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Two And A Half Men: Complete Season 3 | 
enlarge | Actors: Charlie Sheen, Angus T. Jones, Marin Hinkler, Melanie Lynskey, Holland Taylor Studio: Warner Home Video Category: DVD
List Price: £25.99 Buy New: £14.97 You Save: £11.02 (42%)
New (7) from £14.97
Rating: 3 reviews
Format: Box Set, Pal Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over Region: 2 Number Of Discs: 4 Running Time: 508 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.4 x 0.6
EAN: 7321902177120 ASIN: B0012YG7QE
Release Date: May 19, 2008 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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A smooth sheen May 17, 2008 Mr. David Halliday (Ilkeston Derbyshire United Kingdom) 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
This really shouldn't have lasted to 3 series. After all just how far can you stretch the simple premise? Alan is divorced and, having been taken to the cleaners by his ex., goes with his young son,(Jake),, to live at his wealthy brothers,(Charlie), Malibu beach house. Alan is an obsessive about everything, his son jake is a typical booger eating little boy & Charlie is a serial womanizer & all round self centered git. So how come it's lasted? Well there's the scripts for a start. Not only are the set-ups for each episode funny but the dialogue is razor sharp & on the ball. Most of all though it's the performances that keep this going. All involved delivery their lines with great timing & even though it's all too far fetched the characters are believable & easy to like. The one performance that stands out is of course Sheen's. His character Charlie is a reprehensible swine with no morals & a selfish disregard for anyone else. He should be totally unlikeable & yet Sheen gives his character a likeable charm & easygoing style that makes him hard to dislike. The plots are really wafer thin & you never really see the character arcs or anybody's situation move on or grow. But it remains sharp & funny. Alan's neurosis continues to trip him up at every turn,(the episode where he becomes like his brother in the company of a rather well endowed woman is hilarious), Jake is moving into his teens & is packing attitude while Charlie at first appears unchanged. This isn't for everyone, if you like your plots deep & gripping then this is going to be like a paddle in the shallow end. The innuendo & sporadic swearing,(which has increased in this series), will be off-putting for others. But if you have enjoyed the previous 2 series then this is highly recommended. it should be tired by now but somehow all involved keep this show funny & worthy of repeated viewing.
Last of the Good Stuff! May 23, 2008 Kuma (London) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
If Season one was just an extended introduction and season two first saw the show flex itt's comedic muscles then season 3 is perhaps when this show hit its prime. Each season seems to take a different approach to what could become very repetitive material. Season 3 decides to up the ante and deliver more riske comedy (the sexual references are a little stronger) and also looks to move the characters development on. This is acheived by the injection of new characters into the show - Mia, a serious proposition for Charlie and Kandi. The result is a bit of a character reversal Charlie becomes comedic trying to go steady with one girl in a more Alan-like way. Kandi will not be everyone's cup of tea, she can be a little irritating but the comedy they work round her is excellent. On the flip side Rose is used less but more effectively A couple of excellentb episodes really lift this series up - ones to watch out for are "sleep tight, puddin pop", "Principal Gallagher's Lesbian Lover" and "Golly Moses shes a muffin". The DVD extras aren't too much to write home about, but thats not why you're buying this DVD?
A work of genius June 13, 2008 Barry Martin (UK) Chaps - if your girlfriend forces you to watch the horrid 'Sex And The City', then get your revenge and make her watch this. Geared to the male sense of humour, TAAHM is up there with the best of the current crop of razor-sharp US comedies, and is perfect viewing for a boys' night in. The performances are superb: Charlie - the rich, handsome, drunken womaniser; Alan - the divorced, sexually inadequate and broke live-in loser brother; Jake - Alan's lazy, ill-educated and gross pubescent son; Berta - the seen-it-all-before ex-biker housemaid; and Judith - Alan's bitter, selfish and mean-spirited ex-wife. The one-liners are often hilarious and quoteable (as you would expect from a show of this pedigree) and all 5 series are worth investigating (Paramount channel in the UK). Some great-looking women appear too - and that's a nice bonus!
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