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SynopsisHang on for the ride of your life as you launch your imagination into a spectacular world of sci-fi action and rugged adventure from the genius mind of creator Joss Whedon!Set 500 years in the future, in the aftermath of a universal civil war, Firefly follows Captain Malcolm Reynolds and his renegade crew of the transport ship Serenity - a fiercely loyal team ready to tackle any job, legal or not. But when they unwittingly take on a mysterious pair of travellers, they find themselves constantly on the run, desperate to evade Alliance authorities, flesh-eating Reavers and other hostile dangers in the darkest corners of space.Special Features Firefly Cast Roundtable: Lunch with Joss, Nathan, Alan and Ron Audio Commentary on Select Episodes 3 Behind-the-Scenes Featurettes 4 Deleted Scenes Gag Reel, Audition Tape & More! Review: "You cant take the sky from me" - Firefly is the much loved cult space western t.v adventure series created by Joss Wheadon. He's also known for creating Buffy the Vampire Slayer , Angel & more recently co-writer & director of Marvel Avengers Assemble as well as many other well known credits, the man is gifted. Box content: ()= episode No. Disc 1: (1)Serenity (2)The train job (3)Bushwhacked. Disc 2: (4)Shindig (5)Safe (6)Our Mrs Reynonlds (7)Jaynetown. Disc 3: (8)Out of gas (9)Ariel (10)War stories (11)Trash. Disc 4: (12) The message (13)Heart of gold (14)Objects in space. Disc 4: Special features: -The making of Firefly / Serenity: The 10th character / Deleted scenes / Alan Tudyk's auditon tape / Gag reel / Joss(Wheadon) tours the set / Joss sings the Firefly theme. The features are nice, the making of, serenity 10th character & the deleted scenes make for the bulk of it, around 60 minutes worth, while the rest are only about 1-2 minutes or so long. It was nice to get an insight into the series from the actors, crew & Mr Wheadon. And that they had the exact same feelings about the show as we did watching it. The depth of detail that went into every aspect of the program, from the ship, characters & to the music etc... was very poignant after watching all 14 episodes. Malcolm "Mal" Reynolds (Nathan Fillion- Castle ) an ex-solider who fought against the Alliance(the government of the time), is the Captain of Serenity, a smuggler , firefly class ship. Along with his motley crew of, pilot, Hoban "Wash" Washburne(Alan Tudyk- I Robot ) his wife Zoe(Gina Torres- Suits ), engineer Kaylee Frye(Jewel Staite) , all round tough guy Jayne Cobb(Adam Baldwin- Full Metal Jacket ) & Lady of the night Inara Serra(Morena Baccarin- Homeland ) tags along, as an acquaintance of Mal's. Along the way they pick up some more members, in the shape of, questioning his faith, preacher Shepherd Book(Ron Glass) & more notably Dr. Simon Tam (Sean Maher) & his gifted intelligent sister River(Summer Glau). The latter are on the run from the Alliance military, but Mal & his crew have no love for the Alliance, who'd love to get hold of them too, so they allow them to stay, with Tam as medic, until they find another place to go. They search the outskirts of the less populated planets for jobs that are legal & illegal, but within reason, just to get money to keep food on the table & the ship repaired & fueled. I found Firefly to be a great sci-fi space western series, with a good story & strong likable cast of characters. The dialogue has a mixture of futuristic terminology, including the use of Chinese/Mandarin used at times in short bursts for emotional moments, mixed with distinct 19th century western tones & humor. Likewise the appearance is a mixture of old wild west & Chinese influences, along with futuristic spaceships, but the characters wear a mix of old/modern western cloths & wield sci-fi style 6 shooters, as well as the desert like planets using horses etc.. the music also has a very Western/Chinese feel, with the use of guitar, fiddle & lute as the main instruments & the country style lyrics. The theme song which is also written by Mr Wheadon, has the perfect words that really sums up the heart & soul of the show. I've been watching the series after seeing the film version, Serenity , made after the series was cancelled, where Mr Wheadon managed to get the backing for a film spin off, that basically condenses the series into a 2 hour movie feature, set as a continuation from the series. It is such a shame that Firefly never matured past it's 14 episodes after being cancelled mid-season, and dont be put off by that, as they are quality episodes. But the selfish person in me realizes that the other great series i enjoy, Castle, wouldn't possibly be as good, if it had perhaps continued. Lead Nathan Fillion is brilliant(as he is in Castle) with his tongue in cheek/serious acting