Category: (DVD)
29 new, starting at $27.94
6 used, starting at $27.91
After failing to read the fine print on his scholarship
requirements, a young New Yorker is sent to the remote and
eccentric town of Cicely, Alaska after he graduates medical
school.
Item Type: DVD Movie
Item Rating: NR
Street Date: 11/14/06
Wide Screen: no
Director Cut: no
Special Edition: no
Language: ENGLISH
Foreign Film: noSubtitles: no
Dubbed: no
Full Frame: yes
Re-Release: no
Packaging: Sleeve
Welcome back to Cicely, Alaska, where whimsy and magical realism are always in season. While Northern Exposure's heart is as big as all outdoors, its charms are starting to wear a little thin in its penultimate season, particularly John Cullum's New Age-y DJ McDreamy, Chris (one longs for that season 1 episode in which he lost his voice). But there is compensation in such sweet, unexpected moments as the one in "A River Doesn't Run Through It," in which bush pilot Maggie O'Connell (Janine Turner) finds the tape recorder of Dr. Joel Fleishman (Rob Morrow), who is out in the field, and, missing his voice, sits down to listen to one of his tapes. The long-awaited thawing of what Joel calls their "bizarre" relationship is this season's biggest development. Their efforts to "go out" and be nicer to each other are frustrated by such nuisances as a dust-mite allergy ("Mite Makes Right"). Another blessed event is the birth of Shelley's (Cynthia Geary) so-called "Little Pooper," but not before she freaks at impending motherhood ("Baby Blues") and has a series of laundromat encounters with her future child at different stages in her life, from Barbie-playing adolescent to aspiring Dallas Cowboy cheerleader ("Hello, I Love You"). Aspiring young filmmaker and shaman Ed (Darren E. Burrows) finds himself at a crossroads in "Rosebud," one of his better episodes, in which he is charged with organizing a film festival to put Cicely on the map. Peter Bogdanovich, as himself, regales one and all with his Orson Welles stories, and encourages Ed to finally make a movie. A quintessential love-it-or-hate-it Northern Exposure episode is "Mr. Sandman," in which the Northern Lights cause the residents to swap their dreams. The season ends on a heartwarming grace note with "Lovers and Madmen," in which Joel, who has always kept himself aloof from the close-knit community (in "Rosebud," he resists joining the volunteer fire department), at last accepts that he has become a "Cicelian," after discovering a frozen wooly mammoth. Too bad the series couldn't have ended here before finally jumping the caribou in its last season. --Donald Liebenson
One of the disks arrived damaged (warped)Reviewed by Carrie H., 2009-09-23
One of the disks was warped, hence the player rejected it. The
other disk was playable, but the one that arrived damaged, was the
one on which my favorite episode was taped. Oh well. Otherwise, the
order was shipped very quickly and arrived well within the promised
delivery time.
Carol
More northern than everReviewed by Terese A. Herrera, 2009-06-26
Northern Exposure [5th season] is more of the zany experiences of those in Cicely, Alaska. As always, the stories challenge and strike deep into cultural as well as personal questions. Enjoyed every minute!
Northern ExposureReviewed by Michael F. Byrne, 2009-04-27
Thus far all of the series that I've gotten from you have been good !
Still magicalReviewed by R. Swanson, 2009-03-04
I loved the show when it came out on TV and watched the first four
seasons that way. Then I missed the last two seasons so I was
really happy to see that they came out on DVD. The impact of the
original show may have lessened a little over the years but it is
still well worth watching. Chris, the Jungian-quoting, ex-con DJ is
one of the best characters ever created on TV, IMHO. All of the
others are still shining too--Maggie seems softer and sweeter with
her hair grown longer. Fleishman is still Fleishman--annoying and
neurotic but he has some nice moments, too. Holling and Shelly have
expanded their family. Ed is always adorable and in this season he
gets the call to become a shaman. RuthAnn gets a boyfriend.
Maurice, the guy we love to hate has some heart-opening moments,
too.
There is the usual departure into the realm of the supernatural
which always gives this series its special charm. Ed meets a tiny
green man who represents "self-deprecation"--He's very funny as
well as instructive. The whole show is so wise and human and funny
and touching---probably the best TV series ever. How great to be
able to watch it over and over on DVD.
FuriousReviewed by L. Urness, 2009-02-27
I recently purchased this video set, and like so many others, was
APPALLED
at the replacement soundtracks. I really didn't expect it would be
THAT bad. There were episodes in which the final track GREATLY
added to the emotional impact of the theme, particularly in the
second episode of Season 5. I had waited for THAT moment and heard
nothing but Musack. This production debacle is INEXCUSABLE. If you
are a true fan, don't bother puchasing these pathetic
"reproductions."