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The Munsters: The Complete Series | 
enlarge | Actors: Fred Gwynne, Al Lewis, Yvonne De Carlo Studio: Universal Studios Category: DVD
List Price: $69.98 Buy New: $49.08 You Save: $20.90 (30%)
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Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 6853
Format: Box Set, Black & White, Dolby, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Subtitled, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Number Of Discs: 12 Running Time: 1158 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.5 x 2.1
MPN: MCAD61107448D UPC: 025192006005 EAN: 0025192006005 ASIN: B001DZOCZU
Release Date: October 7, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand new Item. CD, DVD, Book, VHS more than 400 000 titles to choose from. ALL days Low Price !
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Product Description Studio: Uni Dist Corp. (mca) Release Date: 10/07/2008 Rating: Nr
Amazon.com Season One It has its own stormy weather and fire-breathing housepet named Spot, but the mansion at 1313 Mockingbird Heights is otherwise like any other American sitcom home. This is the address of the Munsters, the family that for two seasons, 1964-66, found a permanent place in pop culture--if not "monster" success. Developed by Leave It to Beaver team Joe Connelly and Bob Mosher, the series was a standard sitcom (complete with the same awful canned laughter), except that the Ward Cleaver character was a reanimated corpse. Dad Herman (Fred Gwynne) was a Frankenstein's monster, mom Lily (Yvonne DeCarlo) and Grandpa (Al Lewis) were vampires, and son Eddie (Butch Patrick) a little wolf-boy. Munster niece Marilyn was inexplicably normal, which prompted much worry from the other members of the family (she was played in early episodes by Beverly Owen, who left to get married, and then by Pat Priest). The plots revolve around typically tortured sitcom situations: Herman must lose weight to fit into his old Army uniform, Herman has insomnia, Herman takes dance lessons from a crooked instructor. (As that list would suggest, 6'5" Fred Gwynne's wonderfully agile slapstick and Borscht Belt comedy made him the center of the show.) What distinguished The Munsters from Father Knows Best was the Universal horror-movie lineage and the ghoulish one-liners (the latter growing a bit tedious after a while). The three-disc DVD has all 38 first-season episodes in excellent transfers, a 15-minute pilot with different actors as Lily and Eddie, and no extras or commentaries. High points include "Hot Rod Herman," which features the tricked-out Munster Koach and Drag-u-la (boss wagons both), and "Eddie's Nickname," the one where Grandpa gives Eddie a potion that causes the boy's beard to grow (a weirdly memorable image, if you're a kid). The show was either pure kiddie farce or a radical comment on the absurdly unreal world of sitcoms. Either way, if you grew up with them as an alternate TV family, you can't help but have warm feelings for the Munsters, as clammy as they are. --Robert Horton Season Two The second and final season of The Munsters seamlessly carries on the sardonic picture of family life painted in the monster-comedy's first year. Family head Herman Munster (Fred Gwynne) continues to vacillate between thick-headedness and intellectual posturing. His wife, Lily (Yvonne DeCarol), has her feet on the ground, even if her daughter-of-Dracula looks skew her idea of beauty and grace. Grandpa (Al Lewis), the irascible vampire, spends his time concocting mad inventions and criticizing Herman. Young Eddie (Butch Patrick) goes to school and acts like any other kid except, well, he isn't. And lovely Marilyn (Pat Priest) is still stuck with low self-esteem, convinced by her Uncle Herman, Aunt Lily and Grandpa that she's an unattractive woman who scares away potential suitors. In the opening episode, "Herman's Child Psychology," Herman disastrously attempts to convince Eddie not to run away from home by acting as if his son's behavior is no big deal. The very funny "Herman, the Master Spy" finds the big man taken aboard a Russian submarine, where the undersea comrades assume he must be some sort of strange fish. "A Man for Marilyn" concerns Grandpa's ridiculous effort to turn a frog into a handsome boyfriend for Marilyn, an experiment he assumes must have worked when a good-looking guy turns up at the Munster home. (The fellow is there because he assumes Marilyn is being held against her will by monsters.) "Big Heap Herman" is a particularly silly but enjoyable story about an Indian tribe that has been awaiting the arrival of a god who looks, of course, like Herman. Along with seasons one and two on The Munsters: The Complete Series are a couple of post-TV series, theatrical movies of differing quality. In Munster, Go Home, Herman discovers he's the new lord of Munster Hall in England. Crossing the Atlantic with his family to claim his inheritance, Herman is met with hostility by the would-be heirs (played by Terry-Thomas and Hermione Gingold) and a plot to eliminate him from a car race. While the film takes something away from The Munsters by placing them in foreign territory, Munster, Go Home is still a lot of fun. Less so is the cheap-looking The Munsters' Revenge, a 1981 potboiler in which Herman and Grandpa are charged with crimes committed by robot monsters from a wax museum. Hard to watch and kind of greasy-looking, Revenge is instantly forgettable, even with Sid Caesar's participation. --Tom Keogh
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
