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Once Upon a Time: Season 1
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Additional DVD options | Edition | Discs | Price | New from | Used from |
DVD
August 28, 2012 "Please retry" | Deluxe Edition | — | $28.97 | $22.09 |
DVD
August 28, 2012 "Please retry" | — | 1 |
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| — | — |
Watch Instantly with ![]() | Per Episode | Buy Season |
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Genre | Drama |
Format | Multiple Formats, Box set, Color, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen |
Contributor | Josh Dallas, Lana Parrilla, Jared Gilmore, Ginnifer Goodwin, Jennifer Morrison, Robert Carlyle |
Language | English |
Number Of Discs | 5 |
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Product Description
Relive the complete first season of ABC's ONCE UPON A TIME, the hit series that boasts unforgettable characters and a tangled web of romance, action and enchantment. Immerse yourself in the magic and mystery of Storybrooke -- a sleep little town where every fairytale character you've ever known is frozen in time and trapped between two worlds, victims of an evil curse. On her 28th birthday, Emma Swan (Jennifer Morrison) meets Henry (Jared Gilmore), the son she gave up for adoption 10 years ago. Henry believes Emma is the daughter of Snow White (Ginnifer Goodwin) and Prince Charming (Josh Dallas), prophesied to break a powerful curse. Unconvinced, Emma returns Henry to Storybrooke, where she encounters the enigmatic Mr. Gold (Robert Carlyle) and clashes with mayor Regina Mills (Lana Parrilla) -- the boy's adoptive mother -- who Henry insists is none other than the Evil Queen! Start your epic collection with all 22 captivating episodes, including never-before-seen bonus features, in this spectacular 5-disc boxed set.
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.78:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
- Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 6.4 Ounces
- Item model number : 786936823035
- Media Format : Multiple Formats, Box set, Color, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
- Run time : 15 hours and 46 minutes
- Release date : August 28, 2012
- Actors : Jennifer Morrison, Ginnifer Goodwin, Lana Parrilla, Josh Dallas, Jared Gilmore
- Subtitles: : French, Spanish
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 5.1), Unqualified (Dolby Digital 5.1)
- Studio : ABC
- ASIN : B0058YPL66
- Number of discs : 5
- Best Sellers Rank: #28,755 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #5,290 in Drama DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
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The story is both simple and complex: the Evil Queen of Snow White fame has cast a curse that sends all of the inhabitants of their fairy tale world to a town in Maine where things just seem to have always been a certain way: time, in a manner of speaking, has stopped (think PG Stephen King setting without the exploration of small-town bigotries). Before I go on, I should mention that the creators and writers rely STRONGLY on the premise that Disney versions of certain fairy tales are peerless interpretations and take a huge amount of liberty with the intellectual property that Disney has given them to play with. The Disney-synergy element becomes far more transparent from the second season and doesn't let up, but the first season has some subtlety to it and proves to be a lot of fun.
The continue where I left off, our introduction to this story begins with a young boy from the town finding a seemingly random woman--who works as a bail bondsperson--who he believes is the key to breaking the Queen's curse. When she (Emma, played by Jennifer Morrison [House]) returns the boy (Henry) to the town, Storybrooke, she finds that he is her biological son and that his adoptive mother is the Mayor of the town, Regina Mills, who also happens to be the Evil Queen. Things don't feel right with Emma, especially where Regina is concerned, so she stays and things start to change in interesting ways. The first season has the splendid novelty of trying to figure out "who is who" and "who knows what." Henry knows all of this because of a magical storybook that chronicles everything that happened in The Enchanted Forest, which we get to see in the form of flashbacks, before the curse was cast.
Fair warning: The writers don't have a sense of foresight and throw a lot of things to the wall just to see what will stick. Many times, they'll introduce a seemingly relevant plot point that won't be explained for seasons (and typically is shoe-horned in to provide damage control for their massive amount of retroactive continuity). What's great about the first season is that there seems to at least be a element of creation concision. What really saves the show is the approach that most of the actors tend to use: they take the major points seriously but are aware that some of the demands of the story may call for moments of levity to avoid being absurd, though camp elements do prove effective in this and many other seasons. It is interesting to see how certain fairy tales are turned on their heads.
