That 70s Show Season 1
The first season of That '70s Show, an American television series, began August 23, 1998, and ended on July 26, 1999.It aired on Fox.The region 1 DVD was released on October 26, 2004. Clipping found in Star Tribune in Minneapolis, Minnesota on Sep 20, 1998. That 70s Show, Season One. That '70s Show Season show reviews & Metacritic score: The gang goes skinny-dipping and Jackie gets sick. Hyde moves in with the Formans when his mom runs away with a trucker. Bob takes a liking to one of Midge's fe.
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All 92 songs featured in That '70s Show Season 1 Soundtrack, listed by episode with scene descriptions. Ask questions and download or stream the entire soundtrack on Spotify, YouTube, iTunes, & Amazon. That 70's Show Season 1 - S01. Mike Mandel: Good 70s PDF Download Mike Mandel: Good 70s# Read Full Ebook.
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'That '70s Show' Season One DVD Review (Mill Creek Release)
That '70s Show: Season One (1998-99) Show & DVD Details Creators: Bonnie Turner, Terry Turner, Mark Brazill / Executive Producers: Bonnie Turner, Terry Turner, Mark Brazill, Marcy Carsey, Tom Werner, Caryn Mandabach Writers: Terry Turner, Jeff Filgo, Jackie Behan, Bonnie Turner, Mark Brazill, Joshua Sternin, Mark Hudis, Linda Wallem, Philip Stark, Jeffrey Ventimilia, Arthur F. Montmorency, Eric Gilliland, Dave Schiff, Dave Schiff / Regular Director: David Trainer / Pilot Director: Terry Hughes Regular Cast: Topher Grace (Eric Forman), Mila Kunis (Jackie Burkhart), Ashton Kutcher (Michael Kelso), Danny Masterson (Steven Hyde), Laura Prepon (Donna Pinciotti), Wilmer Valderrama (Fez), Debra Jo Rupp (Kitty Forman), Kurtwood Smith (Red Forman), Tanya Roberts (Midge Pinciotti), Don Stark (Bob Pinciotti) Recurring Characters: Lisa Robin Kelly (Laurie Forman), Marion Ross (Grandma Bernice Forman), Paul Kreppel (Mr. Burkhart), Carolyn Hennessy (Sharon Singer), Gary Owens (Announcer/Narrator), Mark Bramhall (Principal Pridwell) Notable Guest Stars: Wayne Pere (Randy), Danny Bonaduce (Ricky), Amanda Fuller (Tina Pinciotti), Eve Plumb (Mrs. Burkhart), Kevin Farley (Matthew Erdman), Jenny Maguire (Kate), Joseph Gordon-Levitt (Buddy Morgan), Mitch Hedberg (Frank), Nick Bakay (Gus), Ernie Ladd (Manager), Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson (Rocky Johnson), Katey Sagal (Edna Hyde), Francis Guinan (John Kelso), Gloria Gaynor (Mrs. Clark), Jennifer Lyons (Pam Macy), Grey DeLisle (Ms. Diane Kaminsky), Scott White (David Milbank), Jade Gordon (Chrissy), Pat Skipper (Marty Forman), Carlos Alazraqui (Jackie's Scary Face Man), Mitch Pileggi (Bull), Arlene Pileggi (Joy) Running Time: 560 Minutes (25 episodes) / Rating: TV-PG 1.33:1 Fullscreen/1.78:1 Stretched Widescreen (Varied by Player) / Dolby Stereo 2.0 (English) Subtitles: None; Closed Captioned; Extras Not Captioned Season 1 Airdates: August 23, 1998 - July 26, 1999 DVD Release Date: September 13, 2011; Wide Black Keepcase with Envelopes Suggested Retail Price: $14.98; Three single-sided, dual-layered discs (DVD-9s) |
'That '70s Show' belongs to a long tradition of entertainment set twenty years in the past. 'Happy Days', Grease, and 'The Wonder Years' are three of the more noteworthy other examples in a pattern that makes complete sense when you think about. Teenage years seem to make the biggest mark on a person culturally and developmentally. People love to look back at their adolescence nostalgically. Add twenty years to a teenager and you have thirty-something with the power to create. That the 20-years-earlier phenomenon seems to be morphing into a 30-years-earlier phenomenon, reflected in the films most recently chosen for remakes and reboots, suggests that life expectancy is growing and power is now more likely to elude creators until their forties. I'm ready for a television show set in the early '90s, but it seems like the rest of the world is not. Just as 'Happy Days' now provides '70s/'80s nostalgia to go with the '50s/'60s longing of its design, 'That '70s Show' has begun to offer distinctly '90s/'00s sensibilities to complement its period of fascination. To the bell-bottoms, disco balls, and unmistakably implied drug experimentation, the show now adds transportation to the last hurrah for the traditional sitcom at every network but CBS. The first season of '70s Show' is set