The L Word - The Complete Third Season (2004)
Facts
|
The L Word - The Complete Third Season
DVD Price: You save 36%! As of Oct 3 21:36 EDT (details)
|
| Directed by | Tricia Brock, Tony Goldwyn, Burr Steers, Ernest R. Dickerson and Jeremy Podeswa |
| Theatrical Release | January 18, 2004 |
| DVD Release | October 24, 2006 |
| Running Time | 644 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 097368015746 |
| Buy this item | $44.99 at Amazon.com As of Oct 3 21:36 EDT (details) 4 DVD, L WORD, Usually ships in 24 hours, AC-3, Box set, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround), Spanish (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled) Or 37 new from $41.59, 12 used from $36.97, 1 collectible from $78.99 |
Website Links
- Movie Review Query Engine - Directory of movie reviews.
- IMDb - Features plot summaries, reviews, cast lists, and theatre schedules.
- Art.com - Search for The L Word - The Complete Third Season posters.
Similar Movies
User Reviews
Average user review:| L Word 3rd season |
| In Defense Of Jenny and Gravity. |
"stupidity" or how "borning" the character is. I find the character's succintness soooo satisfying. She consistently nails people in rather few well-chosen words. She sees who the people around her are and tells them "like it is". During the early first season I found the Jenny character cloying and really annoying. But as I watched her evolve throughout the three seasons I found I really respect her as a woman who says what she means and means what she says. She's real and true to herself and her hard-won truths. Instead of zipping by the Jenny parts of the various episodes, I wish some of you would really hear what she has to say. Maybe you would see her for who and what she is and where she's been. How many of us truly meet and grapple with our demons and come out of the struggle with our hearts and minds not only intact but also with our wits honed to such a fine edge?
Season Three finds Jenny as well as all the other characters more deeply immersed in their "s**t" than ever before. I think this season depicts the pain and strength of Jenny, Dana, Alice, Billie, Bette, Helena, et al. and their ability to deal with the unfairness and complexity of life. Some may find this boring. I find it moving, involving, uplifting and wonderful. How sad some reviewers see Jenny's scenes as an ocassion to "fast forward to the sexy parts". Is that all your lives are about? July 1, 2008
| love it ... |
| what happened to this show??? |
| What happened? Series devolution at its finest..... |
Was there a writers' strike during this season, because the writing, casting, and character development were absolutely horrid. Amateurish, at best. Why, oh why, the writers did what they did during this season is something for which I just don't think there is a logical answer. For example, the Billie Blaikie character is beyond annoying. Not only is this character totally irritating, but he's useless in terms of the story line. A complete and utter bore, and why the writers would decide to infuse this Jar Jar Binks-like personality into The L Word world is beyond me.
Moira/Max. Need I say anything more? Pairing this character with Jenny made no sense. Absolutely no sense. Jenny is devoloping her identity with her newly found orientation, and what do the writers decide to do? Pair Jenny with a woman who wants to become a man. Can they butcher what could otherwise be a potentially great character (Jenny) any further? Just how idiotically confusing do they want to make this character, anyway. I'm sorry, Moira/Max didn't fit in this show and I found her/his character a needless distraction, particularly considering the obvious lack of chemistry with Jenny.
Let's not forget about Angus. Could the writers have found a more dull character this side of the Milky Way? Ohhhhhh no, not just dull. Goofy, too. If they would have limited his role to babysitting Bette and Tina's baby, I would not be so upset. But come on, having him romantically involved with Kit made me cringe and gave me the willies every time they were together. Just another example of horrid writing and misplaced character dependencies.
Spoiler ahead, folks. The absolute strategic blunder of the entire series and evidence which is proof positive that the writers were out to lunch for this entire season--killing off Dana. Why did they do this? Dana was such a sweet, innocent character who many could empathize with, because her family was so conservative and she had struggled so much with coming out. I'm really quite bitter with this writing decision, and the decision to take this valuable character off the series simply tells me the writing isn't what it should have been. A mind numbing lack of vision was involved with this writing decision, because Dana, like all of the core characters, offers the series versatility and great character depth. A huge and completely unnecessary loss for this series.
I'm not happy with the direction of this series. The writing stinks. Too many characters make no sense. Character development is the pits. Strategic decisions to get rid of important characters is being carried out without much thought, it seems. I'll see what they have to offer for the 4th season, and if the writers of this series want a legacy for this show, let's hope they apply more logic to subsequent seasons....
February 15, 2008
More reviews at Amazon.com ...