style, and has a great rapport with all the characters, who in turn are great too. The setting, special effects, banter between the crew & the brilliant musical score is a winner, no wonder the series is so well thought of, it had everything going for it to succeed. I'm a late newcomer, but If you like westerns & sci-fi, you'll enjoy this a lot. Highly Recommended. Review: A slice of Sci-Fi/Western heaven - As the other reviews make clear, "Firefly" is excellent, its cancellation a tragedy and its ownership on DVD mandatory for any fan of quality adventure-drama. Oddly, I pretty much missed it on its TV outing. A huge fan of "Buffy" and (especially) "Angel", why didn't I pick up on "Firefly"? I remember watching the first half of the pilot and after that... it just passed me by. Viewing it again on DVD, the strengths and weaknesses of the show become apparent. The pilot is poor and Fox were right to demand a re-take ("The Train Job") - but the decision to re-insert the pilot episode two thirds of the way through the series run, now that was bizarre. Fortunately, this set restores everything to the correct sequence. What do I mean by criticising the pilot? Well, it's very talk-y, the characters take a long time to establish themselves, the atmosphere is glum and the outcomes are all downbeat. Don't get me wrong: in the context of a show that's already made a claim on your affections, talkiness, downbeat resolutions and the slow revealing of characters are all laudable assets. But not in a pilot. I suspect some hubris at work here: Joss Whedon believing everything he touched would transmute to gold and trusting too much in the loyalty of a fickle TV fan base. These misjudgements were corrected later on in the series - by the episode "Shindig" you're laughing and crying along with the cast like a reunion of old friends and by the end of this too-too-short series, the closedown feels like a minor bereavement. So, the weakness was a poor launch and a fumbled high-concept pitch (space drama without aliens, blasters or comedy droids; themes drawn from the American Civil War; characters with immensely complex back stories). Let's talk about the strengths... It's a space drama without aliens, blasters or comedy droids. All the standard SF motifs are eschewed in favour of some gritty characterisation and very mature consideration (within the constraints of the genre) of sex, religion, politics and ethics. Don't get me wrong, it's often laugh-out-loud funny. But it's the best sort of funny: the sort that comes from finding humour in a situation otherwise treated with full seriousness. For the SF geek, the Firefly 'Verse is intriguing: a single solar system of terraformed planets and moons, no FTL starships, evil megacorporations and shadow governments pitched against pioneers, poker players and prostitutes. It's all familiar, but combined in novel ways - like the hybrid Anglo-Chinese argot the characters curse and swear in or the Guild of Companions who train Jedi-like concubines. The 'Verse manages to become one of the three SF settings you would actually like to go and live in (then other two being the Star Wars Republic and the Star Trek Federation, of course). Next, the themes are drawn from the American Civil War. The "bad guys" are the Yankee Unionists, the "good guys" are the rag tag Confederates. But of course, there are no absolute good and bad guys. The nod towards historical allegory gives some of the episodes a dignity and resonance not commonly found in SF, certainly not in made-for-TV SF. Finally, the immensely complex characterisations. Captain Mal Reynolds (portrayed by the redoubtable Nathan Fillion with oodles of self-deprecating charm) is the worthy successor to Han Solo - notably the Han Solo of original edition Star Wars, before Lucas re-cut it to have Greedo shoot first. The banter between Reynolds and his crew sparkles with the understood yet barely-referenced past they share. Heck, it's all so dense that some characters don't even get their stories told - we never find out about Shepherd Book's past and only the "Serenity" movie filled in the mysteries about River and Simon. This is a quality ensemble cast, acting their socks off and loving every minute of it. As well they might, given that the script comes from the team that cut their teeth on "Buffy" - which means that, as comedy-drama-action ensemble dialogue, this is just about as funny/dramatic/exciting as it gets. Yes, we can dream of a world where Fox didn't axe the show and it went on to tell its charming, idiosyncratic and inventive story in its own time, over an arc of years. But here in the real world we have the DVD set with which to visit old friends, familiar places and endearing scenes. Take me out into the Black 'n' tell 'em I ain't comin' back...













































