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Buffy The Vampire Slayer - Season 1 (Box Set) [1998]

Buffy The Vampire Slayer - Season 1 (Box Set) [1998]

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Actor: Sarah Michelle Gellar
Studio: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Category: Video

List Price: £34.99
Buy New: £3.99
You Save: £31.00 (89%)



New (4) Used (18) Collectible (2) from £1.00

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 102 reviews
Sales Rank: 3548

Format: Box Set, Pal, Special Edition
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over
Media: VHS Tape
Discs: 3
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 520 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 4.9 x 3.7

EAN: 5039036001007
ASIN: B00004CZZU

Theatrical Release Date: March 10, 1997
Release Date: November 15, 1999
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: Still in the shrink wrap and cheaper that DVD. This show still rules 10 years on!

Similar Items:

  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Complete Season 2 [1998]
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season 2 (New Edition)
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season 3 (New Edition)
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Complete Season 3
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Complete Season 4

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.co.uk Review
Vampire-slayer Buffy Summers moves to Sunnydale, a Californian community located above the "Hellmouth", a phenomenon which explains the local graveyard's overpopulation of vampires and other supernatural beings. Angel, a mysterious loiterer, starts flirting with Buffy and gives her helpful tips on how to cope with the local nasties. However, he turns out to be a vampire, which complicates the future of their relationship. Buffy makes friends with school outcasts Willow, a computer nerd, and geeky Xander. But she excites the enmity of high-school princess Cordelia. The season's prime villain is the Master, a Nosferatu-looking vampire lurking under the town. Giles, Buffy's mentor, looks things up in books and demonstrates the exact same look of puzzlement actor Anthony Head used to demonstrate in those horrifying instant coffee ads. --Kim Newman


Customer Reviews:   Read 97 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Season 1 : An Introduction to the Buffy Universe   September 19, 2005
G. Price (UK, Birmingham)
Its wonderful to watch the original series where Buffy, Xander, Giles and Willow are introduced. The episodes on the DVD are stunningly sharp although there aren't that many special features.

My favourite episode is The Puppet Show. Sid is a great character and I can understand why they used him in the game. I also like the season finale.

Definitely worth buying!


5 out of 5 stars Welcome to the Hellmouth   August 1, 2005
T. R. Alexander (East Anglia, UK)
I remember watching these when they were originally on BBC 2 at 6 o'clock but I must say that I do not remember them being so good. It is my usual assumption that the first season of a new TV series are not as those of later seasons, but I feel that many of this seasons episodes must be up there with some of the best of all seven of the Buffy seasons. Of particular note is the season finally, with its mixture of comedy and tragedy, is in my view one of the best episodes of any such show I have ever seen.

Despite the quality of the episodes, I feel that for a special edition the boxed set is rather thin on the ground with only the basics biographies and a couple of interviews. On the plus side, however, the episode guide included in the boxed set is both informative and humorous, with comments on the continuity of each episode as well as notes on some of the background and in-jokes of each episode. All in all a great boxed set despite the lack of extras.


4 out of 5 stars Where it all began...   July 20, 2005
Paul Lessingham
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

In the first season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer we see a show with plenty of original ideas that hasn't yet really hit its stride. The season explores creator Joss Whedon's original premise for the series: the blonde girl who is usually the helpless victim in horror movies is given the power to fight back. Unlike in later seasons, however, these episodes lack a linking story. The central villain, the Master, is kept largely in the background between the first two episodes and the last (with the exception of 'Never Kill a Boy on the First Date'), and the rest of the season is made up of stand-alone episodes.

Many of the strengths of the series can be seen in the first season. The dialogue is sharp and the acting is generally strong. The show intelligently modernises some of the conventions of the Gothic genre: possession, invisibility, nightmares coming to life, etc. Here, however, they are used to tackle 1990s issues including the dangers of internet chatrooms, domineering parents and child abuse. This latter theme is central to the season. The show is about schoolchildren forced to deal with dangers caused not only by the supernatural but also by the everyday world around them (see 'Out of Mind, Out of Sight' and 'Nightmares', for example). Buffy is both the protector of the innocent and an innocent in need of protection, a tension that creates much of the show's dramatic effect.

The season is visually impressive. From season 2 onwards, the graveyard scenes were shot in a studio carpark, but here they are filmed on location and are effective enough to make the move to a set seem like a mistake. The special effects aren't bad, though do seem dated: at this time, vampires turning to dust was still the big dramatic effect.

