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The Critic - The Complete Series

The Critic - The Complete SeriesDirector: Steve Socki
Actors: Christine Cavanaugh, Gerrit Graham, Judith Ivey, Nancy Cartwright, Charles Napier
Studio: Sony Pictures
Category: DVD

List Price: $49.95
Buy New: $23.23
as of 3/20/2010 14:47 PDT details
You Save: $26.72 (53%)



New (26) Used (11) from $19.62

Seller: moviemars
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 97 reviews
Sales Rank: 16806

Format: Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Region: 1
Number Of Discs: 3
Running Time: 520 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.6 x 0.9

MPN: D01617D
UPC: 043396016170
EAN: 0043396016170
ASIN: B00008EY6Q

Theatrical Release Date: January 26, 1994
Release Date: June 23, 1994
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: BRAND NEW, Factory Sealed items direct from the Studios. 30 Day Satisfaction Guarantee. Quick International Airmail!

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 97
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5 out of 5 stars ahchem..The Critic is finally here   January 20, 2004
Agent Nick Castle (washington, dc)
72 out of 77 found this review helpful

The Critic was a very misunderstood and underappreciated masterpiece. Thanks to Comedy Central and recurrent bouts of insomnia I have not been without The Critic these many long years, but not a day went by where I didn't curse those responsible for the show's demise. How could a show with so many writers, producers, and actors from The Simpsons last only two seasons....IDIOT executives, that's how.

Voice Talents:
Jon Lovitz as Jay Sherman
Nancy Cartwright as Margo
Gerrit Graham as Franklin
Doris Grau as Doris
Judith Ivery as Eleanor
Charles Napier as Duke Phillips
Nick Jameson as Vlada Velimirovic, others
Maurice LeMarche as Jeremy Hawke, others
Christine Cavanaugh as Martin

(1) The Pilot (1994): Guest star Valerie Fox as an actress who seduces Jay in order to secure a good review for her latest (sub-par) performance. (4 of 5)
(2) Marty's First Date: It's career day at Marty's school (Jay's son) where Jay is embarrassed and Marty meets the girl who is to be his first date. (5)
(3) Dial `M' for Mother: Test audiences find Jay cold, uncaring, and homely and less warm and cuddly than Hitler. He goes on Geraldo with his mother in order to soften his image-with disastrously hilarious results. (5)
(4) Miserable: An obsessed projectionist kidnaps Jay so that he can tell her what movies are good. On the plus side, Jay did get some action. Jay is rescued by Jeremy Hawke, his best bud and Australian action hero. (4)
(5) A Little Deb Will Do You: Margo (Jay's sister) is reluctant to attend a debutante ball despite pressure from her mother (...to starve yourself to fit into a dress, to dance with boys who feel you up, to drink so much you fall into a well, it's a magical night...). Secondary to threats to shoot her beloved horse, Margo agrees to her mother's will and has a miserable time. (5)
(6) Eyes on the Prize: Jay celebrates his 1000th episode but poor ratings and no visitor turn-out at his party spur him to quit and focus on winning a Pulitzer. Guest stars Phil Hartman as Adolph Hitmaker, Adam West as himself, and Tress MacNeille make the episode a hit. (4)
(7) Every Doris Has Her Day: Jay and Doris (yep, Lunch lady Doris) go to a show and as they get to know each other better, it becomes apparent that Jay may in fact be Doris' child given up for adoption years earlier. (4)
(8) Marathon Mensch: To prove his machismo, Jay agrees to train for and run the NY Marathon. Guest star Bob Costas. (4)
(9) L.A. Jay: Jay writes a screenplay and takes it to LA but it's too good for the illiterate , ex-gigolo executive to produce (instead opting for Revenge of the Nerds 4). Jay is then hired to write `Ghost-Chasers III' and in so doing must abandon his creative ideology. (5)
(10) Dr. Jay: As Duke announces his plan to change the endings of Holly Woods greatest hits he is stricken with a terminal illness. Jay vows to find a cure. (4)
(11) A Day at the Races and a Night at the Opera: Jay is voted Time Magazine's Wittiest Man Alive and to improve ratings Duke offers to pay any viewer $100 if they don't find Jay funny. Upon failing, Duke and Jay are taken to court in a mass class-action suit. Guest stars Steve Allen and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. (5)
(12) Uneasy Rider: Jay refuses to endorse products on his show and quits his job to become a truck driver. In order to impress his fellow truckers he volunteers for the high-risk jobs. (4)
(13) A Pig-Boy and His Dog: Jay's mother writes a children's book whose main character (pig-boy) resembles the critic and he is tortured by the consequences. (5)
(14) Sherman, Woman, and Child (1995): Here we are introduced to Alice, Jay's assistant and on-again off-again love interest. Alice re-creates Jay's image thereby saving his job and Jay teachers her how to survive in NYC. (4)
(15) Siskel and Ebert & Jay and Alice: This episode guest stars Roger Ebert, Gene Siskel, Rex Reed, and Gene Shalit. Siskel and Ebert splt and each want Jay as their new partner. (4)
(16) Lady Hawke: Jay falls for Jeremy's twin sister, Olivia. Olivia is a man-eater and Jeremy fights to protect his friend. Meanwhile, Alice finds herself caught in this love triangle. (4)
(17) A Song for Margo: Margo falls for her dangerous new neighbor, Johhny Wrath from the group Nuns in a Blender. When she denies his advances, he abandons her for another, looser woman. (4)
(18) From Chunk to Hunk: Jay and Marty go to a fat camp for diet, exercise, and torture. Marty is successful both in losing weight and subsequently with the ladies. (4)
(19) All the Duke's Men: Jay is enlisted as a speech writer for Duke Phillips' presidential campaign. Jay's writing gains him respect and Duke the loyalty of the masses. When Jay refuses to write a speech where Duke drops Franklin (Jay's father) as his running mate Duke fires him and reveals his true plans for the country. (5)
(20) Sherman of Arabia: Marty has a slumber party and Jay regales the children with his story of capture and subsequent heroism during the Gulf War. (4)
(21) Frankie and Ellie Get Lost: Following their 40th anniversary, Jay's parents get lost at sea when their penguin-piloted aircraft crashes. Recall that "penguins can't fly." (5)
(22) Dukerella: Miranda, Alice's sister (Alice is Jay's girlfriend), visits NY and proceeds to irritate all with her great beauty, naivety, and deep southern ways. Just as Miranda hit's rock-bottom she meets and falls in love with Duke. (5)
(23) I Can't Believe It's a Clip Show: Jay and pals are held hostage at his 10th anniversary show. Although this is a flash-back episode and no way for a show like the Critic to leave us, it did have Milton Berle as the saves-the-day ninja. (4)