| ASIN | B074G321XR |
| Actors | Adam Baldwin, Alan Tudyk, Gina Torres, Nathan Fillion, Sean Maher |
| Aspect Ratio | 16:9 - 1.78:1 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 377 in DVD & Blu-ray ( See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray ) 24 in Television (DVD & Blu-ray) 30 in Fantasy (DVD & Blu-ray) 40 in Box Sets (DVD & Blu-ray) |
| Country of origin | Poland |
| Customer reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (9,904) |
| Is discontinued by manufacturer | No |
| Language | English |
| Manufacturer reference | unknown |
| Media Format | Blu-ray |
| Number of discs | 3 |
| Product Dimensions | 13.5 x 1.5 x 17.2 cm; 120 g |
| Release date | 11 Sept. 2017 |
| Run time | 10 hours and 25 minutes |
| Studio | 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment |
| Writers | Joss Whedon |
J**S
"You cant take the sky from me"
Firefly is the much loved cult space western t.v adventure series created by Joss Wheadon. He's also known for creating Buffy the Vampire Slayer , Angel & more recently co-writer & director of Marvel Avengers Assemble as well as many other well known credits, the man is gifted. Box content: ()= episode No. Disc 1: (1)Serenity (2)The train job (3)Bushwhacked. Disc 2: (4)Shindig (5)Safe (6)Our Mrs Reynonlds (7)Jaynetown. Disc 3: (8)Out of gas (9)Ariel (10)War stories (11)Trash. Disc 4: (12) The message (13)Heart of gold (14)Objects in space. Disc 4: Special features: -The making of Firefly / Serenity: The 10th character / Deleted scenes / Alan Tudyk's auditon tape / Gag reel / Joss(Wheadon) tours the set / Joss sings the Firefly theme. The features are nice, the making of, serenity 10th character & the deleted scenes make for the bulk of it, around 60 minutes worth, while the rest are only about 1-2 minutes or so long. It was nice to get an insight into the series from the actors, crew & Mr Wheadon. And that they had the exact same feelings about the show as we did watching it. The depth of detail that went into every aspect of the program, from the ship, characters & to the music etc... was very poignant after watching all 14 episodes. Malcolm "Mal" Reynolds (Nathan Fillion- Castle ) an ex-solider who fought against the Alliance(the government of the time), is the Captain of Serenity, a smuggler , firefly class ship. Along with his motley crew of, pilot, Hoban "Wash" Washburne(Alan Tudyk- I Robot ) his wife Zoe(Gina Torres- Suits ), engineer Kaylee Frye(Jewel Staite) , all round tough guy Jayne Cobb(Adam Baldwin- Full Metal Jacket ) & Lady of the night Inara Serra(Morena Baccarin- Homeland ) tags along, as an acquaintance of Mal's. Along the way they pick up some more members, in the shape of, questioning his faith, preacher Shepherd Book(Ron Glass) & more notably Dr. Simon Tam (Sean Maher) & his gifted intelligent sister River(Summer Glau). The latter are on the run from the Alliance military, but Mal & his crew have no love for the Alliance, who'd love to get hold of them too, so they allow them to stay, with Tam as medic, until they find another place to go. They search the outskirts of the less populated planets for jobs that are legal & illegal, but within reason, just to get money to keep food on the table & the ship repaired & fueled. I found Firefly to be a great sci-fi space western series, with a good story & strong likable cast of characters. The dialogue has a mixture of futuristic terminology, including the use of Chinese/Mandarin used at times in short bursts for emotional moments, mixed with distinct 19th century western tones & humor. Likewise the appearance is a mixture of old wild west & Chinese influences, along with futuristic spaceships, but the characters wear a mix of old/modern western cloths & wield sci-fi style 6 shooters, as well as the desert like planets using horses etc.. the music also has a very Western/Chinese feel, with the use of guitar, fiddle & lute as the main instruments & the country style lyrics. The theme song which is also written by Mr Wheadon, has the perfect words that really sums up the heart & soul of the show. I've been watching the series after seeing the film version, Serenity , made after the series was cancelled, where Mr Wheadon managed to get the backing for a film spin off, that basically condenses the series into a 2 hour movie feature, set as a continuation from the series. It is such a shame that Firefly never matured past it's 14 episodes after being cancelled mid-season, and dont be put off by that, as they are quality episodes. But the selfish person in me realizes that the other great series i enjoy, Castle, wouldn't possibly be as good, if it had perhaps continued. Lead Nathan Fillion is brilliant(as he is in Castle) with his tongue in cheek/serious acting style, and has a great rapport with all the characters, who in turn are great too. The setting, special effects, banter between the crew & the brilliant musical score is a winner, no wonder the series is so well thought of, it had everything going for it to succeed. I'm a late newcomer, but If you like westerns & sci-fi, you'll enjoy this a lot. Highly Recommended.