There are weaknesses in the season. The friendship between Buffy, Willow and Xander is never developed: they meet in the first episode and by episode 3 are lifelong friends. Compare this with the later introduction of characters such as Oz, Anya and Tara and we can see the ways in which the writing matured as the season progressed. The action sequences seem a little tame, particularly in the first two episodes; again, this improved in later seasons.

Despite its faults, however, this season comes alive in the final episode, 'Prophecy Girl'. This is beautifully acted and gives a clear glimpse of what the show would become. It captures the reality of death in a way that few episodes would: only 'Passion' and 'The Body' (seasons 2 and 5 respectively) really match it. Alyson Hannigan conveys the real horror of murder, while SMG hits the perfect balance between acceptance of fate and the struggle to resist it.

BtVS season 1 is a good start to a great series. It's a good introduction to the characters and to the themes of the show and sets things up nicely for the better seasons that followed.


5 out of 5 stars "The music of pain." (or at least adolescence)   June 25, 2005
Hayley (UK)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

For a first time screenwriter, Joss Whedon's "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" was a good effort for a feature film. I thought for sure the series was going to tank. When I started watching halfway through the first season, I quickly found that I was wrong. "Buffy" simply blossoms on television. I've been hooked ever since.

For the first time, Whedon has provided us with all the terrors of high school in a horror genre setting. Not only that, but he provides a confident, cool FEMALE character to trounce the bad guys. Whether you're a fan of the genre or a teenage feminist, Buffy (Sarah Michelle Gellar) provides a niche for the unpopular misfits in high school, but looks upon them as heroes. Were you as uncomfortable as Xander (Nicholas Brendon)? As geeky as Willow (Alyson Hannigan)? As quick with an aphorism as Oz (Seth Green)? The series proves that high school is indeed survivable no matter who you are, even if you're cliquish Cordelia (Charisma Carpenter). And in the end, the more unpopular you were - possibly the more important you were to your teenage community.

Mix in your favorite teacher (or librarian) played by Anthony Stewart Head to be the requisite horror genre British pseudo-scientist, and Buffy's single mom (Kristine Sutherland) and you're all set to go with the most intelligent sci-fi TV series possibly written for this age group.

I'm not kidding. It's amazing how quickly these characters grow in the first season and their responses remain true to life despite the extraordinary situations they're thrown into. Creator Joss Whedon has become one of the most talented writer/directors working in the industry today, despite the fact that "Buffy" is most of what he's been doing for the last ten years.

As far as what you get in this box set, you're in for a treat. This is the full first season, not just the half previously released on VHS; including the season finale "Prophecy Girl" - where we see just how heroic Buffy really is, despite her adolescence and fear of death. Also present throughout the series are teenage issues of emotional/sexual conflict ("Teacher's Pet") and problems with acceptance ("The Pack"). Specific highlights also include Whedon's commentary for the two part premiere as well as the first appearances of Angel (David Boreanaz) and Jenny Calendar (Robia LaMorte).

Remember, Buffy's not JUST about vampires. In fact I think it's safe to say that vampires are secondary to the emotional undercurrent of the show, if not a particular episode's plot. This is the one for the adults.


5 out of 5 stars The Best Debut Season Ever   April 22, 2005
Simon Edwards (Liverpool, England)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Starting off as a very poor film at the Box Office, Joss Weadon (or the people at Fox) rather decided decided to turn it into a series by creating 12 great, phenomanal episodes. Not really knowing what was going to happen, they set it onto the world like the vampires of the night and all of a sudden, Buffy turned into an overnight success that had audiences hooked from the very beginning.

Every episode of this wonderful First Season has been restored and put onto a wonderful DVD box set that is well worth every penny. While it is only short compared to every other season done, this season is well worth watching and has some of the best episodes ever done. While it doesn't include a great amount of extras, the episodes themselves are well worth the price alone.

The season starts off with "Welcome To The Hellmouth", a wonderful episode that introudces all your favourite characters, Xander, Willow, Buffy and Angel. Starting off very simple with a story about a kid being bitten by a vampire and Buffy finding out that she has been sent due to the fact that the school is standing on the top of a Hellmouth. Also beneath the Hellmouth is The Master, an ancient vampire who plans to escape from his prison to eat all the inhabitants of Sunnydale - the town where this series is set.

Eleven other episodes follow. Not every episode has something to do with vampires. Some are about witches, hyenas, puppet shows and an invisible girl. All of these episodes have something to offer in the world of Buffy and all of these episodes are brilliant masterpieces that Joss Weadon and his crew have wonderfully created, putting hard work and effort into all twelve episodes.

InsideTheMarket.co.uk
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