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Bewitched - The Complete Seventh Season by Richard Michaels, William Asher
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DVD detailsActor: David White, Dick Sargent, Dick York, Elizabeth Montgomery, Mabel Albertson Director: Richard Michaels, William Asher Brand: SONY PICTURES HOME ENT Writer: Barbara Avedon Writer: Bernie Kahn Writer: David V. Robison Writer: Ed Jurist Writer: Henry Sharp Writer: Jerry Davis DVD: Region Code 99 Audio: English (Original Language); Portuguese (Subtitled); Spanish (Subtitled); Portuguese (Dubbed); Spanish (Dubbed) Format: Black & White, Box set, Color, Dubbed, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC, Subtitled Picture Format: 1.33:1 Running Time: 712 minutes DVD Release Date: 2009-02-03 Audience Rating: Unrated Studio: Sony Pictures
DVD Reviews of Bewitched - The Complete Seventh SeasonDVD Review: Lover of Bewitched Summary: 5 StarsI've always loved Bewitched and I'm happy to have this season as well. The change to Dick Sargeant was fine. He isn't Dick York, but he made the character his own.
DVD Review: I love this show! Summary: 5 StarsI know that Dick Sargent is still Darren but this show is fun and Elizabeth Montgomery got more and more beautiful and it was nice to see Paul Lynde return. Not much in extras, but I didn't buy the show for that...I bought this and the whole series for the joy of reliving a more innocent and just plain fun time and a more creative period in television.
DVD Review: BEWITCHED SEASON 7 Summary: 5 StarsThe seventh season of Bewitched brings us once again the new
DARRIN [...]. It's very enjoyable. Though SARGENT isn't as
emotional as YORK was,but still has the usual laugh out loud special
effects which make this series fun.
DVD Review: Sweet One Summary: 4 Stars"Bewitched" was my favorite show in its day. I've thoroughly enjoyed picking up all of the DVD releases through the seventh season. The eight-episode arc in old Salem was a creative way to thread episodes together. "Samantha's Hot Bed Warmer" is great classic comedy as the enchanted bed warmer keeps following Sam around. I thought "Samantha's Old Man" was quite touching, showing issues about aging and the joys of growing old together with one you love. "Sister of the Heart" tackled the issue of racism in a very sweet way, one to which children can relate. Imogene Coca was a favorite of mine, so it's a particular delight for me to see her as Mary the tooth fairy. "Samantha & the Troll" has just a little bawdy flavor, enough to raise a smile without offending. Alice Ghostly is back as Esmerelda and complicates things on "Samantha's Magic Mirror." "Samantha & the Magic Doll" had me laughing out loud as Darrin's mother is suddenly persuaded that she has magic powers. This seventh year of the series is another sweet one, well worth replaying from time to time. Enjoy!
DVD Review: Bewitched Season 7 Summary: 5 StarsThis is another DVD set of the Bewitched series! I enjoyed all of these episodes!
Description of Bewitched - The Complete Seventh SeasonSamantha, a powerful member of the society of witches that has lived apart from (and disdained) humanity for many centuries, falls in love with a mortal, Darrin Stephens. Much to the disgust of most of her family, she vows to give up witchcraft and become an ordinary suburban housewife, raising a family (bearing Tabitha and Adam). Never able to give up her heritage completely, the friction between the matriarchal, moneyless society of her birth and the patriarchal, capitalist society of modern advertising drives the comedy over eight seasons and 256 episodes, from 1964 to 1971. In its penultimate season, Bewiched showed little signs of the seven-year twitch. The season begins with an ambitious eight-episode arc, in which the fate of mortal Darrin (Dick Sargent) and witch Samantha's (Elizabeth Montgomery) mixed marriage is to be decided by the Witches Council. A trip to Salem, Mass., leads to a series of charmed misadventures, among them, encounters with a cursed antique colonial bedwarmer with the hots for Samantha and the real Paul Revere. In "Samantha's Old Salem Trip," spell-impaired Esmeralda (Alice Ghostley) accidentally sends Samantha back to 17th century Salem, but it is Darrin who is accused of witchcraft after he is dispatched to rescue her. Disc three of this four-disc set contains a string of inspired episodes that have all of Bewitched's old magic. The delightful Imogene Coca appears in a two-parter as Mary, the dissatisfied Good Fairy, who switches places with Samantha. Dick Sargent, more settled in to his role as the replacement Darrin, gets a crack at one of Dick York's finest half hours in "The Return of Darrin the Bold," in which he appears in a dual role as Darrin's 14th century ancestor, a randy, "warm-blooded Irishman." "The House That Uncle Arthur Built" is "the last in a long line of funnies" featuring the indispensable Paul Lynde as Uncle Arthur, who tries to hide his true practical joker nature from his snooty new girlfriend. This season also contains one of Bewitched's most memorable episodes, "Sisters at Heart," a Christmas story about racism conceived by the 10th grade English class at Los Angeles' Thomas Jefferson High School in which Tabitha (adorable Erin Murphy), told that she and her best friend, a black girl, could never be sisters because they don't look the same, conjures up polka-E20dotted equality. As Endora, Agnes Morehead worked hard for her Emmy nomination this season, conjuring up spell after spiteful spell for the dread "Durwood," including giving him a pig's head, turning him into an insult comedian ("My mother-in-law has one terrible habit--breathing."), and changing him into an old man. And Montgomery doubles the toil and trouble in her dual role as swinging "quicksilver" Serena. From the dancing skeleton in the closet in "The House that Uncle Arthur Built" to Endora's commercial for Bobbins Bon Bons in "The Mother-In-Law of the Year," Bewitched's seventh season will have you under its spell. --Donald Liebenson
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