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The Wonder Years: Complete Series [DVD]
Formato: DVD
Género | Adventure Games |
Formato | NTSC |
Tipo de contenido | Digital |
Cantidad de discos | 1 |
Región de Reproducción 1
: Este DVD no se podrá reproducir en algunos de los reproductores de DVD vendidos en México. El artículo requiere un reproductor de DVD específico de la región o multirregión y una TV compatible aquí
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Descripción del producto
Los años maravillosos: Serie completa [DVD]
Detalles del producto
- Producto descontinuado por el fabricante : No
- Dimensiones del paquete : 19,6 x 14 x 9 cm; 852,75 g
- Formato de medios : NTSC
- Estudio : Time Life/WEA
- ASIN : B07GTQW73V
- Número de discos : 1
- Clasificación en los más vendidos de Amazon: nº23,844 en Películas y Series de TV (Ver el Top 100 en Películas y Series de TV)
- nº3,888 en Televisión (Películas y Series de TV)
- Opiniones de los clientes:
Opiniones de clientes
4.7 de 5 estrellas
4.7 de 5
1,188 calificaciones globales
Cómo funcionan las opiniones y calificaciones de los clientes
Las opiniones de los clientes, incluidas las calificaciones por estrellas de los productos, son útiles para que otros usuarios obtengan más información acerca del producto y decidan si es el adecuado para ellos.
Para calcular la calificación global por estrellas y el desglose porcentual por estrellas, no utilizamos un promedio simple. En cambio, nuestro sistema considera aspectos como la fecha de la reseña y si el autor compró el artículo en Amazon. También se analizaron las reseñas para verificar la fiabilidad.
Más información sobre cómo funcionan las opiniones de los clientes en Amazon-
Opiniones principales
Las mejores reseñas de México
Ha surgido un problema al filtrar las opiniones justo en este momento. Vuelva a intentarlo en otro momento.
Revisado en México el 9 de marzo de 2023
La calidad de la imagen es igual a la que tenia en los 80s. Como viene especificado, solo viene audio en inglés y no trae la característica voz en español de las transmisiones en México. Aun así para un fan, no me arrepiento de revivir la serie completa.
Revisado en México el 29 de diciembre de 2016
lo único malo es que no tiene subtítulos en español lo cual hubiera mejorado la experiencia ya que lo quería para regalo y la persona que lo recibiría no habla ingles
Revisado en México el 1 de diciembre de 2016
Excelente, siempre quise tener la serie. Viene en inglés pero puedes poner CC para ver subtítulos en inglés. Nada en español para los que tengan duda. Aún así 100℅ recomendable
Revisado en México el 20 de diciembre de 2016
La serie me gusta mucho, la calidad del vídeo es obvio la de los años 80s, pero no tiene subtítulos en español, tampoco tiene doblaje al español y lo más importante no se reproduce en los dvd o blu-ray nacionales, yo la estoy viendo en mi lap conectada a la TV
Revisado en México el 19 de junio de 2018
No tiene subtítulos en español
Revisado en México el 10 de noviembre de 2017
Solo se puede ver en región EU no es compatible con la region de mi país, espero ayude esta información
Revisado en México el 10 de septiembre de 2016
Necesito saber si tiene subtítulos o está doblada al español ???? Siempre pasa lo mismo con cualquier dvd no son específicos
Revisado en México el 2 de agosto de 2016
Por favor, aclaren si cuenta con subtítulos o está doblada al español.
Muchas gracias por su aclaración
Saludos a todos
Muchas gracias por su aclaración
Saludos a todos
Mejores reseñas de otros países
Colonel D
5.0 de 5 estrellas
Charming and delightful, and, well…wonderful!
Reseñado en los Estados Unidos el 8 de febrero de 2021
When “The Wonder Years” first was broadcast I saw most of the first season then life circumstances distracted me from catching much of what followed. I’ve always wanted to watch the rest of the series to see what happened to Kevin, Paul, and Winnie so was pleased when it finally came out on DVD and included all of the iconic music from the period.
“The Wonder Years” is, well, wonderful. If you’re of a certain age this series hits all of your life’s high (and low) notes when you were growing up. Frequently poignant and consistently funny the writing is just superb. By my calculation I’m just a year younger than the series protagonist, Kevin Arnold (Fred Savage) and his experiences definitely resonated with me and my memories of suburban life back in the turbulent late 60’s and early 70’s. We follow Kevin through junior high school in 1968 through his junior year of high school in 1973 and his trials and tribulations that many kids faced before cell phones and social media.
The series cast is excellent; Dan Lauria as Jack Arnold the family patriarch, Alley Mills as Norma the perfect mother, Olivia d’Abo as Karen the older hippie sister, and Jason Hervey as Wayne the bullying older brother are just perfect. Best friend Paul Pfeiffer (Josh Saviano) is great and of course Danica McKellar as the love of Kevin’s life Gwendolyn “Winnie” Cooper.
The writers and creators beautifully capture life’s events that many viewers will relate to regardless of their generation. Gym classes, teacher crushes, school bullies, uninspiring educators (and an inspiring one), disappointing sports experiences, square dancing classes (the horrors), the President’s Physical Fitness challenge, an overzealous young music teacher, the school play, and so much more.