J**N
A slice of Sci-Fi/Western heaven
As the other reviews make clear, "Firefly" is excellent, its cancellation a tragedy and its ownership on DVD mandatory for any fan of quality adventure-drama. Oddly, I pretty much missed it on its TV outing. A huge fan of "Buffy" and (especially) "Angel", why didn't I pick up on "Firefly"? I remember watching the first half of the pilot and after that... it just passed me by. Viewing it again on DVD, the strengths and weaknesses of the show become apparent. The pilot is poor and Fox were right to demand a re-take ("The Train Job") - but the decision to re-insert the pilot episode two thirds of the way through the series run, now that was bizarre. Fortunately, this set restores everything to the correct sequence. What do I mean by criticising the pilot? Well, it's very talk-y, the characters take a long time to establish themselves, the atmosphere is glum and the outcomes are all downbeat. Don't get me wrong: in the context of a show that's already made a claim on your affections, talkiness, downbeat resolutions and the slow revealing of characters are all laudable assets. But not in a pilot. I suspect some hubris at work here: Joss Whedon believing everything he touched would transmute to gold and trusting too much in the loyalty of a fickle TV fan base. These misjudgements were corrected later on in the series - by the episode "Shindig" you're laughing and crying along with the cast like a reunion of old friends and by the end of this too-too-short series, the closedown feels like a minor bereavement. So, the weakness was a poor launch and a fumbled high-concept pitch (space drama without aliens, blasters or comedy droids; themes drawn from the American Civil War; characters with immensely complex back stories). Let's talk about the strengths... It's a space drama without aliens, blasters or comedy droids. All the standard SF motifs are eschewed in favour of some gritty characterisation and very mature consideration (within the constraints of the genre) of sex, religion, politics and ethics. Don't get me wrong, it's often laugh-out-loud funny. But it's the best sort of funny: the sort that comes from finding humour in a situation otherwise treated with full seriousness. For the SF geek, the Firefly 'Verse is intriguing: a single solar system of terraformed planets and moons, no FTL starships, evil megacorporations and shadow governments pitched against pioneers, poker players and prostitutes. It's all familiar, but combined in novel ways - like the hybrid Anglo-Chinese argot the characters curse and swear in or the Guild of Companions who train Jedi-like concubines. The 'Verse manages to become one of the three SF settings you would actually like to go and live in (then other two being the Star Wars Republic and the Star Trek Federation, of course). Next, the themes are drawn from the American Civil War. The "bad guys" are the Yankee Unionists, the "good guys" are the rag tag Confederates. But of course, there are no absolute good and bad guys. The nod towards historical allegory gives some of the episodes a dignity and resonance not commonly found in SF, certainly not in made-for-TV SF. Finally, the immensely complex characterisations. Captain Mal Reynolds (portrayed by the redoubtable Nathan Fillion with oodles of self-deprecating charm) is the worthy successor to Han Solo - notably the Han Solo of original edition Star Wars, before Lucas re-cut it to have Greedo shoot first. The banter between Reynolds and his crew sparkles with the understood yet barely-referenced past they share. Heck, it's all so dense that some characters don't even get their stories told - we never find out about Shepherd Book's past and only the "Serenity" movie filled in the mysteries about River and Simon. This is a quality ensemble cast, acting their socks off and loving every minute of it. As well they might, given that the script comes from the team that cut their teeth on "Buffy" - which means that, as comedy-drama-action ensemble dialogue, this is just about as funny/dramatic/exciting as it gets. Yes, we can dream of a world where Fox didn't axe the show and it went on to tell its charming, idiosyncratic and inventive story in its own time, over an arc of years. But here in the real world we have the DVD set with which to visit old friends, familiar places and endearing scenes. Take me out into the Black 'n' tell 'em I ain't comin' back...
