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ER - The Complete First Season - Warner Brothers Home Video
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Brand: Warner Brothers Home VideoManufacturer: Warner Brothers Home VideoStudio: Warner Brothers Home VideoPublisher: Warner Brothers Home VideoRelease date: 2003-08-26Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)List price: $27.98New price: $8.25Used price: $7.99
Inspired by creator Michael Crichton's experiences as a medical student in a hospital emergency room, ER quickly became one of the most compelling shows of the 1990s, each episode a whirlwind of intense and involving drama, gritty realism, and offbeat humor. Heading the staff at the inner-city Chicago hospital is Mark Greene (Anthony Edwards), a doctor so good at providing care to the downtrodden, helpless, or just plain quirky patients that his career blossoms even as his personal life crumbles. Greene is the soul of the cast, but the heart is Julianna Margulies's nurse Carol Hathaway. Her character was intended only for the pilot episode, but she ended up capturing viewers with her palpable empathy for patients and her troublesome romance with womanizing pediatrician Doug Ross (George Clooney). The rest of the central cast consisted of compassionate Susan Lewis (Sherry Stringfield), Peter Benton (Eriq Lasalle), whose prodigious talent nearly matches his ambition, and his fresh-faced student, John Carter (Noah Wyle). Other key characters included ER heads Morgenstern and Swift (William H. Macy and Michael Ironside, respectively), overachieving student Deb (Ming Na), who returned later in the show's run, attending physician Angela Hicks (CCH Pounder), and physical therapist Jeanie Boulet (Gloria Rueben). The remarkably strong first season showed off its sharp ensemble cast through a variety of compelling story lines both personal (Carter's conflicts with Benton, Lewis's struggles with her no-account sister, Chloe, played by Kathleen Wilhoite) and professional (a holiday blizzard and especially the harrowing tale of a pregnancy gone bad, "Love's Labor Lost," which won five Emmy Awards). When Carter is pondering whether his future includes the ER, Green jokes, "It's not bad: Stress, late nights, hard work, no pay--it's hard to beat." It's hard to imagine people choosing to work under those conditions, but they do, and in the process these very human people perform superhuman feats as they face life and death as part of their daily jobs. DVD features are fairly generous for a TV series box. There are two commentary tracks on the pilot episode, including one by Crichton, and crew commentaries on "Sleepless in Chicago" and "Love's Labor Lost." A new 39-minute documentary discusses the show's genesis, casting, and the "Chicago hospital drama smackdown" with Chicago Hope through interviews with Crichton, executive producer Steven Spielberg, other crew members, and the principal cast members other than Eriq LaSalle. Also included are a very watchable featurette on the show's realism (ever wonder why Ross is always looking down?) and another on post-production, a list of characters (including patients by episode, but why no actor credits?), three minor deleted scenes, outtakes, and a glossary of frequently used medical terms. Particularly notable is that the episodes are shown in anamorphic widescreen. ER was one of the first network shows broadcast in widescreen, but that was years after these episodes, which are shown in widescreen for the first time. --David Horiuchi The lives, loves and losses of the doctors and nurses of Chicago's County General Hospital. Celebrate the 10th anniversary of the most watched and honored drama of the last decade. Loaded with extensive special features including two new documentaries featuring Steven Spielberg, Michael Crichton, John Wells and George Clooney created exclusively for this release. DVD Features: Additional Scenes Audio Commentary:Audio commentary on three key episodes by series producers and crew Deleted Scenes Documentaries:Prescription for Success: The Birth of ER; First-Year Rotation: Caring for ER; On the Cutting Edge: Medical Realism on ER; Post Operative Procedures: Post Production in the ER Easter Eggs Featurette Interactive Menus Outtakes Scene Access:Audio commentary on three key episodes by series producers and crew

Customer Reviews:
Suprisingly good In the nineties I did not watch much TV, so I only watched a couple of episodes here and there of this show, and although I enjoyed them, I never realized there was an overall story being told. The other week I rented this box set from the video store, as I could not find anything interesting to rent...well I was pleasantly surprised. What an excellent show! The ER action is very realistic and as such very fast paced. I can relate to some of this having worked in a "crisis" environment in the public school system of the inner city of a large metropolitan area. That feeling of just being thrust from one emergency into another and having to think very fast on one's feet. The show captures very well the way in which the lives of people that work in those kind of environments unfolds and the bonds that are formed between people whom have to work together under such pressure. I like how these personal stories are told, very realistic, not sentimental, very real. Again, an excellent show. In fact I am now watching season two, which is also very good. Highly recommended, especially for anybody that, like myself, missed it when it was shown on TV. --2006-12-18Love It! I got into ER by renting the first disc of season one off of Netflix. After that I was hooked and bought it immediately. It quickly became my favorite TV show and quite a bit of obsession. To me the first season is the best by far. The current episodes lack the amazing characters of the earlier ones. Every episode on these discs is great and so far none of mine have gotten scratched. --2006-06-04Groundbreaking 90's Medical Drama Okay, I remember in the early 90's when NBC was beating the other networks with hits like Seinfeld, Friends, and this bigtime drama. Well, this was probably the really big hit drama during the early 90's that no one will forget. Now, I don't recognize today's ER cast and the people seem more Hollywood than struggling TV actors. So, this first season really defines the heart of drama on TV which is giving a chance to those struggling TV actors to really shine. Well, I guess George Clooney is the only one to break out of ER with big success. The others managed to get out when the scripts ran out of steam after the 4th or 5th season.
Well, the DVD treatment of this season is pretty standard. Although I would have prefered a nicer box set with individual cases. Anyways, the DVD package is a fold-away stack of double-sided DVDs. Yeah, this probably was done to save cost so that the price would be affordable. It's annoying to be super careful but hey, fewer discs in the end. The menus are pretty much simple to use and some discs have extras. My favorite was looking at the bloopers on the final disc. Also, interviews with the cast was nice to see how the actors remember fondly on their times on ER.
The picture quality of the episodes are first rate and seems almost perfect as it was on TV. I don't have any complaints on the transfer since everything looks crisp. So, there are no overly dark scenes which are difficult to see. Plus, the audio is well done but I wished there were English subtitles. Sometimes, the doctors, interns, and nurses speak too fast in the action that you want to catch part of their dialogue. This was a major letdown for me since this should be the standard for all US released DVD in general (TV, movies, etc).
Overall, this is a keeper and I would recommend this to watch again. You really get to heart of disciple-pupil relationship between Carter and Benton as well as some funny fiascos of Deb Chen with trying to please Benton. Plus, Dr. Ross and Nurse Hathaway plot is full of complications which is the more soapy stuff for daytime. But, the writers balanced it off on the operating table and I think this season is probably the best in my humble opinion. It makes me think that if doctors watched ER on a regular basis, then they would realize that the humanizing part of being doctors about understanding the patient is what we really appreciate. Well, I just hope that my doctor turns out to be like Susan Lewis rather than Peter Benton. --2006-05-12TV drama, how it's ment to be. This is where it all started. This is the real deal. This is quality TV. Before they turned it into a crappy soap opera.
Top notch picture & sound quality. --2006-02-24A very good buy! I am from Quebec, in Canada. I bought ER the First Seaseon there are 3 weeks, and , I'm not able to stop watching it! Even if you are french, you can easily understand what they are saying. I recommand it to eveybody! --2006-02-19
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