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Queer as Folk - The Complete First Season

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 Location:  Home » Anniversary Rings » Gay & Lesbian » Queer as Folk - The Complete First SeasonJanuary 6, 2009  
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Queer as Folk - The Complete First Season
Queer as Folk - The Complete First Season
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Directors: Alex Chapple, Bruce Mcdonald, David Wellington, Jeremy Podeswa, John Fawcett
Actors: Gale Harold, Hal Sparks, Randy Harrison, Michelle Clunie, Thea Gill
Studio: Showtime Networks
Category: DVD

List Price: $49.99
Buy New: $29.49
You Save: $20.50 (41%)
Buy New from $29.49

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars(283 reviews)
Sales Rank: 12834

Format: Anamorphic, Box Set, Closed-captioned, Collector's Edition, Color, Dvd-video, Ntsc
Language: English (Original Language)
Media: DVD
Running Time: 1205 minutes
Number Of Items: 1
Discs: 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.5 x 2

MPN: SHOD2007D
ISBN: 193166949X
UPC: 758445200720
EAN: 9781931669498
ASIN: B00005RIY5

Release Date: January 8, 2002
Theatrical Release Date: December 3, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Similar Items:

  • Queer as Folk - The Complete Second Season (Showtime)
  • Queer as Folk - The Complete Third Season (Showtime)
  • Queer as Folk - The Complete Fourth Season (Showtime)
  • Queer as Folk - The Final Season (Collector's Edition)
  • Latter Days (Unrated Edition)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Studio: Paramount Home Video Release Date: 08/23/2005 Run time: 1320 minutes

Amazon.com
They're here, they're queer, and they make Sex and the City look like a demure tea party. Showtime's quintessentially American Queer As Folk--based on the British miniseries--pours on copious amounts of hot and steamy sex. This slick (and slickly entertaining) series shares the same basic concept as its British counterpart--centering on a group of gay friends living in a primarily industrial city--but after that, all bets are off. Whereas the British version focused on the gritty, realistic drama of its characters, the American QAF is a glossy, fun soap opera that occasionally tackles big issues but never lets you forget that life at times can be a party, and you shouldn't be one of those poor suckers starving to death. A good part of the show's charm lies in its cast--boy-next-door Michael (Hal Sparks), ruthlessly seductive rake Brian (Gale Harold), out-and-proud Emmett (Peter Paige), wallflower Ted (Scott Lowell), and nubile teen Justin (Randy Harrison)--who grew from standard gay prototypes to intriguing characters by the first season's end. And while some subplots didn't work (such as Emmett's farfetched foray into gay-conversion therapy), others were quietly affecting, including Brian's coping with his father's death. Some may object to the show's relentless fixation on sex (and gay men--there are just two lesbian characters), but this is a series that in its own polished way is both engrossingly fun and truly groundbreaking. It's liberating to watch an American TV series in which the straight world is only peripheral. Let's hear it for the boys! --Mark Englehart


Customer Reviews:   Read 278 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Queer as Folk best ever!!   December 17, 2008
It took less than a week to get here, and we couldn't stop watching!! Love this show...Amazon is awesome!!


5 out of 5 stars One of the BEST series ever created!!   July 9, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I found this show while channel surfing, just a few months ago on a censored station. I had heard of this show before, but did not have premium cable, so I was unable to watch when it hit the screen originally. I absolutely fell in love with it with just one episode, I would tape and watch faithfully. I was determined to get the DVD version, so that I could see it uncut and in it's original form. The first season is very near and dear to my heart, probably the best of the series!! The show was casted perfectly, you will fall in love with each and every character. Yes, it contains a lot of sex, drugs, and language, but it's also full of loving relationships, fun, humor,intelligence, brilliance, and warmth that will make it very difficult to tear yourself away from it. I'm a 40yo straight woman who would love to be a part of these queer as folk!