in 1976-77. It centers on six teenaged friends from fictional Milwaukee suburb Point Place, Wisconsin. Our protagonist is sarcastic, gangly Eric Forman (Topher Grace). Often joining him in his basement are girl next door/love interest Donna Pinciotti (Laura Prepon), male bimbo Michael Kelso (Ashton Kutcher), his sophomore girlfriend Jackie Burkhart (Mila Kunis), antiestablishment tough kid Steven Hyde (Danny Masterson), and foreign exchange student Fez (Wilmer Valderrama), whose real name and country of origin remain mysteries as a running gag. Eric's parents regularly feature and, in defiance of sitcom tradition, they are cast age-appropriately and even a bit on the older side. Kurtwood Smith makes a particularly lasting impression as hard-assed father Red, who disciplines Eric sternly and often calls him out as a 'smartmouth' and a 'dumbass.' A nice counter to him is his nurturing wife Kitty (Debra Jo Rupp), who coddles Eric and can score laughs from simply a well-placed signature awkward laugh. Donna's parents -- afroed, thickheaded salesman Bob (Don Stark) and ditzy wife Midge (Tanya Roberts) -- also number as regulars and as Red and Kitty's friends. Donna has a younger sister who appears once and an older sister merely mentioned, both of whom are soon forgotten. Eric, meanwhile, has an older sister in slutty, scheming University of Wisconsin student Laurie (Lisa Robin Kelly), who recurs in Season 1 and would be made a regular for the next two years. 'That '70s Show' is not a parody or a spoof of the decade, nor is it just a parade of pop culture jokes (though there are plenty of them). Instead, it is a nostalgic but unsentimental look at end-of-the-decade adolescence experienced with a spirit of rebellion and a tight-knit group of friends. The series hails from Bonnie and Terry Turner, the husband-wife team that spent seven seasons as 'Saturday Night Live' writers, created '3rd Rock from the Sun', and penned a number of the more celebrated comedy films of the early '90s, including Wayne's World, Tommy Boy, and The Brady Bunch Movie. They created 'That '70s Show' with '3rd Rock' writer Mark Brazill. Again, the Turners and Brazill counted the successful Marcy Carsey and Tom Werner ('The Cosby Show', 'Roseanne') among their executive producers. Though Carsey-Werner, as usual, produced the sitcom independently, 'That '70s Show' has the clear makings of a Fox sitcom at a time when the network was still a distant fourth in viewership. '70s Show' quickly became Fox's fourth most highly-rated series behind 'The Simpsons', 'Ally McBeal', and 'The X-Files.' It was no doubt aided by its desirable 8:30 Sunday night timeslot, airing in between 'Simpsons' and 'X-Files.' Fox moved '70s' to Monday night the summer and Tuesday the following season and it never again matched its first season ratings, although it did repeat its series-best 49th ranking in 2004, when it was made the lead-in to 'American Idol.' Fox clearly targeted and found more of a young audience than one that had similarly had their teen years in the late '70s. While never a ratings behemoth, 'That '70s Show' went on to run an impressive eight seasons for a total of 200 episodes. Even more notably, it managed to launch careers for most of its young cast members, with Topher Grace, Ashton Kutcher, and, most recently, Mila Kunis picking up major feature film credits as leads. Grace disappeared for a while, letting Spider-Man 3 stand as the only film release of his late twenties, and his most recent output (the bomb Take Me Home Tonight) has cast doubt on his star status. Kutcher has run a gamut, from producing success on 'Punk'd' to lightweight romantic comedy vehicles to serious acting and back. The romcoms have earned him his biggest audiences and prevented him from being known as more than just one of the most followed celebrities on Twitter. He returned to TV tonight in the much-publicized 'Two and a Half Men' retooling following Charlie Sheen's much-publicized meltdown. Meanwhile, Kunis, by far the youngest '70s Show' cast member (a mere 14 at the start), might just have the healthiest career at the moment, after Black Swan became the rare picture to find both a huge audience and widespread acclaim. 