Search - Farscape - Season 2, Collection 2 (Starburst Edition) on DVD


Farscape - Season 2, Collection 2 (Starburst Edition)
Farscape - Season 2 Collection 2
Starburst Edition
Actors: Ben Browder, Claudia Black, Anthony Simcoe, Lani John Tupu, Jonathan Hardy
Directors: Geoff Bennett, Ian Watson, Tony Tilse
Genres: Action & Adventure, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Television, Animation
UR     2005     0hr 50min

Don?t get your shivvies in an uproar! It?s the fifth collection in the Starburst Edition of Farscape -- the middle of Season 2! "I?m just looking for a way home." Astronaut John Crichton (Ben Browder) is lost. Really, real...  more »

     

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Movie Details

Actors: Ben Browder, Claudia Black, Anthony Simcoe, Lani John Tupu, Jonathan Hardy
Directors: Geoff Bennett, Ian Watson, Tony Tilse
Creators: Andrew Prowse, David Willis, Emily Skopov, Justin Monjo, Rockne S. O'Bannon
Genres: Action & Adventure, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Television, Animation
Sub-Genres: Action & Adventure, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Television, Animation
Studio: Adv Films
Format: DVD - Color - Animated
DVD Release Date: 08/09/2005
Original Release Date: 03/19/1999
Theatrical Release Date: 03/19/1999
Release Year: 2005
Run Time: 0hr 50min
Screens: Color
Number of Discs: 4
SwapaDVD Credits: 4
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 0
MPAA Rating: Unrated
Languages: English

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Movie Reviews

READ THIS!!!! IMPORTANT!!!!
Rufus McGregor | Seattle, Washington | 09/08/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The negative reviews pertaining to quality issues are no longer valid. ADV has discontinued the 2 disc editions and now releases the Starburst editions as 4 disc sets - similar in setup to the box sets but including the extras from the previous Starburst edition. That said, be warned when purchasing these discs from a third party vendor through Amazon. The product details are the same so there is no reason to expect you'll get the 4 disc set instead of the 2 disc set. Even Amazon (see above) has an incorrect product assessment -- they call this a two disc set but ship the appropriate four disc set."
A crucial series of episodes in a truly great Sci-fi series
Robert Moore | Chicago, IL USA | 10/17/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Although FARSCAPE had no bad seasons and no set in this series will be of anything less than completing enjoyable, this set contains what is arguably the ones where the show evolved into what it in fact was: the most innovative Sci-fi series in the history of television. In particular, in these episodes the story arc that would extend from the three "Look at the Princess" episodes to the final minutes of the miniseries would be in place. For it is in these episodes that John and Aeryn's romantic interest in each other, which had previously been latent, is made explicit and we begin getting the first concrete hints that something is not quite right with John's head, though we won't learn precisely what until late in the season. All we know for certain is that John has begun to see Scorpius even when he knows that he isn't there.

Like many fans of FARSCAPE, I've only now started turning in my old recordings of the show for DVDs now that we are finally getting acceptably priced copies of the show. Although there have been other TV series that have appeared in overpriced editions-THE X-FILES springs to mind-FARSCAPE was the only one in its original edition that could be said to be prohibitively so. I'm not sure about other fans, but there was simply no way that I was able or willing to pay for a set that listed for well over a hundred dollars. One could make some complaints about the new Starburst edition-for instance, I'm still not clear on why they have to dribble these out two discs at a time, instead of releasing an entire season at once-but two things one cannot carp about: the cost and the number of extras. As to the former, I've been about to find each disc in the Starburst so far from various resellers listed on Amazon for no more than $16 apiece. As to the latter, each of the three sets making up each season is stuffed with a variety of special features. Some of the special features feel a bit like filler, but a number are substantive.

As in all these sets, the final side of the second disc has many interesting special effects. Here the longest is a long interview with Virginia Hey that took place after the demise of the series, with her hair regrown and skin decidedly not blue. Even though she was 52 at the time of the interview, she honestly doesn't look as if she could be a day over 35. People talk of good genes, and she has them aplenty. As long as the interview is, it is incomplete, and will presumably be completed in another set. There is also a blooper reel (my favorite is when D'Argo bumps against a huge rock column and it moves forward-ooops!) and some raw footage of "The Flax" and "Through the Looking Glass" from Season One, which is great to see what the scenes look like on the set before special effects have been added.