5 out of 5 stars Iron-clad proof the networks no nothing   March 28, 2004
Inspector Gadget (On the trail of Doctor Claw)
34 out of 34 found this review helpful

The Critic is the brainchild of Al Jean and Mike Reiss (producers of The Simpsons) and is produced by Gracie Films, also of Simpsons fame. It was a highly intelligent and very funny show that made fun of movies, Hollywood, TV stations at the same time as giving us a sympathetic hero and the whacky world he lives in.

Jay Sherman is short, fat, bald and dresses like dweeb, his ex-wife hates him, his boss is always on his back, women run from him in terror and his make-up lady humiliates him at every given opportunity. He's also voiced by the increasingly adorable Jon Lovitz and has one of the best catchphrases ever. HOTCHIE MOTCHIE!!!!!

The supporting characters are equally hilarious. Jay's crazy dad is always up to some kind of insanity. His pal Jeremy Hawke (star of the controversial and highly blasphemous Crocodile Gandhi movies) is always featured in some sort of dumb action movie clip. Even his tummy has a 'feed me' voice of its own. Though the honors go to Charles Napier, who is absolutely priceless as Jay's megalomaniacal, all-American hard-man boss.

It's hard to believe ABC ditched this after ONE EPISODE!!! What were they thinking? Even Fox eventually gave up on it. Sad considering how sharp the writing and humor was. How on earth does self-indulgent, over-rated and long, long past prime trash like Friends gets 10 seasons and The Critic gets 23 episodes. You won't find Jay Sherman all but winking at the camera or pausing until the fake laughter dies down.

This complete set comes with a fair amount of extras (the cinema screen trivia cards are great) but the best is fact that we get all the 'webisodes'. In 2000 Jay made a brief comeback on the internet and all those 5 minute shows are featured on the 3rd DVD. My only complaint is, after 22 brilliant episodes, it kind of dies out with an obnoxious and annoying 'clip show' than a proper end-of-season finale. Minor complaint nonetheless.

The shows are all presented in 1.33:1 fullscreen, as drawn with a good Dolby 2.0 soundtrack. If Family Guy can come back through strong DVD sales then let's hope the same for The Critic. Now only if Duckman would come to DVD...


