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Survivor - The Complete First Season
 
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Survivor - The Complete First Season (2000)

Starring: Jeff Probst, Amber Brkich Director: Mark Burnett Rating: NR (Not Rated) Format: DVD
4.4 out of 5 stars See all reviews (79 customer reviews)

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Survivor - The Complete First Season + Survivor - The Australian Outback: The Complete Second Season + Survivor Pearl Islands - The Complete Seventh Season
Total List Price: $74.97
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Editorial Reviews

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Here's where it all began. The first season of Survivor dominated the ratings in the summer of 2000, helped spur the reality-TV craze, and inspired countless water-cooler jokes about getting voted off the island. The first season established the formula that would continue, with sometimes surprising variations, over numerous subsequent seasons: 16 people intended to represent the American mosaic are stranded far from civilization (in this case, the island of Pulau Tiga, off the coast of Borneo), struggle for food and shelter, compete in a series of physical and mental challenges, and at the end of each three-day episode vote out one of their fellow contestants. After 39 days, the one sole survivor who is able to outwit, outplay, and outlast the others wins a million-dollar prize. Because the Survivor craze preceded the craze for complete-season DVD boxed sets, the first season was represented on DVD and video by a 150-minute highlights package called Season One: The Greatest and Most Outrageous Moments. Now, all 13 episodes are available in a five-disc set (the fifth disc is ...Outrageous Moments) that contains every challenge, every political maneuver, every next-episode preview and previous-episode recap, every tribal council including the famous finale, and the reunion show. If you started watching Survivor in the Australian Outback or later, this is the perfect opportunity to see how host Jeff Probst, scheming Richard Hatch, tough truck driver Sue Hawk, ex-Navy SEAL Rudy Boesch, athletic Kelly Wiglesworth, and the others got the ball rolling. If you did watch the first season, here's your chance to relive it, and you also get an enthusiastic group commentary by host Jeff Probst (poking fun at himself) and contestants Hatch (talking the most, which should surprise no one), Boesch, and Gervase Peterson on the first and last episodes, plus some minor featurettes (seven minutes of footage of the contestants leaving L.A. for Borneo, David Letterman's Top 10 featuring the contestants, and 10 minutes of new interviews with Hatch, Boesch, and Peterson). Many reality shows have come and gone in the meantime, but in terms of staying fresh over a long run, Survivor has outwitted, outplayed, and outlasted them all. --David Horiuchi

Product Description
Studio: Paramount Home Video Release Date: 08/28/2007 Rating: Nr

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Customer Reviews

79 Reviews
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 (57)
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 (12)
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4.4 out of 5 stars (79 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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47 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Grand Sociological Experiment of the New Age, April 2, 2004
By "antithesys" (Minneapolis, MN) - See all my reviews
In June 2000 the landscape of American television was starkly different than it is now; nearly all shows stopped production in the summer, and aside from a traditional game show fad that was beginning to subside, all programming was scripted fiction.

Then Charlie Parsons and Mark Burnett brought to CBS an idea that, while not entirely original in concept or design, was remarkably different than anything currently being aired in the United States. It was a "reality" show, based on the hit Swedish program "Expedition Robinson", in which a group of strangers were dumped on an island and forced to fend for themselves, and vote each other off one by one. They called their version "Survivor", and it kicked off a TV revolution that does not appear to be going away.

This first season of "Survivor" established all the rules which, eight seasons later, are considered gospel by fans and contestants alike: sixteen players are divided into two tribes where they must build shelter, find food, and compete in challenges. Lose the challenges and you face Tribal Council, where the tribe votes out one of its players, be they the weakest link, the bossiest leader, or the slimiest snake. Eventually the two tribes merge into one where the challenges become individual and the field is ultimately levelled to two remaining players who are judged by their fallen peers. One is left standing to claim the million-dollar prize and the title of Sole Survivor.

With these parameters, sixteen Americans volunteered to be the initial guinea pigs, and were marooned in Borneo. Some were there for the adventure, some for the fifteen minutes of fame, and some for the money. It was, in the end, a game, and those who sought the pot of gold proved the most ambitious. One of the only rules of Survivor is that you cannot conspire to share the prize money. The Pagong tribe, consisting of mainly younger players like Jenna Lewis, Colleen Haskell and Greg Buis, were quite content with this and opted to lay back and let the cards fall where they may. But the Tagi tribe (including Rudy Boesch, Susan Hawk, and, of course, Richard Hatch) discovered early on that you could bend the conspiracy rule without actually breaking it. If they all voted together as a bloc, they'd have the numerical advantage to ensure a slot in the final four or five. You could call it an arrangement, or agreement. They called it an alliance.

The alliance strategy ultimately proved the obvious way to go, and it was perhaps that one aspect of this first season which proved the most influential on the seasons which followed it; nearly every subsequent winner of the game has used a solid alliance to get them to the top. It is not always the ringleader, not always the strongest or smartest. No one person or personality is guaranteed victory in this wholly unique game, because the game is shaped by the people who play it, and no two people are the same. Survivor was an almost instant ratings smash, and the first season finale ranks among the most watched events in recent years, and this can be attributed not to its sex appeal or entertainment quotient, but its curiosity. Random people scheming and plotting to outlast each other in a democratic process. Survivor is, at its core, a microcosm of Western society and politics, a grand sociological experiment of the Pax Americana.