All the episodes on this disc are excellent (though I cringe a bit when I see the identity-switch episode "Out of Their Minds"-why must every show employ this hackneyed plot device when it never leads to anything good, with the notable exception of the stunning two-parter on BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER where Buffy and Faith switch bodies, the exception that proves the rule), the highpoint of the set and one of the highpoints of the entire series is the three-part "Look at the Princess." Although on one level it is about John's nearly being forced to become a prince (and statue) on a planet over which Scarens and Peacekeepers struggle for mastery, in reality it is about John and Aeryn. Although there had been flirtations in the first season and a half, and in one virtual reality episode apparently spent on earth a night of passion, their feelings had more or less remained sublimated. Here, however, the three-part saga begins with John and Aeryn on his shuttle, with her showing him piloting tricks, when things get more than a little passionate. Breaking off from their kiss Aeryn yells that she will not be a slave to his hormones, when clearly her hormones are every bit as guilty as his. While John seems pretty clear on how he feels about Aeryn, the former Peacekeeper, suffering from a lifetime of being taught not to have strong feelings for others, is having a difficult time figuring how to come to terms with how she feels for John. When the crew descends to a planet about to celebrate a royal wedding, they discover a practice whereby someone places a drop of a liquid on the tongue of a member of the opposite sex, briefly touch tongues, and then kiss. If they are genetically compatible, a sweet taste will result; if incompatible, a bitter taste. The ambitious prince, younger brother of the woman who is heir to the throne, has poisoned her DNA so that any Sebacean who kisses her will prove incompatible. When she kisses John, however, who being human somehow is immune to the poison, a sweet taste results and John suddenly finds himself about to become royalty.

In the end John avoids all the intrigue to either kill him or make him a regent. Back on the ship a scene occurs that demonstrates as well as any in the run of the show what makes it so special. Although it has as many or more special effects as any show ever made, a host of aliens and exotics settings, and as much action as even the most avid action nut could hope for, the most exciting scene occurs in a quiet moment between John and Aeryn back upon Moya. Seeing each other alone for the first time after their ordeal, John talks happily to Aeryn until he finally call attention to her persistent silence. Aeryn breaks off her exercise, reaches for something nearby, and then holding up one of the planet's compatibility vials walks slowly towards John. Both of them quiet now, she hands the vial to John who places a drop on her tongue and then on his own. They kiss as the music rises and then break off suddenly as it lowers. She turns around to face the camera, a blank expression on her face which holds for a second, and then breaks into a smile that barely represses the joy is obviously feels, John also breaking into a grin as she walks away. Though FARSCAPE had so much window dressing, the show in the end was really about whether two people have the right chemistry. Though the show went for four seasons and a miniseries, John and Aeryn's kiss has to stand as one of the half dozen great moments in the history of the show. From this moment on, it isn't a question of if John and Aeryn will get together, but of how long it will take. But we all know that if there is one thing that television shows love to do it is to postpone the inevitable.

The other major thing we see in these episodes is that Scorpius has a hold over John that we hadn't previously known. True, in one episode he had imagined seeing Scorpius on Moya, but in this episode Scorpius explicitly states that John hasn't even begun to understand what he has done to him, and we find that when John attempts to kill Scorpius he is suddenly unable to go through with it. Then on the final episode of this set, "Beware of Dog," John again sees Scorpius when he knows he can't be there. These are the beginning intimations of what John would later call Harvey, the inner presence of Scorpius due to the chip he inserted into John's brain when he was in the Aurora chair.

All shows take some time to mature and find their greatness. BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER (which, by the way, gets a mention in one of the Princess episodes, when John complains that when he awakens after being a statue for 80 years everything he cares about will be dead, even Buffy) was a very good show its first season and for the first third of the second, but in the episode "Innocence" became a great show. Likewise, FARSCAPE was a very good show for its first season and a half, but after the Princess trilogy clearly had achieved greatness."
Farscape, Could It Be any MORE Addictive?
S. Hodgkinson | The Miami Valley, OH USA | 08/17/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)

"I was exposed to Farscape by a very geeky friend of mine to whom I consider myself forever endebted. If you're thinking of buying this particular volume, chances are you're already familiar with the series if not a fan if not an absolute avid drooling lunatic for it. So, I need not drone on about the show itself.
So, the set. The ONLY thing I can think to complain about is the number of episodes. It has approximately the same number of episodes on it that the others do, so it's not disappointing in that regaurd, I just wish there was less disc-switching that needed to be done.
The renders seem fantastic. I've a relatively old DVD player and it had no problem reading and playing the disc (which I seem to recall reading another reviewer complain about in a previous Farscape set). Also, I must say that I'm not 100% thrilled with thier methodology for packaging the discs. Having to take Disc 1 out to get to Disc 2, and remove Disc 3 to get to Disc 4 is kind a pain in the butt, but a minor inconvenience when weighed against the sheer amount of entertainment the set contains.
The special features, as always, are intriguing and entertaining, and answer quite a few questions that avid fans may have.
On the whole, this is another great volume in a tremendous series."
Farscape Starburst Edition - 2.2
Jamesmoynedonaldson | Dallas | 08/05/2006
(4 out of 5 stars)

"I missed the original airing of the Farscape series and passed on the overpriced DVD's. (Why do the suits think they can rip off Sci-Fi fans?) Finally got the original 2 episodes per disk season 1 at a discount sale. Nice but they took up valuable space. I much prefer the Starburst editions. The extra's are really interesting. And I've been able to get these at discount prices as well :) If your a fan of this series then I recommend the Starburst editions."