The two people to watch are Lana Parrilla and Robert Carlyle. Parrilla plays Regina Mills (The Evil Queen), and no one takes their role more seriously than she does. Of all the actors, she probably has the hardest job: running the gamut from playing a younger, more naive version of her queenly self to a regal dark sorceress to a quasi-sociopathic mayor to a very devout mother. She gets some of the best lines, especially the larger portion of the delightfully sardonic dialogue. Parrilla largely carries the show for the rest of its run: she continues to be an endearing part, if not the most endearing, of every episode in the current seasons.
Robert Carlyle, genius actor that he is, has almost as many roles to play with his character as Lana, but his most magnificent contribution to the show is when we get the privilege of seeing him as the deranged Rumplestiltskin (one of the most critical characters) in the fantasy realm. This version of the impish character is far more imposing but also so unique in every way that he steals the show whenever he's on screen. In the fantasy world, he's like a Mephistopheles-type deal maker with a warped mind that makes him delightfully droll, fantastical, clever, and in many ways terrifying. His real-world curse form is that of the town loan shark and pawn broker Mr. Gold, who bears Carlyle's signature sparkling blend of charm and totally ominous menace.
Carlyle, like Parrilla, carries the show in this season and for the many seasons to come. In this season, however [possible SPOILER ahead], both are more ostensibly evil than they may be in future and undeniably the "big bads" of the show, so enjoy that because both of them do evil so so well!
Despite an ending that seems very rushed, I still contend that this is the strongest of all the seasons. The other major actors are given other chances to show what they can do, though it's almost always the ladies who shine (which is great). Again, Carlyle's experience and professionalism (that he has literally brought to every project he's ever worked on [a truly brilliant actor who needs to be known by more]) and Parrilla's strength and dedication really make the show a delight. Final warning: you will more than likely experience frustration with future seasons.
The show is based on the theory that there is an alternate universe where every classic fairy tale character exists—a world that has a connection to our world.
In Storybrooke, a small town in Maine, beloved fairy tale characters we've known of since our parents read to us about them, are trapped in our world by a curse cast by an Evil Queen. Everything changes when a boy named Henry Mills, (beautifully played by Jared Gilmore), an adopted child, learns the "truth" through a "special" book. He finds out who his birth mother is and goes looking for her...heading toward Boston with his school teacher's credit card - desperate times call for desperate measures...right? Maybe not......
The action moves between the two worlds - one where the fairytale characters are themselves and living in their own parallel universe, and the present, in modern day Storybrooke, where they are trapped by their own curse-induced amnesia. The pilot seamlessly sets up the connections between these two worlds and makes it clear that the Storybrooke characters' stunted emotional lives could well be explained by the curse that Henry so fiercely believes in.
The Pilot opens with a period Prince Charming, (Josh Dallas), racing into a snowy forest in search of Snow White, (Ginnifer Goodwin). He finds her in an open coffin, seemingly dead, and surrounded by seven rather gnarly looking dwarfs. But as in the timeless tale, his kiss awakens her and in the next scene they're being married. Suddenly, a sexy, snarly, Evil Queen, dressed in black-leather (Lana Parrilla - who is fantastically BAD), busts in to the celebration to inform everyone that "I shall destroy your happiness, if it is the last thing I do." What a GREAT Gift!!!!
Meanwhile, back in modern day Storybrooke, Emma Swan, (Jennifer Morrison), a bounty hunter and bails-bond collector from Boston, is on the track of a fleeing defendant. As she drives toward Storybrooke, searching for her "missing person," she sees a boy walking alone, along the dark nighttime roadside. Dangerous! She stops the car and asks him where he is going and if she can help him. The boy is Henry Mills.
