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List Price: $49.98 | | Label: Fox Network
Salesrank: 1856
Released: October 26, 2004 |
| Our Price: $17.94 |
| Used Price: $9.55 |
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MPAA Rating: Media: DVD |
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Editorial Review:
When Ryan Atwood a tough guarded fiercely intelligent 16-year-old plunges headlong into the wealthy privileged community of Newport Beach he soon discovers that the ruling families of Orange County are every bit as territorial as the tough crowd with which he ran on the streets of Chino. For Sandy Cohen the idealistic public defender who takes Ryan in; his wife Kirsten the linchpin of O.C. society; their awkward adolescent son Seth; and the beautiful troubled girl next door Marissa Copper - Ryan's presence will forever change their lives.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA UPC: 085393968021 Manufacturer No: 39680
Description of The O.C. - The Complete First Season:
It looked like a standard teen soap on the outside, but once you scratched the surface of the glittery, sun-dappled Fox drama The O.C., you'd find underneath a number of surprisingly well-developed characters, fun plots that played around with their soap conventions, and some of the wittiest dialogue this side of an Aaron Sorkin show. The setup was pure high concept: hunky, brooding Ryan (Benjamin McKenzie) was a good kid from Chino starting to go bad, and thanks to the interference of his lawyer, Sandy Cohen (Peter Gallagher), finds himself whisked away from the wrong side of the tracks to the mansions and manicured lawns of Orange County. Soon, Ryan finds himself living in the Cohens' pool house, involved with troubled rich girl Marissa (Mischa Barton), and bristling against the societal confines of his new home, as the people may be richer but they're just as screwed up as anyone else. Still, somehow, he manages to bring out the humanity of the superficial people around him, and they become all the better for knowing him.
Okay, enough with the Beverly Hills, 90210 scenario--what The O.C. turned out to be was the most addictive TV soap in recent memory, and one with a brain to boot. Smarter than Melrose Place, sexier than 90210, funnier than Felicity, and not as enamored of itself as Dawson's Creek, The O.C. reveled in clever and hilarious dialogue (the pilot episode earned a WGA nomination) and quirky, eccentric characters. Most noteworthy was breakout star Adam Brody, who as Ryan's geeky newfangled brother-type Seth practically stole the teen heartthrob mantle away from Russell Crowe-lookalike McKenzie. Barton was a bit of a blank as the troubled Marissa, but her best pal, the blissfully superficial Summer, was played by Rachel Bilson as the perfect supporting character in a dizzy farce. And the adults, especially Gallagher and Kelly Rowan as the supportive Cohens, grounded the other half of the show in you know, like, maturity. Not that The O.C. ever forgot the fun that was to be had in TV-land, as most every other episode ended with a fistfight or someone falling into a pool--sometimes both. Here was a soap you could purely enjoy without guilt. --Mark Englehart
The O.C. - The Complete First Season Reviews:
A Guilty Pleasure 
2008-09-29 - This show was a summer replacement on Fox. It was right after my freshman year of college and I basically tuned in because the lead girls were hot. The show was irritatingly addictive. Within five weeks, all of my friends were watching too. The show is ridiculous, on so many levels. So much more ridiculous than Beverly Hills 90210, but I think that is the appeal.
The show burns so brightly the first 10 episodes that it was bound to let down eventually. The inclusion and persistence of the Oliver story arc proves this, but, in the end, the 27 episodes in season 1 are some of my favorite television. I highly recommend this show as I'd watch it multiple times.
great show 
2008-08-28 - fell in love with this shown when it was on tv, now I can watch it anytime I like!
Not What It Seems! 
2008-08-20 - Three years ago I got over myself and rented the first season of The OC. I was so surprised by what I found under its glitzy surface. I was expecting a stupid teen soap with no substance or importance, but when I finally watched it I found a smart unique show that always challenged the audience's wit. It possessed clever story lines, perfect dialogue, fantastic characters, and episodes that leave you on the edge of your seat. As soon as I saw it I couldn't believe that I'd ever thought it was stupid. The commercials portrayed it to be something that it completely wasn't, the next 90210. All the seasons were good but not nearly as good as the never stop action of the first. All 27 episodes are enthralling, drama, comedy, tragedy, all rolled up in the neat little bundle that is The OC's first season. Compared to other TV shows, nothing reached the level of perfection as this season. So skeptics step aside, you may be surprised by what you find...
First Season Lived Up to the Hype 
2008-08-02 - The FOX Television Network scored a major hit in 2003 when The O.C. premiered on August 5. The show at first seemed to be the next logical step in updating the Beverly Hills 90210 and Dawson's Creek teen soap genre for the 2000s. In many ways it improved on the formula in its first season and used up and coming music stars to propel the action on screen, making stars of little known recording artists in the process. However, the show's quick rise to popularity is often compared to its equally swift fall. But that's not to say that the first season was a mediocre one.
I didn't catch the show during the 2003-2004 TV season, but viewed the entire season on the subsequently released DVD set. The story centers around fish-out-of-water Ryan, a brooding, bad-boy teenager who moves in with a rich Newport Beach family in Southern California. The Cohens are a family with money - mother Kirsten works for her rich father, who is at odds with father Sandy, a local attorney. It's Sandy who represents Ryan in a case and ultimately invites him into his home.
The key partnership in the series is between Ryan and Seth, the Cohen's son. The show centers around dorky Seth's relationship to bad-boy Ryan, who is sort of like the big brother he never had. The boys juggle relationships with fellow classmates Marissa and Summer, while tackling the usual blend of teen drama along the way.
I always think I've seen it all when I see a teen drama like Beverly Hills 90210, which was remixed for the late nineties with Dawson's Creek. But The OC somehow manages to be just as good, if not better, during its first season. The first half of the season was particularly good, with things slowing down after a plot involving an unstable friend of Marissa's named Oliver, who develops an obsessive crush. Other plots involve Marissa's struggle with alcohol and the divorce of her mother and father.
Perhaps the slight lag during the last quarter of the season kicked off the amazingly swift downfall of the series. In the end, four seasons aired, each with a major percentage of viewer loss in the ratings. Adam Brody, Mischa Barton, Benjamin McKenzie, Kelly Rowan, Rachel Bilson and Peter Gallagher are the main cast of stars that propelled this FOX drama into an overnight sensation that burned out way before it should have.
(I originally posted this review at my personal website: jasonhink.com)
Highly recommend this show. 
2008-07-21 - This show had me hooked from the very first episode. I usually like teenager shows like 90210, Dawson's Creek, Gossip Girl...etc. If you like those shows too...this one won't disappoint you. Not only was I intrigued by the teenage characters that the shows revolves around, but their parents also cause a LOT of drama. One the parents actually slept with her own daughter's ex-boyfriend. This is the type of drama that just keeps me glued. I've only watched the first season so far and I was very pleasantly surprised that it had 27 episodes. I buy a lot of TV shows on DVD and most of them don't have this many episodes in one season.