The Complete Series of the Munsters-Is Great December 1, 2008 Betsy F. Dickerson 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This was a gift for my husbands birthday, he is really enjoying this series. I received it when it was expected and in the condition(NEW) that I purchased. As always I am a satisfied customer. Thanks Betsy
5 STAR SERIES STILL GETS 3 STAR TREATMENT November 9, 2008 JACK LOBO (Greenwich,CT USA) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I must say if you're an owner of the previous 2 box sets and the 2 Movie Fright Fest, this new package will probably disappoint. Aside from the colorized bonus feature of Family Portrait, which I would classify as acceptable not stellar, is exactly the same thing. The Menu boards are exactly the same. Season 1 has scene select, season 2 doesn't. Plus every episode of season 2 still has that long get on your nerves UNIVERSAL STUDIOS fanfare. No you can't skip it. It'll just go to the next episode with that same fanfare. The true Munsters fan will quickly cringe at the inferior musical cues substitutes that were not corrected from the previous release. Even the episode Knock Wood, Here Comes Charlie is still recorded at a low volume. Very little effort went into correcting the shortcomings of the previous sets. In fact, aside from the convenience of being transferred to single sided discs there was really no effort at all. Universal studios should fire their lawyers. They should have had the courage to say " This is how the show was made. This is how the show is presented on TV. And this is how we will present the dvd. The same way. We will keep all the original musical cues intact". I guess people with guts are becoming more scarce every day. Really, doesn't Universal have the faith that the profits of a properly made Munsters set would have more than covered the costs of monies owed to other entities that hold the rights to the music. I can understand Disney being difficult to deal with for "Someday My Prince Will Come", because they are a heartless company. But The Standells? Come on now! What possible power could they have that Universal was afraid to use "Just A Little Bit" instead of that sickening music that wasn't the Standells at all, when Eddie played them on the phonograph in the opening of Far Out Munster. Go figure. The final insult, to us the buyers, instead of using the inexpensive yet convenient thin snap covers, they created this triple fold out that holds 2 discs per side overlapping each other. If you don't own the previous set then I recommend you get this. If you do own the previous set, don't be in too much of a hurry. Wait for it to hit one of those large warehouse stores like BJs, Costco or Sam's club to carry it. Why did I give this 4 stars? Because 80% of the set is pretty good. The 20% I gripe about is like a black hole that just sucks the good right into it. I guess even badly released Munsters is better than no Munsters at all.
The Munsters November 3, 2008 Marilyn Parker (USA) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
I got this for my husband's Christmas gift/2008. I always enjoyed the series and he loves it. A shame that they only made two seasons of it.
Absolute MUNSTER heaven October 31, 2008 Robert 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Not only does it have the pilot color episode. Not only does it have the color version of "Family Portrait." Not only does it have the two wonderful color movies featuring the lovable Munster Family escapades, but here "lies" all, I repeat, all the black and white episodes ever aired to make your goulish belly laugh, even to this day. The jokes are surprisingly crisp, corny, whimsical, terrific, and completely without shame for the family of the undead. There is no stopping this household brim full of goodies at every corner in the spider webbed palace. Lightning strikes at any given moment, and Spot the family dragon looms in from the darkness with zeal. The episodes and movies are not without fresh ideas with many twists and turns wrapped around the Munster's familiar characteristics. Herman, is without a doubt, the funniest monster ever built, even if his doctor was a "butter fingers." Get this fabulous collection of funny goodies, and laugh til you die. -I mean drop.
Broad Horror Spoof on TV October 13, 2008 The Movie Man (Maywood, New Jersey USA) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
One of the most enjoyable horror spoofs was the TV show "The Munsters," which aired originally from 1964 to 1966. "The Munsters: The Complete Series" contains all 70 episodes of the show's two seasons on 12 discs. At 1313 Mockingbird Lane in Mockingbird Heights stands a musty, cobweb-covered gothic mansion. The residents consider themselves a normal, everyday American family, but to neighbors and viewers, they are a bit odd. Herman (Fred Gwynne), the man of the house, is seven feet tall and looks very much like the Frankenstein monster. His wife Lily (Yvonne DeCarlo) looks like a lady vampire. Son Eddie (Butch Patrick) is a boy/wolf, and Grandpa (Al Lewis) can pass easily for a centuries-old Count Dracula. Daughter Marilyn, who looks strange to her family, is the only normal-looking Munster of the clan. The comedy is very broad in these episodes, and the concept wears pretty thin after a few shows, but Gwynne is always very funny as Herman and Lewis is perfect as his vaudeville schtick melds with his vampire persona. Extras include the two full-length Munsters movies, "Munster, Go Home" and "The Munsters' Revenge," and career portraits of Gwynne, DeCarlo, and Lewis.
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