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The Office: The Complete BBC Collection (First and Second Series Plus Special)
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Genre | Comedy |
Format | Box set, Color, NTSC, Closed-captioned, Multiple Formats |
Contributor | Ricky Gervais, Martin Freeman, Mackenzie Crook, Lucy Davis (II), Stephen Merchant |
Language | English |
Number Of Discs | 4 |
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Product Description
Product Description
Office, The - Collection (DVD) Welcome to The Office, a place of petty rivalry, bad flirting, and easily-bruised egos. Filmed in documentary-style, this sharply observed and highly acclaimed comedy exposes the excruciating truth about the world of nine-to-five. Complete collection includes all twelve episodes plus the special.
Amazon.com
It feels both inaccurate and inadequate to describe The Office as a comedy. On a superficial level, it disdains all the conventions of television sitcoms: there are no punch lines, no jokes, no laugh tracks, and no cute happy endings. More profoundly, it's not what we're used to thinking of as funny. Most of the fervently devoted fan base watched with a discomfortingly thrilling combination of identification and mortification. The paradox is that its best moments are almost physically unwatchable. Set in the offices of a fictional British paper merchant, The Office is filmed in the style of a reality television show. The writing is subtle and deft, the acting wonderful, and the characters beautifully drawn: the cadaverous team leader Gareth (Mackenzie Crook); the monstrous sales rep, Chris Finch (Ralph Ineson); and the decent but long-suffering everyman Tim (Martin Freeman), whose ambition and imagination have been crushed out of him by the banality of ! the life he dreams uselessly of escaping. The show is stolen, as it was intended to be, by insufferable office manager David Brent, played by codirector-cowriter Ricky Gervais. Brent will become a name as emblematic for a particular kind of British grotesque as Basil Fawlty, but he is a deeper character. Fawlty is an exaggeration of reality, and therefore a safely comic figure. Brent is as appalling as only reality can be. --Andrew Mueller
The second series exceeded even the sky-high standards of the first. Indeed, it ventured beyond caricature and satire, touching on the very edge of darkness. Ricky Gervais is once again excruciatingly superb as David Brent, but in this series, Brent's to-the-camera assertions concerning his management qualities and executive capabilities are seriously challenged when the Slough and Swindon branches are merged and his former Swindon equivalent Neil (Patrick Baladi) takes over as area manager. To compensate, Brent cultivates his pathologically mistaken image of himself as an entertainer-motivator-comedian whose stage happens to be the workplace. Meanwhile, Tim, who can only maintain his sanity by teasing the priggish Gareth, continues to wrestle with his yearning for receptionist Dawn Tinsley (Lucy Davis), a sympathetic character persisting in a relationship with a man about whom she still maintains unspoken reservations. As ever, it's the awkward, reality TV-style pauses and silences, the furtive, meaningful and unmet glances across the emotional gulf of the open-plan office, that say it all here. As for Brent, his own breakdown is prefaced by a moment of hideous hilarity--an impromptu office dance, a mixture of "Flashdance and MC Hammer" as Brent describes it, but in reality bad beyond description. Then, when his fate is sealed, he at last reveals himself in a memorable finale to perhaps the greatest British sitcom, besides Fawlty Towers, ever made. --David Stubbs
The brilliant and devastating comedy of The Office is brought to a satisfying conclusion in The Office Special, originally a two-part Christmas special on the BBC, set three years after the end of the faux-documentary's second season. The former office manager David (Ricky Gervais) now ekes out a desperate existence as an oblivious quasi-celebrity, making awkward, humiliating visits back to the office staff he still believes loves him. Gawky Gareth (Mackenzie Crook) has risen to manager and become a petty tyrant, while the sweet but snide Tim (Martin Freeman) continues to pine for former receptionist Dawn (Lucy Davis), who fled to Florida with her fiance. When the documentary crew pays for Dawn to return for the holiday party, an unpredictable reunion looms ahead. The Office fuses scathing humor and genuine empathy, turning excruciating social discomfort into inspired satire. Fans will find this special rewarding in all respects. --Bret Fetzer
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.85:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : NR (Not Rated)
- Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 11.28 ounces
- Item model number : E2085
- Director : Ricky Gervais, Stephen Merchant
- Media Format : Box set, Color, NTSC, Closed-captioned, Multiple Formats
- Run time : 2 hours and 6 minutes
- Release date : January 10, 2006
- Actors : Ricky Gervais, Martin Freeman, Mackenzie Crook, Lucy Davis (II)
- Subtitles: : English
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo), Unqualified
- Studio : BBC Home Entertainment
- ASIN : B0002W4P98
- Number of discs : 4
- Best Sellers Rank: #22,120 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #2,550 in Comedy (Movies & TV)
- #3,579 in Drama DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
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Office Rule #9: Download porn
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The Office season 1 clip
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The Office Collection trailer
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Office Rule #19: Be negative
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Excruciatingly funny in its honest and knowing approach to the realities of dull office routine, populated with characters diplaying the everyday weirdness of the everyday people one can find oneself working beside, and filmed with the brilliant creative stroke of a cinema verite documentary style, this is an acute and perceptive look at how people behave and what constitutes the working lives of most of us.
That, and it is screamingly funny in its sly and witty, surgical dismemberment of its character's various pretenses. Like an autopsy done on laughing gas, this is a wincingly hilarious examination of basic human foibles, that cuts deep and true, and yet never loses sight of the flawed humanity therein.