Emma had given a baby boy up for adoption 10 years before and now discovers that the infant is 10 year-old Henry. Although he has not yet reached the town's limits, he has traveled quite a distance. He is running away from home, looking for her....trying to find her because, as he tells Emma, "No one can ever leave or enter Storybrooke." This is Emma's 28th birthday and she wants, more than almost anything, to not spend it alone. As it were, she does get to spend at least part of it with her son. In any case, a disbelieving Emma drives the boy back home to the mother who raised him. So, Emma, innocent of her role in Storybrooke, enters the town, (probably the first person to do so), and into the story, as the prospective heroine.
As mentioned above, Henry has in his possession a special volume of fairy tales from long ago - certainly not your mother's book of fairy tales. The boy is convinced that Emma, his birth mother, is the daughter of Snow White and Prince Charming. The royal couple sent her away so she would be protected from the deadly curse. They placed her in a magic wardrobe made from a block of wood by Mister Geppetto and his son Pinocchio. The infant was transported from the Enchanted Forest, within the fairy tale world, as a babe before she could be cursed. As such, she is the only person who can break the curse and restore the characters' lost memories.
The town is indeed populated by fairy-tale characters such as the above mentioned Snow White and Prince Charming, only they have no idea of their true identities. The only two who do know are the Evil Queen, a.k.a. Regina Mills who is also the town's powerful mayor and Henry's adoptive mother, and the villainous Rumplestiltskin, (Robert Carlyle). a.k.a. Mr. Gold, the enigmatic owner of the local pawn shop, as well as the town itself. Jiminy Cricket, Geppetto, Pinocchio, Captain Hook, Red Riding Hood, the Seven Dwarves, Hansel and Gretel, Belle and the Beast, etc., are all characters in both worlds.
I love the concept of the program, but then I always loved fairy tales. And, even this late in my life, I do believe there are at least a few happy endings. "Once Upon A Time" is very different from what what's on television at the moment, ("Grimm" cannot even begin to compare with the quality and talent of OYAT). The cast does a fantastic job! And the clothing, scenery and decorations in fantasy land are sumptuous. I can not wait to continue watching the show and see how the storyline develops in Season 2. Very highly recommended!
JANA
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believed to be reality.
The cast from the story-book, have, because of the 'Witch's' spell
have been placed into todays world living in a town called 'Storybrook'
without any knowledge of who they really are.
Only a 10-year old boy 'Henry' who carries a story-book with the tale
of 'Snow White' told within, with him, is, beginning to work out who
the people of the town really are.
'Henry' enlists the help of 'Emma Swan' who had 10-years ago given up
her new-born son for adoption......her mother from that time is.....
....you probably know the answer without being told...???
Something like this shouldn't really work, however. does.....this is
an enjoyable story that combines the story from the story book with
todays world.
A series that ''Kids'' of all ages will surely enjoy......the second
series will be available to buy very soon.
Good sound and 'HD' picture quality contained within the 4-disc 'U.S'
22 episode TV-series.....coupled with a bucket-load of additional features
which includes ....'Fairy Tales in the modern world' --'Building Characters'
--'Welcome to Storybrooks' --'The Story I Remember....Snow White' --'Fairest
Bloopers of them all' --'Once Upon a time origins' --'Audio commentaries' and
of course 'Deleted Scenes' .....enough to fill any spare time you may have.


Sets and scenery - full Marks. Loads of theatrical costumes to die for [especially those for the Evil Queen], Prince Charming and Snow White.
Attention to detail is superb. Excellent scripting and special effects are faultless.
You get a number of extras on the DVD as well.

The casting is well done. I love all the main characters and how they are portrayed, especially Robert Carlyle. He is particularly strong as the quirky Rumpelstiltskin.
The green screen is relied upon too much, thus the reduction of a star from 5 to 4, but perhaps that will change should the show do well and get a larger budget in future.
I recommend it. A great, fun escape!