to a recreated prom night love triangle quite cleverly. Then Homer joins an Oil Rig with Lenny, whose heartbroken over Carl for some reason. -"The Bart Wants What It Wants": Bart falls for Rainier Wolfcastle's daughter (voiced by Reese Witherspoon). Bart then find himself in a love triangle with Milhouse. Plus, see Skinner at an open mic night. -"The Lastest Gun in the West": Dennis Weaver of Gunsmoke guests as an aging cowboy whom Bart helps to revive his career on the Krusty the Clown Show. -"The Old Man and the Key": A Grandpa Simpson episode that revolves around him getting his license to impress a hot new woman at the Old folk's home. A solid episode. -"Tales From the Public Domain": An inspired take on three classics: The Odyssey, Joan of Arc, and Hamlet. -"Blame it On Lisa": The Rio episode full with rainbow rats and roaming monkey gangs. -"Weekend at Burnsies": The Homer as a pothead episode. A classic. -"Gump Roast": An uneven clip show, that doesn't stand well on its own, like most of the later clip shows. -"I am Furious Yellow": Greetings True Believers! Stan Lee guest stars as an insane version of himself. Bart creates a comic book based on Homer's angry life and becomes a poor successful writer in the process, paid only in worthless stock. One of the best this season. -"The Sweetest Apu": Homer catches Apu cheating on Manjula and walks backwards in shock all the way home. Another great one from Schwartzwelder. -"Little girl in the Big Ten": Lisa pretends to be in College so she can be challenged and Bart becomes a Bubble Boy. -"The Frying Game": Homer is accused of Murder and sent to death row with a 'shocking' revelation. -"Papa's Got a Brand New Badge": Homer and his cronies become the law enforcement in town when the police are once again deemed inept to handle crime. A very funny episode with a great ending. Don't avoid season 13, there's too many bright spots of hilarity.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Still something for Simpsons fans to enjoy,
By
This review is from: The Simpsons: The Thirteenth Season (DVD)
Ever since season 9 there have been complaints from the fans about what they see as a decline in quality of The Simpsons. I'm sorry but I have to agree, I love the earlier Simpsons episodes and seasons but that doesn't mean the latter ones don't have any value. Actually I still find enjoyment in watching the show even today but you can't just ignore that the show is not as good as it once was, and that' being objective. I loved the first 9 seasons, 10-12 are still good to me, season 13 less so but is still watchable. Season 13 definitely has some good moments and provides laughs. As it turns out, I enjoy those episodes much more now than I did when they initially aired. The thing is, after so many seasons it gets incredibly hard for a television show to stay fresh and keep all viewers happy, season 13 struggles with this. I like season 13, I do not LOVE it like I did earlier season but that's normal, I'm just glad it's still watchable and entertaining. There's no real problem, a show changes and sometimes it's not as good as it once was. No one is forcing you those buy anything as far as I'm concerned.
Some episodes I particularly enjoyed from season 13 were "A Honka Honka Burns In Love" which had Mr. Burns falling in love, the three story episode "Tales From The Public Domain" was particularly a good and clever one in my opinion, and "I Am Furious Yellow" in which Bart makes a comic based on Homer called "Angry Dad" and gets successful. I thought this season's Halloween episode was average, the Harry Potter story was a great one thought. Interesting to note, this season brought back Homer and Ned's Las Vegas wives and Marge's admirer Artie Ziff, also from this season on the Halloween shows would not be shown in October but rather in early November. I don't hate any episodes in season 13, for a letter season there's plenty of good in it, I'm just being objective an expressing my feelings towards this season (please don't see this as bashing!). If seasons of the show are still being released on DVD there must be fans who want them right? Now an issue I feel is important to address; the packaging. The first season of The Simpsons was first released on DVD in 2001, since then they've kept coming and now, in 2010 season 13 was recently released. The history of the packaging seems to interest many here but the reality is that it is not all about packaging, there's the content as well. Season 6 introduced the "limited edition" character set, there is also the regular edition of season 13, this year it's Ralph that's on the cover (One has to wonder who's next? Bumblebee man or Kent Brockman perhaps?). Season 11 introduced bad packaging; season 12 continued this trend but season 13 aims towards perfecting the art of bad packaging. At this point if you're obviously going to have an opinion about the quality of the show, good or not. There are good episodes in this season and the show is still worth watching if you're a fan. If you can live with the fact that it's not as good as some of the previous season, and the packaging that comes with it, I bet you'll find plenty to like from season 13. 3/5.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good episodes (not great) - Lousy packaging...the saga continues,
By DJ (Michigan, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Simpsons: The Thirteenth Season (DVD)
Being that season 13 was about the time I started to lose interest in new episodes of The Simpsons, I was looking forward to this release, but with some reservations. I was pleasantly surprised to find that the episodes are not nearly as bad as I remember them being, and in some (most) cases are actually pretty good. Yes, the plotlines are generally ridiculous, and the episode flow is terrible, but there are still some very funny moments and lines throughout the season.
