DVD : Babylon 5 - The Complete Third Season

DVD : Babylon 5 - The Complete Third Season

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Babylon 5 - The Complete Third Season

starring: Bruce Boxleitner, Claudia Christian




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MSRP: $59.98
Our Price: $34.99
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Average Buyer's Review:  out of 5 stars
Sales Rank: 4773










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Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
Brand: Warner Brothers
EAN: 9780790776101
Feature: Covering a variety of social issues in the stratosphere, BABYLON 5 continues to be the point of negotiation for humans and aliens alike in the 23rd Century.
Format: Anamorphic, Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
ISBN: 0790776103
Label: Warner Home Video
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video
Number Of Items: 6
Publisher: Warner Home Video
Region Code: 1
Release Date: August 12, 2003
Running Time: 968 minutes
Sales Rank: 4773
Studio: Warner Home Video
Theatrical Release Date: January 26, 1994



Item facts:
  • Covering a variety of social issues in the stratosphere, BABYLON 5 continues to be the point of negotiation for humans and aliens alike in the 23rd Century.







Our review:

Description:
The complete third season of this acclaimed science-fiction cult favorite is now available as a 6-disc DVD collector's set.

DVD Features:
Audio Commentary
Documentaries
Introduction
Other




Amazon.com:
'Matters of Honor' launched Babylon 5's third season with the introduction of the White Star, a spacecraft added to enable more of the action to take place away from the station. Also introduced was Marcus Cole (Jason Carter)--in another nod to The Lord of the Rings, a Ranger not so far removed from Tolkien's Strider. In 'Voices of Authority' the show finds an epic scale as Ivanova seeks the mysterious 'First Ones' for allies against the Shadows, and evidence is discovered pointing to the truth behind President Santiago's assassination. A third of the way through the season 'Messages from Earth,' 'Point of No Return,' and 'Severed Dreams' prove pivotal, changing the nature of the story in a way previously unimaginable on network TV. Earth slides into dictatorship, the fascistic Nightwatch takes control of off-world security, and Sheridan take decisive action by declaring Babylon 5 independent.

'Interludes and Examinations' presented the death of a major supporting character, while the two-part 'War Without End' reached apocalyptic dimensions in a complex tale resolving the destiny of Sinclair and the fate of Babylon 4 (dovetailing elegantly with the events of the first season's 'Babylon Squared'), resolving a 1,000-year-old paradox and presenting a vision of a very dark future for Sheridan and Delenn. All this was trumped by the monumental 'Z'ha'dum.' In the preceding 'Shadow Dancing' Anna Sheridan (Melissa Gilbert, Bruce Boxleitner's real-life wife) returned from the dead, no longer entirely human. In the mythologically resonant climax Anna invited Sheridan back to the Shadow homeworld with no hope of survival. Just as in The Lord of the Rings Gandalf fell into the abyss at Khazad-Dum, so Sheridan took a comparable leap into the unknown on an alien world. --Gary S. Dalkin









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Buyer Testimonials
Average Buyer's Review:  out of 5 stars

Buyer's review: 5 out of 5 stars - The galaxy goes to hell
Following up on the dramatic action from the previous season, the third season of Babylon 5 throws on yet more exciting story, in the form of the Earth Alliance and its eventual civil war.

Key to this storyline are 'the Trilogy' - "Messages from Earth", "Point of No Return", and the Hugo-award winning "Severed Dreams". These episodes are extremely highly regarded (rightfully so, in my opinion), and mark the beginning of the major two-front war the Babylon 5 characters would face until the end of Season 4.

Even as the civil war erupts, though, Sheridan and company must still deal with the Shadows continuing to make their move in the galaxy and the Vorlons finally getting involved. The ominous Morden (great performance throughout by Ed Wasser) continues to haunt Londo, and the way characters react as the galaxy falls apart around them is fascinating.

I'm torn as to which I prefer - this or the previous season, but both mark some of the finest science fiction ever produced in any medium.



Buyer's review: 5 out of 5 stars - Spectacular stuff
By the time Babylon 5's second season ended, Warner Brothers in the USA seemed to be pretty happy with how the series was going. Ratings were solid and for a budget about half that of Paramount's Star Trek shows, they were grabbing a lot of TV headlines and magazine features that used to automatically go to Trek. For J. Michael Straczynski, Season 3 proved to be a challenge. Have set up a lot of storylines and characters in the first two years, it was time to start delivering the pay-off. Unfortunately, due to the sheer number of major, epoch-shaking events that had to happen this season he found it difficult to assign scripts to other writers, and was left with no option but to script all 22 episodes himself. Since he was also a hands-on producer, this proved to be a massive challenge, but one he successfully pulled off.