'That '70s Show' entertains with amusing cultural references and the authentic, easy to appreciate flavors of period Midwest working class living. The detail cannot be faked and even though most of the show's viewers weren't even alive back in the late '70s, the camaraderie and youthful adventures have a timelessness to them which is soaked up by the responsive studio audience and those who have made the show a fixture in syndication, where it currently airs four times a weekday on ABC Family (with viewer discretion advised) and four times at night on Nick at Nite. One area where the show deserves special notice is in its visuals. The vast majority of sitcoms leave nothing to be said regarding mise-en-scène. 'That '70s Show' not only nails its era with set and costume design (the latter, the subject of the show's only Emmy win), it also supplies some inventiveness in camera and editing techniques, from split-screen scenes to characters dubbing others to inspired fantasy sequences. The trademark rotating circle scenes are an accomplishment when you consider how they have to be shot and lit. The show does lay the transitions on a bit heavy, from animating mouths on Farrah Fawcett's famous poster and other photos to cast disco dancing, but this lightens as the first season progresses. The season mainly focuses on two couples: slowly advancing the relationship of lifelong friends/neighbors Eric and Donna, and treating Michael and Jackie more impulsively, comedically, and flimsily. 'That '70s Show' started appearing on DVD in October of 2004 from 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment. Four years later, all seasons were released individually and in a groovy 'Complete Series Stash Box.' All of Fox's DVDs of the shows have since been discontinued with Carsey-Werner bringing this and three other hit sitcoms to value distributor Mill Creek Entertainment, who reissued the first two seasons last week. Part of the attraction of Mill Creek's new editions of 'Roseanne' and '3rd Rock' is that the shows resurface with their original broadcast cuts intact, having previously been presented on DVD in trimmed syndication form. The packaging for '70s Show' makes no such claim and there is little information on whether Fox's DVD offered syndication edits of episodes. The runtimes here are uniform, which typically suggests abbreviated syndication cuts, but the 22½-minute lengths are in line with complete 1998-99 half-hour network broadcasts after commercials are removed. A more definite area of concern is in the soundtrack. 'That '70s Show' is somewhat loaded with period songs and the likelihood of all of the season's being cleared at a list price of $14.98 seems distant. TV.com provides a list of songs used in each episode and while I can't vouch for their accuracy, I can confirm that a number of the songs cited there are never heard on Mill Creek's DVDs (among them, Mott the Hoople's 'All the Young Dudes', David Bowie's 'Rebel Rebel', the Vince Guaraldi Trio's 'Christmas Time is Here', Kool & the Gang's 'Jungle Boogie', and Elton John's 'Bennie and the Jets'). With the list price so low, one wonders if Mill Creek could have raised it a little and cleared more songs, although the studio does pride themselves on low pricing and minimal effort. Disc 1 1. Pilot (22:26) (Originally aired August 23, 1998) 2. Eric's Birthday (22:26) (Originally aired August 30, 1998) 3. Streaking (22:25) (Originally aired September 6, 1998) 4. Battle of the Sexists (22:26) (Originally aired September 20, 1998) 5. Eric's Burger Job (22:25) (Originally aired September 27, 1998) 6. The Keg (22:25) (Originally aired October 25, 1998) 7. That Disco Episode (22:26) (Originally aired November 8, 1998) 8. Drive-In (22:26) (Originally aired November 15, 1998) 9. Thanksgiving (22:25) (Originally aired November 22, 1998) Disc 2 10. Sunday Bloody Sunday (22:24) (Originally aired November 29, 1998) 11. Eric's Buddy (22:26) (Originally aired December 6, 1998) 12. The Best Christmas Ever (22:25) (Originally aired December 13, 1998) 13. Ski Trip (22:25) (Originally aired January 17, 1999) 14. Stolen Car (22:25) (Originally aired January 24, 1999) 15. That Wrestling Show (22:25) (Originally aired February 7, 1999) 16. First Date (22:25) (Originally aired February 14, 1999) 17. The Pill (22:25) (Originally aired February 21, 1999) 18. Career Day (22:25) (Originally aired February 28, 1999) Disc 3 19. Prom Night (22:24) (Originally aired March 7, 1999) 20. A New Hope (22:26) (Originally aired March 14, 1999) 21. Water Tower (22:24) (Originally aired June 14, 1999) 22. Punk Chick (22:24) (Originally aired June 21, 1999) 23. Grandma's Dead (22:28) (Originally aired July 12, 1999) 24. Hyde Moves In (22:24) (Originally aired July 19, 1999) 25. The Good Son (22:24) (Originally aired July 26, 1999) VIDEO and AUDIO There was only one real problem with the DVD presentation, but it was a huge one; on my Sony Blu-ray player, nearly all of the 1.33:1 full screen presentations stretched to fill my 16:9 Panasonic television. This is not the first Mill Creek disc that has done this for me, but your mileage could definitely vary. The DVDs displayed the proper aspect ratio when played on my computer's DVD-ROM drive. Still, on my TV, this was bizarre, annoying, and not easily remedied for me. Adding to my bewilderment, tinkering with my player's settings seemed to have an effect only on the menus, which were sometimes similarly stretched, but could more often appear properly. And, for whatever reason, one episode on each disc (the third from last) displayed correctly in 1.33:1 for me, as if they were encoded more accurately than the others. Stretching full screen programming to widescreen is one of the more offensive things a disc can do and I'm glad that the occurrence remains rare even in the converting of SD television to HD ratios. Though seemingly not deliberate or something you are certain to experience with a 16:9 TV, it is most unfortunate. Besides that, the picture is gladly quite clear and clean. There is some light grain and the rare white speck, plus the limits of DVD compression are regularly illustrated. The video is a bit on the dark side, which is true to the show's original design (and other FOX sitcoms from the time). The Dolby stereo soundtrack is clear but limited. Void of subtitles, the set does include closed captioning, though their accessibility seems hit and miss. BONUS FEATURES, MENUS, PACKAGING and DESIGN Three extras, all recycled from Fox's Season One DVD, appear on Disc 3 and two of them were also stretched to 16:9 on my TV. 'Hello Wisconsin: Season 1' is an 18-minute making-of featurette. It's heavy on episode clips and promotional, but includes some insightful actor and producer remarks on characters, co-stars, and the show's themes and appeal. 'That '70s Trivia Show' (2:20) has cast members ask simple questions about the series followed by clips revealing the answers. Evidently created for syndication, these bits are cool but few. 'Promo-palooza' (3:44) is a montage of clips used in series and Season 1 episode promos. I'd rather see the original promos as they were, but this is better than nothing and I noticed at least one line otherwise not included on the DVD. All menus loop the theme song at a volume louder than the episodes, with one character singled out on both the backdrop-animated main and static episode pages. Episodes are fitted with just two chapter stops each, making scene access more of a chore than usual. Mill Creek packages Season 1 in a thick keepcase, with the discs cheaply held in paper/plastic envelopes. CLOSING THOUGHTS 'That '70s Show' is too rowdy and mean-spirited for me to consider it a favorite, but this sitcom is easy to watch, enjoy, and get into. Mill Creek's Season One DVD is less of a no-brainer than you'd think for fans who didn't get around to picking up Fox's comparable box set. I don't think it's plagued by syndicated cuts, but music replacement seems both apparent and unfortunate. Meanwhile, the stretched widescreen presentations are practically unwatchable, if you're someone whose player and widescreen TV prove a challenge to the disc's puzzling authoring. If you're sure they won't and are interested, there's no reason not to pick this up. Aside from the low price, this doesn't appear to offer anything above what Fox's discontinued set did. Those who have become diehard fans in just the past few years probably ought to wait until Mill Creek's inevitable complete series release. Those just wanting a taste of the show might be better served by the even lower-priced Biggest Hits, a disc collecting '10 fan favorite episodes' from the first four seasons. Support this site when you buy That '70s Show: Season One from Amazon.com |
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Reviewed September 19, 2011.
That 70s Show Season 1 Free
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