Maybe over the past ten years or so, I've come to accept that we can't have Season 6-8 over and over again. Maybe my sense of humor has changed. Whatever it is, this season was definitely worth the purchase for me. Of course, there's the recurring issue with the poor packaging that has to be mentioned in every review. I thought the packaging for Season 12 was a step up from Season 11 (at least the discs didn't scratch in the casing), but Season 13 is far below both of them. They've reused the disc storage idea from 12, but for some reason put the discs in a flimsy box that has to be opened, instead of just sliding out. All of the boxes at Best Buy were already damaged. I also opened the case to find that the booklet for this season was bent and folded, damaged beyond belief for a new product. I see from other reviews that this was not unique to my set. Disappointing.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good show, HORRIBLE PACKAGING,
This review is from: The Simpsons: The Thirteenth Season (DVD)
Good show but the most important thing: HORRIBLE PACKAGING!! PLEASE GO BACK TO THE OLD WAY!
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Hello Principal Skinner, Hello Super Nintendo Chalmers,
By Inspector Gadget "Go Go Gadget Reviews" (On the trail of Doctor Claw) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Simpsons: The Thirteenth Season [Blu-ray] (Blu-ray)
And so it begins!
It's no secret that The Simpsons fell into a steep freefall about ten years ago. The erratic quality of the show began about 1999, but there were still many great episodes produced in that time. Season 13 (which aired between 2001/2002) isn't a bad season, as a matter of fact it has mostly brilliant episodes, but the episodes which ARE bad, are among the worst ever, and drag the rest of it down. Of the 22 episodes featured about 18 get a 4-star rating. A couple get 2 or three stars, and the worst of the bunch...get minus infinity. First of all, the episode 'Gump Roast' is a cheap clip show. I think it's appalling that 13 years into a billion-dollar cash cow they thought it was still acceptable to churn out a half-assed episode filled with recycled animation, mostly of things that weren't funny first time around. The other bad one is 'The Lastest Gun in the West', starring Dennis Weaver as a old-time cowboy. Weaver's heart isn't in it, his voice is completely wrong for the character, and the story of the episode itself is grim and depressing. Really not funny. I can't stress enough how utterly awful these two are. The writers try to cover it up with self-referential, depreciating humor, but it doesn't, and never has, worked. They use this cheap trick time and time again and I wish they'd focus more on making a better show than trying to jokingly cover-up their failings by wearing them on their sleeve. But, like I said, the remaining 18 are well-written, have smart stories, and loads of great humor. Where else would you learn that Otm Shank is the biggest star in India? It's just a shame that two bad shows reduced the overall rating to 3/5. The Blu Ray looks great in 1.33:1 1080p, with DTS HD-MA sound. I wish Fox would release all the early seasons on BD, but in order to upgrade the picture they'd have to re-edit every episode digitally from scratch, as the were edited in video-quality before, and would not hold up well in HD. There are loads of extras and 15 minutes of hilarious deleted scenes.
32 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Season 13 has some nice episodes,
By
This review is from: The Simpsons: The Thirteenth Season (DVD)
Season 13 of the Simpsons airing from 2001 to 2002 had some of the finer episodes (in my opinion) produced later on in the series.
