King of the Hill - The Complete Third Season

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Our Price: $15.19
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Average Customer Rating:     
Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox Starring: King of the Hill
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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: DVD EAN: 0024543147107 Format: Animated Label: 20th Century Fox Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox Number Of Items: 3 Publisher: 20th Century Fox Region Code: 1 Release Date: 2004-12-28 Running Time: 600 Studio: 20th Century Fox Theatrical Release Date: 1997-01-12
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: king of the hill complete third season Comment: It was pretty funny and "emmy award winning". Anyway I think that they should have commentary for more than the first and second season, the commentaries done by the characters were hilarious. But, all in all it is a funny animated show.
Also when are the other seasons supposed to come out? I have been waiting forever and a day!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Bonus Features? Comment: This is my favorite TV Series ever, and, in case you don't know already - this season was positively excellent. It breaks my heart to give this 2 stars, but the season 1 and 2 DVD collections had gobs of bonus features - deleted scenes, character comentary, making of featurrettes, you name it, it was there. There is no bonus content for the season 3 (and onwards) DVDs at all. Nothing. Even the menus feel cheap and tacked on. It's like they spent no time on these things. They crammed everything onto double sided disks to save a few bucks, and gave us no extra content because that would cost them 1 extra disk - like, 50 cents extra per DVD set.
I want to cry, and I want my 30 dollars back. I don't know about you, but I can see the episodes on TV already, the extra features are why I buy the DVDs.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Damn Bobby...It's Good Comment: Simply put...this collection is hilarious. This is the season in which the show really begins to pick up as far as the pace goes.
Seasons 1 & 2 are currently in syndication, and while they're not exactly BAD, I can never find myself really laughing at them.
Season 3 ends all of that, and I'm pretty sure that the show maintains that same hilarity own into the present.
This isn't the Simpsons or Family Guy----God knows it's not what they're showing on Adult Swim...but it's damn good comedy.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Possibly the most scatalogical season... Comment: Here are my favepisodes:
The Amazing Toilet Fiasco---Everyone in Burlington's toilet backs up except Randall's, causing everyone to fight over it. My favorite quote is in this episode:'I gotta pee'.
A****d's Blog---A****d opens a conservative political blog against Walter Mondale.
The Musical Fruit---Josie and A****d's food supply is eaten by a bear, all except the beans.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Still the Best Comment: From Beavis and Butt-Head, to Office Space, to King of the Hill I love all things Mike Judge. This set is pure entertainment, though the extras are lacking, the episodes are still top-notch.
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Editorial Reviews:
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With the Huxtables long gone, the Hills of Arlen, Texas, may just be television's most functional family. They are certainly one of the funniest as they struggle to appreciate "the little things in life while some big things are wrong and evil," as "sweet and trusting" Peggy learns in the classic episode "Peggy's Headache," in which Peggy is the last to discern that Dale's wife has had a decades-long affair with John Redcorn. Likewise, in "Death and Taxes," Peg is conned by an alleged former student, now a Death Row inmate, to unwittingly smuggle him cocaine. Hank, who is aptly described at one point as "a good husband with a good head on his shoulders," is the lone voice of reason in "Nine Pretty Darn Angry Men," in which he joins a focus group to rate a new "yuppified" model of his beloved lawnmower. At least he has come to terms with his son Bobby's desire to become a prop comic, and his wistfulness at the prospect of Bobby one day leaving home in "Hank's Cowboy Movie" is just one of many "sweet family moments" that elevate this series. The third season is a pivotal one for Bobby, whose coming-of-age misadventures include his devastating first adolescent crush on an older student in "And They Call It Bobby Love," a father-son hunting trip in "Good Hill Hunting," becoming Connie's boyfriend in "Love Hurts... And So Does Art," and marriage (don't ask) in "The Wedding of Bobby Hill." The Simpsons gets all the glory, but I'll tell you what, the writing in King of the Hill is no less incisively brilliant, its core ensemble no less indelible, and its star power no less impressive. Guest voices this season include Mary Tyler Moore as the new minister in "Revenge of the Lutefisk," Sarah Michelle Gellar in "And They Call It Bobby Love," Billy Bob Thornton in "Nine Pretty Darn Angry Men," Buddy Ebsen in "A Firefighting We Will Go," Uta Hagen, Betty White, and Phyllis Diller in "Escape From Party Island," and, as himself, a very gracious Chuck Mangione in "Death of a Propane Salesman." Unlike the previous two sets, there are no extras; but who needs commentaries? Such benchmark episodes as "To Spank With Love," in which Peggy is dubbed "Paddlin' Peggy" after spanking an unruly student, eloquently speak for themselves. --Donald Liebenson
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