Season 3 picks up the story in the year 2260. The Centauri Republic is now on the prowl, its borders expanding and conflict erupting with the smaller worlds who make up its neighbours. Whilst Londo frantically tries to distance himself from his increasingly dangerous and unreliable allies, the Shadows, others in the Centauri court do not prove so wise. Elsewhere, the Earth Alliance is becoming divided, riven by paranoia and distrust fostered by the new Ministry of Peace and its volunteer Nightwatch division of informants. With the Galaxy slipping towards darkness and war, an ancient Minbari organisation, the Rangers, has been refounded to help guide the races back to peaceful coexistence, and a powerful new warship is put at the disposal of Captain John Sheridan and the crew of the Babylon 5 station to help them achieve this goal.

Season 3 of B5 starts off surprisingly slowly, with a number of stand-alone episodes. Whilst these ease viewers coming off a long break between seasons back into the show, when watched sequentially after Season 2 they diffuse a lot of the pace and tension built up at the end of that season, and it's slow-going getting back on track. These early episodes are unfortunately mostly filler, particularly the disappointingly shallow Convictions. Exogenesis shows signs of the writer trying to pull of a second 'revisionist Star Trek episode' approach (after the previous year's Confessions and Lamentations) but not quite nailing it. However, events take an upswing in what fans informally dubbed 'The Trilogy': Messages from Earth, Point of No Return and the award-winning Severed Dreams. These three episodes act as a pivot around which the entire series swings, with the crew of B5 finally taking a public stand for what they believe is right, culminating in one of the biggest space battles ever seen on the small screen. When the dust clears, our heroes find themselves in a very different situation to where they were before.

The remainder of the season sees the problems on Earth dropping into the background in favour of the growing conflict with the Shadows. JMS finally addresses the question of what the Shadows want, and how they plan to achieve it. Episodes like Ship of Tears sees the network of alliances and animosities shifting as a former enemy is personally affronted by the Shadows and agrees to work with the B5 crew in revenge, whilst Interludes and Examinations is a masterful look at B5's key central themes of redemption, consequences and responsibility. Things break down somewhat in the War Without End two-parter, which attempts to resolve the mystery of Babylon 4 established in the first season's Babylon Squared. A lot of things had changed in the plan for the series since then (not least Sinclair's departure and his replacement with Sheridan), and JMS was forced to explain the events of the former episode with a different set of circumstances and characters to what he had planned two years earlier. It just about hangs together, as long as you don't think about it too much.

The last few episodes of the season ramp up the tension, with the deaths of several recurring characters, a massive alliance of races meeting the Shadows in a cataclysmic confrontation and a season finale that is pretty stunning, moving from an intense, revelation-packed character piece to the unleashing of the apocalypse.

Season 3 of Babylon 5 (****½) isn't quite as intense and powerful as the second, but the more action and incident-driven narrative works quite well, whilst 'The Trilogy' and the culminating arc of episodes at the end of the season stand right up there with the best SF TV has to offer.



Buyer's review: 5 out of 5 stars - Excellent continuation
The superb Babylon 5 continues seamlessly from Season 2 in this third season. What can I say to express the adoration I have developed for this series? The characters are fascinating, the plot lines are edge-of-your-seat, the special effects finally look extremely decent, and the theme song has morphed into a creepy, 'Shadow'-esque version of the original tune. If this season of Babylon 5 has faults, they escaped me.



Buyer's review: 4 out of 5 stars - About the DVDs - The series itself is awesome!
Very short and succint -- the DVD packaging and features are a few years old, and thus they do not offer the same qualities available in the newer box-sets. The interviews are sparse -- commentaries are few and far between. The packaging is that horrible hard plastic, that doesn't secure the DVDs. When the boxset arrived, two of the DVDs were loose in the case -- but fortunately were undamaged. I would have definitely preferred a slim-pak, but it is a small price to pay to own the "best sci-fi series ever :)



Buyer's review: 5 out of 5 stars - Great pay off to the first three seasons
If you look at all five regular seasons of BABYLON 5 as one large novel, Season Three would be the part where the pay off for the rather slow first two seasons. (Though, to be honest, most of the slow episodes of the first two seasons were stand alone episodes that networks love to force on show runners and creators. For some bizarre reason they imagine that people not currently watching a show will tune in for the stand alones and then get sucked into the larger narrative. This never works, of course, and fans of shows always identify the stand alone episodes as the weakest part of any series.) B5 had actually started getting much, much better near the end of Season Two with the episodes detailing the destruction of the Narn homeworld and the personal agony of G'Kar. In Season Three they not only kept up the intensity of the arc dealing with the defeat of the Narn, but racheted up the impending war against the Shadows. There was also a sharp decline in the number of stand alone episodes.

Season Third Complete The - 5 Babylon


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