Treehouse of Horror 12 3 mini episodes. Homer recieves Roma curse, Homer gets a talking computer, and a Harry Potter parody The Parent Rap Bart's delinquency catches up with him and a judge sentences him to be tethered to Homer Homer the Moe Moe's re-entry to bartending school prompts him to turn the bar into a nightclub with live music by REM A Hunka Hunka Burns in Love Homer writes fortune cookie fortunes for a restaurant and Mr. Burns gets one of them. The Blunder Years Homer's visit to a hypnotist reveals a repressed traumatic memory from his childhood She of Little Faith Rev. Lovejoy commercializes the church which outrages Lisa so much that she converts to Buddhism. Brawl in the Family The family gets in a fight which leads to a social worker counseling them Sweets and Sour Marge Springfield is declared the fattest town in the world. Marge tries to ban sugar from the town Jaws Wired Shut Homer's jaw is wired shut after an injury which gives him a lesson in how to listen to people instead of being a chatterbox Half-Decent Proposal Marge stays with an old flame for the weekend to earn money for Homer's sleep apnea surgery The Bart Wants What It Wants Bart meets Rainer Wolfcastle's daughter and she fancies him. The Lastest Gun in the West After an aging western film star guests on Krusty's show, he makes a comeback The Old Man and the Key Grandpa's driver's license is restored and his new car makes him popular with a woman. Tales from the Public Domain Three classic tales "Odyssey of Homer" "Joan of Arc" and "Hamlet" Blame It on Lisa The Simpsons go to Brazil to track down a missing orphan Lisa became a pen pal with Weekend at Burnsie's Homer gets a prescription for cannabis which worries his family Gump Roast Clip show I Am Furious Yellow Bart writes his own comic which becomes a hit online The Sweetest Apu Apu is caught having an affair with an employee. Homer and Marge find out and help Apu prevend his wife from finding out. Little Girl in the Big Ten Bart has to live in a plastic bubble after an insect bite damages his immune system. The Frying Game Homer and Marge are under suspicion for killing an old woman who dies under their care. Papa's Got a Brand New Badge Homer creates a private police force after the town's police poorly handle a blackout. My favorite episodes in this season are "Parent Rap" and "Sweets and Sour Marge" Get this season box set and help complete your collection.
13 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
It's a REAL Simpsons season package!,
By
This review is from: The Simpsons: The Thirteenth Season (DVD)
I was so turned off by the 20th season's bare bones release that I never did buy it (which surprises me). I'm so glad to see season 13 is coming and is back on track. I always enjoy the commentaries very much as well as other extras, but more importantly it just feels like a celebration of The Simpsons.
It's easy for me to rate this package before watching it: the previous 12 season on DVD have all been 5-star in my eyes. Still think you won't enjoy it? Just ask Ralph Wiggum on the front of the box. He'll tell you that's unpossible.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great season, but bring back the old packaging!,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Simpsons: The Thirteenth Season (DVD)
I almost stopped buying the Simpsons seasons after buying season 11 at Walmart when it first came out because the packaging changed and there was GLUE on one of the disks that did not come off no matter what I used causing it not to play all of the episodes. Season 13 has similar packaging but not as bad as 11. Season 11 has skinnier slots so I have to cram the disks in and it's a chore to fish them out. I would love for them to bring back the jewel cases and more sturdy boxes, but I will continue to collect the seasons I love.
As for the show itself, I refuse to watch new episodes ever since I saw Homer strangeling Bart while blowing fire in his face shouting, "Burn Barty burn!" I can't say for sure what episode or season this was, but it aired in 2010. I thought that was so tastless and low for the show I have watched and adored most of my life. (The first episode aired when I was 4 years old.) They should have bowed out gracefully years ago when they were obviously running out of ideas and trying too hard but it's starting to seem like they are too greedy and full of themselves to stop now. Season 13 still has some wonderful episodes so I will watch it until I memorize every single moment and then watch it again!
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Everything but the packaging,
This review is from: The Simpsons: The Thirteenth Season (DVD)
The Simpsons, though thick and thin, remain my favorite show. As time rolls on, some of the jokes border annoying and yes sometimes Homer's blatant stupidity is overbearing, but I love the show and nothing's going to change that. The only thing that really annoyed me was the packaging of the dvd itself. I don't know why but the Simpsons dvds always seem to have problems with the packaging. Someone needs to get on the ball. That's the only quarrel I have with the set
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
One of the better seasons on DVD,
This review is from: The Simpsons: The Thirteenth Season (DVD)
I think this season is one of the better one's out on DVD now, though it isn't as good as 4,5,8, or 9. There are alot of great episodes on here that you can watch over and over again and the commentary and other special features are awesome. Well worth the 30 bucks
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The Simpsons: The Thirteenth Season by Matt Groening (DVD - 2010)
$49.98 $30.99
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