M**H
pretty good but i dont see why everyone gushes over it. Not sure id watch it a second time (the whole space cowboy stuff gets on your nerves after a while) but ive seen it and thatll do.
B**7
My roomate first introduced me to Firefly, and I have become a commited browncoat ever since! This is an excellent series that died long before it's time. In contrast to so many shows in the sci-fi genre, Firefly incorperates both the ancient past and the distant future-- space travel and cowboys, a winning combination. Recounting the voyages/adventures of the Firefly class ship(Serenity) captained by Malcom Renyolds and a crew from several walks of life, the show sets a more realistic conception(at least in my opinion) as to what life would be like for mankind if they were to leave this rock and explore/settle various planets in the galexy. One thing I love about this series is the fact that there are no far fetched stories of alien beings or other species(unless if you count people turned savage, cannibalistic and sadistic- aka Reavers). Laying aside the many cliches so prevalent in the science fiction world, Joss Wheaton created a truly unique work about real people struggling to make a living on the far reaches of space, far from the many luxuries that civalization has to offer. I could delve deeper into the plotline, conflicts, personality clashes and character profiles that make Firefly a truly worthy addition to one's video collection(or at least one worth checking out) but as I am confident that this info is readily available to the common man, let it be sufficiant to say that as a fan of the sci-fi genre and one who appreciates cleaver writing(unlike much of the drivel being passed of as entertainment today), I would highly reccomend the series. Let me add that I am quite perplexed and somewhat saddened by the fact that Fox discontinued such a rare gem. If only a diffrent station was interested in picking it up we may have gained the answers to a number of questions and seen the resolution to several loose ends... Still, as stated in the commentary- "You can't take the sky from me". Perhaps someday They may have the chances and resources to continue the series(wishful thinking on my part)!
T**K
Série géniale mais pas de sous titres fr, étrange vu qu'elle possède la VFR
M**E
Impresionante
P**C
Ich habe mich im Jahr 2005 heiß und innig in FIREFLY verliebt – und nun, viele Jahre später, beim erneuten Anschauen festgestellt: die Magie ist ungebrochen. Joss Whedons Science-Fiction-Western ist clever, ambitioniert und voller Herzblut umgesetzt, und auch nach vielen Jahren der Abstinenz macht ein Wiedersehen mit der Serenity und ihrer Crew einfach einen Heidenspaß! Gerade beim wiederholten Ansehen merkt man, wie durchdacht Handlung, Tonalität und Figuren sind. Die Serie begeistert durch Abwechslung, Witz und Tiefe – und sie schafft es, auf nur 14 Folgen mehr zu erzählen als andere Formate in mehreren Staffeln, den die Folgen sind keineswegs nach "Schema F" gestrickt, sondern bieten jeweils eine Menge Überraschungen und "Aha-Momente". Auch nicht unerwähnt sollte bleiben, dass das auf den ersten Blick verrückt wirkende Worldbuilding sich sehr stimmig entfaltet - das 'Verse von FIREFLY wirkt im Rahmen einer SF-Serie durchaus schlüssig. Besonders hervorheben muss man natürlich das Ensemble: neun großartige Charaktere, allesamt wunderbar gespielt, die jede Episode bereichern und die Serie tragen. Ihre Dynamik, ihre Glaubwürdigkeit und die vielen denkwürdigen Dialoge machen FIREFLY zeitlos... nicht umsonst sind die Figuren auch heute noch Kult. Alles in allem: auch nach über 20 Jahren hat FIREFLY nichts von seiner Qualität eingebüßt. Im Gegenteil, die Serie fühlt sich frisch, einzigartig und immer noch visionär an. Ein echtes Meisterwerk – und für mich ein unumstößlicher 5-Sterne-Klassiker.
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