The DVD release of the complete first series allows many fans who have forgotten or did not see the original Pulau Tiga castaways to experience, or re-experience, the show that they fell in love with those four long years ago. And coming with the hindsight of eight sequel seasons (season nine is being cast as of this writing, and producer Burnett and host Jeff Probst are reportedly signed through season twelve), it is a real trip to go back and watch how it all started; when grubs were considered "gross food", sloppily-edited credits gave away future events (giving berth to the wild internet "spoiling" subculture), and "alliance" was considered a dirty word. Probst is shaky here; the job is new to him and there is no edge to his attitude. It is a new experience to him, as it is to everyone else. And all the great moments are here: Greg and his "coconut phone", Sean's alphabetical voting strategy, and of course Susan's infamous "snakes and rats" jury speech, often imitated but never duplicated.

Survivor fans will need a copy of Season One. Others may want to consider this as the perfect place to start catching up on what they've been missing.

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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Why This Show Works on DVD, May 6, 2004
By REX (Chicago) - See all my reviews
Contrary to a popular belief, SURVIVOR is not the kind of show that only works in its first viewing. Yes, as a game show with an unpredictable outcome, the first viewing may be the most entertaining, but what one must consider here is that SURVIVOR remains popular, season after season, because it is the best-produced show on the air. If you have any interest in TV as a creative medium, think about what it takes to produce a show like this: the countless hours of editing to create story arcs amongst the contestants and keep the outcomes unpredictable, the artfully-woven travelogue elements that present the geography and harsh climate of a remote location, the vast creativity and ingenuity required to come up with dozens of well-designed games and challenges that will entertain viewers while truly testing the players. (It looks as if the DVDs themselves could have presented a few more extras, in which the depth of these processes are shared.) SURVIVOR changed the face of modern TV for a reason -- and, to this day, it maintains the professionalism and class that few, if any, other reality programs have achieved.

In fact, I'd argue that watching the series again *after* the first time is the only way to completely grasp what makes SURVIVOR work so well, as being less focused on who is ousted from the island each episode allows the viewer to actually notice the details. New viewers, one-time viewers, and longtime fans alike should all be able to appreciate this set, while purchasing it will most likely determine whether later seasons are released onto DVD as well... so have at it.

(Speaking of later seasons, all of them contain a series of reactions and strategies against the standards set by this season, when the slate was clean and no one really knew how to play. The powerful reactions of the often innocent players, not expecting the backstabbing and deceit that everyone expects from this game now, are completely unique in that respect to this season of SURVIVOR, and remain gripping -- even emotional -- four years later.)

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Survivor - Not just great the first time around, May 12, 2004
By Christopher Watts (Surprise, AZ USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This DVD is so incredible because My wife and I love looking back at previous episodes and see where things went wrong for many of the losing survivors. Strategy and luck play huge factors in this game. It's fun to see enjoy the season with 20/20 hindsite.

Usually before every new season starts, I go back and re read the highlights of each previous season. It's amazing watching how with each new season, the survivors learn from the previous seasons. The All Star season is going to have a huge effect on the new seasons because we found out that having a bad reputation can kill you (lookin at you ROB C). I also think we'll be going back to alliances playing large roles in future seasons. Pearl Islands had almost NO alliances compared to previous seasons. I can't wait for the other seasons to be released on DVD. Colby storming through Australia, Ethan,Lex and Big Tom dominating Africa, Vecepia owning Marquesas, Brian controlling Thailand, Rob C and Matt using each other in the Amazon, Rupert and Jon battling in Pearl Islands and Everyone at once on All Stars.. Keep em rolling CBS!!

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars The original and the best
It is a real treat to re-watch this. As a Survivor junkie from that first curious boat trip in the "south China sea", the amateur quality of this series is better than all of it's... Read more
Published 19 days ago by Roberto Carlos da Silva

5.0 out of 5 stars a perfect product
One of my favourite reality show DVDs.
Just delivered within 10 days from USA to PRC, perfect.
The package was well done and I was very pleased. Thanks Amazon.com
Published 6 months ago by Qi Le

4.0 out of 5 stars What could have been a 5 stars item but isn't a 5 stars item
¡DON'T READ THIS IF YOU HAVEN'T WATCHED THE SERIES!
I think that the edition is good for those who want to enjoy the DVD version of this classic in the series but it lacks... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Carlos Garcia Martín

5.0 out of 5 stars Rat vs. Snake.
Survivor - The Complete First Season became a sensation in 2000. Jeff Probst is the host and still is even though he's a cutie he gets on my nerves every now and then. Read more
Published 9 months ago by ADRIENNE MILLER

5.0 out of 5 stars The orginal great one
Well, what can you say about a show that started one of the biggest changes in the history of television? Read more
Published 9 months ago by Brent Sullivan

3.0 out of 5 stars Survivor SEASON One
I am a survivor nut, but by far this is most annoying one yet, lots of mean people on this show , and lots of sore losers.

This one frankly got on my nerves. ! !
Published 11 months ago by L. henderson

5.0 out of 5 stars survivor 1
if u luv suvivor u will luv this 1 it's awsome! buy it & u will see for yourself! debi!
Published 13 months ago by Deborah K. Hall

4.0 out of 5 stars Impressed
I don't personally watch Survivor, but ordered this as a very late Christmas Present (on 12/21) With 2 day shipping, it was at my house on the 23rd as advertised and saved me a... Read more
Published 17 months ago by Preston Landry

5.0 out of 5 stars Good
It's funny to see how this popular show started. Thank goodness they made some improvements during the following seasons.
Published 23 months ago by Chicago Fan

5.0 out of 5 stars The Start of a Classic
As Survivor started this week with Fiji, you should go back to see how it all started. It was shot in many cases with one camera and things were done on the fly so to speak. Read more
Published on February 10, 2007 by R. Frye

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