5 out of 5 stars Grossly neglected.   March 4, 2004
Church of The Flaming Sword
23 out of 24 found this review helpful

The Critic is one brilliant animated TV show that suffered a fate that befell entirely too many other brilliant shows like Family Guy and The PJs. These shows would be hyped up weeks before the first episode aired. Then about 2-4 weeks into the series' first season (few of these shows lasted much longer than that), an entirely different series would air. And thus, the series would be left in limbo for weeks, sometimes months before another episode made its way to its small, and impatient group of fans. Because of this apathetic treatment from the networks, these shows were not given a sufficient opportunity to find an audience. The Critic, which debuted on ABC in 1994, languished in this manner until Fox would pick it up a year later. History would once again repeat itself on that network as well. It's just shameful how not one, but two, networks could take such a clever, inventive show for granted.

The Critic is about a very short pudgy New York City film critic and divorced father named Jay Sherman (voiced by Jon Lovitz). Sherman hates blockbuster films with a burning passion. He makes his hatred known with two simple words: "IT STINKS!!!". This makes him one of the least popular people in the city. John Rocker may get the key to the city before Sherman does if that tells you anything. Sherman's life is full of some interesting and sometimes oddball characters. He comes from a rich family - his mother is a haughty aristocrat and his father is still recovering from a stroke, which is evident with his eccentric behavior. The only other normal person in Sherman's family is his loving, but slightly insecure teenage sister. Sherman's best friend is an Australian actor who is basically cross between Mel Gibson and Paul Hogan. The actor stars in precisely the same big budgeted films that Sherman likes to pan. And finally there's his boss, a Southern-bred media tycoon would love to cancel Sherman's hugely unpopular show for purely business reasons, but the tycoon for some reason likes having Sherman around.

What set The Critic apart from the other creative animated shows was how it would joke about cinema, much in the same way Family Guy would do to modern television, or how King of the Hill would do with rural stereotypes. One of the funniest skits (Lord knows The Critic had a lot of them), involved a trailer with Arnold Schwarzeneggar in a Jewish-themed action film. Arnold's new catch phrase was "Haga Navilla, Baby!!!". Pure hilarity.

For those of you who can't get enough of these amazing animated shows like The Simpsons, Family Guy, and King of the Hill; you owe it to yourself to watch The Critic. Once you've watched it, realize that it has been cancelled for nearly a decade, and see the sickening glut of reality shows that now reign over prime time with an oppresive fist - Don't be surprised to hear yourself saying this about the sickening state of 21st Century television: "IT STINKS!!!"


5 out of 5 stars Bout time   January 15, 2004
19 out of 21 found this review helpful

I've been waiting for years to see the Critic on DVD. By far, one of the funniest shows of all time which was cancelled in its prime. Fox was completely foolish for removing the show which I've watched faithfully since I was 11 years old. The episodes are very well written, and the characters are voiced to perfection by Jon Lovitz and a great supporting cast, including frequent guest cameos by celebrities such as Milton Berle, June Lockheart, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Ricki Lake, Queen Latifah, and Geraldo Rivera (not to mention every popular film critic under the sun). With film parodies such as "Family Affair: the Motion Picture with Marlon Brando as Mr. French," or "Honey, I Ate the Kids with Anthony Hopkins," and the antics of Jay, Alice, Duke, and the rest of the show's ensemble, this DVD set is bound to be a gem in any collection, and I highly recommend it to anyone who enjoys sarcastic, laugh out loud, and often silly humor. A definite buy.


5 out of 5 stars You're Satan, aren't you?   January 11, 2005
Evil Lincoln (Dayton, Ohio)
9 out of 10 found this review helpful

I saw this DVD set for sale while getting off work one night, and immediately bought it. "The Critic" was one of the best shows of the `90's, and it had been a long, long time since I'd seen it.

For those of you who have never seen it, it's sort of comparable to "Family Guy," with plots completely inconsequential to the enjoyment of an episode. The funniest segments are always the movie "trailers" ("Brown Acres" and "Rabbi P.I." being the best, in my opinion). And for a show that's ten years old, it's aged remarkably well, and I laughed just as hard at the jokes.

This box set includes every episode of the series, as well as commentaries. My favorite episode by a long shot is "Siskel & Ebert & Jay & Alice," which includes one of the funniest moments in television history- Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert getting into a fistfight, and then duetting on a love song.

The box set also features "webisodes," previously available only on the Internet, that feature Jay Sherman "reviewing" more recent films. They are actually very funny, and I had no idea they existed until I got this.

If you liked this gem of a show, this DVD set is a must-have.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 97
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