Starting with co-creator, writer and director Ricky Gervais's monumentally obtuse, politically incorrect, inept and, usually, stunningly self-deluded office manager, David Brent, forever cringingly doing or saying the absolutely inappropriate thing when not winking at the camera and expounding his inane, self-congratulatory and insipid "management philosophy". It is a fabulously rich character and Gervais plays him to perfection. Brent is such a total jerk, yet so helplessly so, one simply can't hate him. It is a rare and marvelous turn, and a great gamble to make your central character such an unsympathetic twit without making him inhuman, and Gervais deserves high praise indeed for both the writing and the performance.
The rest of the characters, large and small, are written and played with equal insight and intelligence. The angular and dense Gareth; the intelligent but stymied Tim; the sweetly trapped and yearning Dawn; the loutish and nasty Chris; the competent and ambitious Neil; Keith,the lumbering accountant, he of the terse and enigmatic observations; and the other office folk we get bits and glimpses of, usually with the telling remark or gesture that reveals. We see dithering, goofing-off, dead-time, and the aches and fumblings of unrequited office romance.
The story arc makes sense and over the course of the series we watch David Brent take himself right over-the-cliff, self-destructing as the ultra-smooth professionals cooly down-size, merge, and eliminate. Brent is no match for them, and somewhere inside, he knows it. The wrap special, which takes place 3 years after the supposed documentary has aired, neatly resolves many plot-lines, or at least does so for that moment. The Office always lets you know that life goes on, and nothing is ever resolved forever.
It is a shame to have to write so seriously about something that is so damn funny. I laughed out loud many many times, and even the painfully wince-inducing behaviour was done with great good humor. If you liked This Is Spinal Tap, Waiting for Guffman, Best in Show, and A Mighty Wind, you will have the right sensibility for this series. This is brilliant work here, more true than any "reality TV", and well worth your while.
The British comedy, The Office, stars a bunch of unknowns, but that's perfect because you really believe that these people are genuine. The mock-documentary style is so convincing that you wish you could fax them your resume/CV and get a job with these people.
It has humor; so much humor in fact that you will laugh until you cry... guaranteed.
It has heart; I challenge anyone not to shed tears after the series finale (aka Office Special).
You learn to love these characters, even David Brent the smarmiest of bosses. He'll make you cringe, he'll make you laugh, but in the end you still like he guy. That's the magic brought into the role by actor, writer, creator, and above all "entertainer" Ricky Gervais (aka David Brent).
I recommend this set to everyone... both those that have worked in an office, and those who haven't had the pleasure.
Everyone can associate with the workplace hi-jinks between characters Tim (played by Martin Freeman) and Gareth (played by Mackenzie Crook)... from the let's hide all Gareth's belongings stink on Red Nose Day, to Tim's putting Gareth's stapler in Jell-O, to the long drawn out Q&A sessions on Gareth's obsession with the military with Tim using homosexual overtones to make Gareth sound like a "poof".
Then of course there is the ceaseless, and very realistic flirting and romance between characters Dawn (played by Lucy Davis) and Tim. Dawn is the sole source of joy in Tim's life, but engaged to another who doesn't appreciate her.
Then there is the relationship between David and his bosses, Jennifer (played by Stirling Gallacher), and his newly promoted supervisor, Neil (played by Patrick Baladi). Everyone who has ever felt the stress of dealing with a boss can understand how David feels towards Jennifer and Neil.
The reason that as ridiculous as David Brent is, he's still such a likeable character is due to the fact that regardless of the crude, and inappropriate comments he makes, and the wacky way he acts, underneath it all he is just a very lonely guy looking to have some friends, even if they are only his "devoted" subordinates. In all, he just wants people to like him, and tries too hard in all the wrong ways to have that occur.
If you'd like more info about The Office, you can visit the main website for The Office at [...]
To find out more about the characters and actors who portray them see [...]
Top reviews from other countries

As a total, the two six-episode series and the two-part Christmas Special are in my opinion some of the best TV I've ever seen.

モキュメンタリーと呼ばれるジャンルのショーで、架空の人物、架空のストーリーをドキュメンタリー風に撮影したものです。BGMも入らないし、登場人物がカメラに向かって、インタビューに答えるように話しかけるということがあり、始めてみる人にはとても奇妙に映ると思います。
このドラマの主人公はデイヴィッドという超KY,非常識なボスです。基本的に、そのボスが何か問題発言をしたり、やらかしたりして、場が凍りつく(超シラケル)、もしくは、部下も悪乗りして、会社に来たお客さんを困らせるといったような内容です。
ドキュメンタリー風に臨場感をもって撮影されているので、場が凍りつく瞬間なんかで、見てるこっちも、ちょっと気まずい気分になります。そういう点を楽しめないと、このドラマは面白いと感じられないでしょう。(その点は、アメリカ版の方がまだちょっと優しいです)
個人的には、このシーズン2、14話しかないUK版(オリジナル)よりも、シーズン5まであり、まだ続いているUS版の方が、深い人間関係を描くことに成功しており好きですが、やっぱりこの奇妙で面白い新しいドラマを作ったリッキー・ジャーヴェイス(デイヴィッド役でもある)は凄いと思いますし、US版を楽しむという意味でも、オリジナルのUK版を見る価値が十分にあります。
逆に、超シビアな雰囲気を楽しみたいという方には、US版より、こちらのオリジナルUK版の方が楽しめるでしょう。
いずれにせよ、日本には無い新感覚のドラマです。