5 out of 5 stars enjoyable even for straight people   April 12, 2008
  3 out of 3 found this review helpful

My wife and I really enjoyed this series. If you can get through the first episode, and not be too disturbed by the gay sex, you will be rewarded with a very human story. The sex is presented as just another part of life (though a very integral one for these guys), something completely unusual in shows produced for the sex-phobic American market. It manages to be graphic and unsensational at the same time, and always relevant to the characters' personalities (Ethan's adventure with on-line dating is a hilarious twist on his everyday personality). It is a great mixture of drama and comedy, with a diverse set of characters that will grow on you. Michael's mother (Sharon Gless) is funny at first, but becomes a little bit over-the-top in later seasons. Other than that, a captivating and nearly perfect series that we were sad to see end.


5 out of 5 stars A show too good for TV!   April 8, 2008
  3 out of 3 found this review helpful

I could probably start this review by welcoming you into the world of gay sex, complete with disco music and darkrooms in clubs. I could invite you to watch sex scenes like you've never seen on TV, or I could go on and on praising "Queer as Folk" as a controversial TV show that makes the girls of "Sex and the City" look like school girls. "Queer as Folk" is all this, but much, much more. By the end of season one, and once the initial shock wears off, you will find yourself actually watching this show not because of the sex it's not afraid to show, but because of the plights and emotional conflicts of its characters.
The three main characters are probably meant to represent a cross-section of gay culture - Hal Sparks plays the "sensitive narrator" role, Gale Harold is Brian, the predator, and Randy Harrison plays Justin, the virgin. Also, there are Emmett and Ted, and also Melanie and Lindsay, the lesbian couple... The list goes on and on, but the good thing is that the stereotypical concept fades out during the show - "Queer as Folk" treats its characters like actual, emotional humans, who evolve as the show progresses. It can make a powerful emotional punch as well as a sex scene, and that is what makes this show so good. The fact that it makes you care for the characters because of who they are, and not simply because they're gay is the biggest praise I can give this excellent show. Kudos for QAF!



5 out of 5 stars A co-worker of mine told me that back in the day, people used to run home to watch this show. Now, I know why!!!   March 26, 2008
  3 out of 3 found this review helpful

And after watching this show, to add to what my co-worker told me, I would've taken the WHOLE day off in anticipation to what was in store for me for what was going to happen next on this show!!!

'Cause that's how you start to feel once you get into this show. I mean, I was totally hooked after watching the first episode--if not, after watching the first minute!!!

I found myself liking all of the characters instantly and I liked how most of the characters are all connected to each other in one way or the other, like how Emmett and Michael are roommates. Ted is secretly in love with Michael. And how even though Michael and Brian are best friends, Michael, in his own way has a thing for Brian and Brian, in my opinion, has a thing for Michael--even though Brian's never going to admit that.

I also liked the overall tone of the show. And how it could somehow balance itself with having a scene go in one direction towards the outrageous (insert Brian here) and then how it could go in a very down to earth, very human and touching direction (also, insert Brian here.)

I guess I just have a thing for the Brian character and though how on the surface, he might be plotting and making everything be all about him--you just have to wait for the moments when it's just him and Michael and you get a glimpse that there's a whole lot more cooking with him.

To get an example of this, please see the episode wherein the fellas are heading out to New York to find Justin, who's run away. There's a moment, when the car gets a flat and Emmett and Ted have to fix it and Brian and Michael sneak away to share a joint.

As the scene unfolds, Brian tells Michael how much he means to him. And then before you know it, the two of them are kissing.

But that's not the part, that gets to you. It's how when Ted & Emmett start telling them that the car is ready, it's like Brian holds onto Michael maybe a little longer than he has to and while doing this, Brian at this point kisses Michael on the forehead. That one little scene tells you just how human Brian really is. (Incidentally, those were always my favorite scenes throughout the show--the little moments that were quiet and unassuming--you might have to really look for them, but man are they worth it!) :)

Anyway, I can't say enough about this show. I hope everyone out there who hasn't watched this show, will give it a try. I think you'll be very surprised in more ways than one.

I know I was!

(Also, a BIG shout out to the phenomenal Hal Sparks!!!) What he gave to the character Michael was truly amazing!!! I can't imagine the WHOLE world not falling in love with him. (I know I did!!!)


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