For me standout moments included Kevin’s adolescent infatuation with his teacher Miss White (Wendel Meldrum) and her recurring story arc which ends with an amusing twist. The story line involving Kevin’s demanding math teacher, Mr. Collins (Steven Gilborn) touched me as well and I could remember a few teachers who cared about me as a student and challenged me to do better than I thought I could. There was always a girl that was so beautiful and out of your league at that age; the character of Madeline Adams (Julie Condra) completely blows Kevin’s mind with comic results until he finally realizes that looks aren’t everything.
A number of ‘before they were famous’ stars show up like David Schwimmer as Karen’s roommate/boyfriend, Soleil Moon Fry (Punky Brewster), Jim Caviezel (Person of Interest, The Passion of the Christ), Juliette Lewis, Carla Gugino, John Corbett, Giovanni Ribisi, and memorably Robert Picardo (China Beach, Star Trek: Voyager) and more. Picardo’s recurring role as the Phys ed teacher with an inferiority complex, Mr. Cutlip, is hilarious; especially his comically sad efforts at teaching sex education.
By the sixth and final season with the kids now high school juniors and much older some of original charm and appeal diminishes as they deal with more adult issues. When the series finale was shot it wasn’t known if the show was renewed or not. When it was canceled the showrunners were able to make that last episode a fitting ending that will give fans the closure that’s not always guaranteed with TV programs. This collection by StarVista includes a number of bonus features including cast interviews and the first two seasons are accompanied with little booklets with episode information.
I realize that some people did not experience idyllic childhoods and that school was a traumatic experience for them and for those individuals “The Wonder Years” might seem to be an unrealistic fantasy. All I can say is for me, I could definitely relate to Kevin and his reminisces of growing up in suburbia in that particular time. Jon Hamm playing Don Draper on the series “Mad Men” while he’s pitching an ad campaign for the carousel slide projector observes: “Nostalgia – its delicate, but potent…in Greek nostalgia literally means ‘the pain from an old wound.’ It’s a twinge in your heart far more powerful than memory alone.” If you agree with Don then “The Wonder Years” will probably appeal to you.
“The Wonder Years” is, well, wonderful. If you’re of a certain age this series hits all of your life’s high (and low) notes when you were growing up. Frequently poignant and consistently funny the writing is just superb. By my calculation I’m just a year younger than the series protagonist, Kevin Arnold (Fred Savage) and his experiences definitely resonated with me and my memories of suburban life back in the turbulent late 60’s and early 70’s. We follow Kevin through junior high school in 1968 through his junior year of high school in 1973 and his trials and tribulations that many kids faced before cell phones and social media.
The series cast is excellent; Dan Lauria as Jack Arnold the family patriarch, Alley Mills as Norma the perfect mother, Olivia d’Abo as Karen the older hippie sister, and Jason Hervey as Wayne the bullying older brother are just perfect. Best friend Paul Pfeiffer (Josh Saviano) is great and of course Danica McKellar as the love of Kevin’s life Gwendolyn “Winnie” Cooper.
The writers and creators beautifully capture life’s events that many viewers will relate to regardless of their generation. Gym classes, teacher crushes, school bullies, uninspiring educators (and an inspiring one), disappointing sports experiences, square dancing classes (the horrors), the President’s Physical Fitness challenge, an overzealous young music teacher, the school play, and so much more.
For me standout moments included Kevin’s adolescent infatuation with his teacher Miss White (Wendel Meldrum) and her recurring story arc which ends with an amusing twist. The story line involving Kevin’s demanding math teacher, Mr. Collins (Steven Gilborn) touched me as well and I could remember a few teachers who cared about me as a student and challenged me to do better than I thought I could. There was always a girl that was so beautiful and out of your league at that age; the character of Madeline Adams (Julie Condra) completely blows Kevin’s mind with comic results until he finally realizes that looks aren’t everything.
A number of ‘before they were famous’ stars show up like David Schwimmer as Karen’s roommate/boyfriend, Soleil Moon Fry (Punky Brewster), Jim Caviezel (Person of Interest, The Passion of the Christ), Juliette Lewis, Carla Gugino, John Corbett, Giovanni Ribisi, and memorably Robert Picardo (China Beach, Star Trek: Voyager) and more. Picardo’s recurring role as the Phys ed teacher with an inferiority complex, Mr. Cutlip, is hilarious; especially his comically sad efforts at teaching sex education.
By the sixth and final season with the kids now high school juniors and much older some of original charm and appeal diminishes as they deal with more adult issues. When the series finale was shot it wasn’t known if the show was renewed or not. When it was canceled the showrunners were able to make that last episode a fitting ending that will give fans the closure that’s not always guaranteed with TV programs. This collection by StarVista includes a number of bonus features including cast interviews and the first two seasons are accompanied with little booklets with episode information.
I realize that some people did not experience idyllic childhoods and that school was a traumatic experience for them and for those individuals “The Wonder Years” might seem to be an unrealistic fantasy. All I can say is for me, I could definitely relate to Kevin and his reminisces of growing up in suburbia in that particular time. Jon Hamm playing Don Draper on the series “Mad Men” while he’s pitching an ad campaign for the carousel slide projector observes: “Nostalgia – its delicate, but potent…in Greek nostalgia literally means ‘the pain from an old wound.’ It’s a twinge in your heart far more powerful than memory alone.” If you agree with Don then “The Wonder Years” will probably appeal to you.
Glenn W. Browning
5.0 de 5 estrellas
Great deal on the 2-day prime days sale.
Reseñado en los Estados Unidos el 3 de agosto de 2023
I got this one at a great price. You need to make a huge wish list and review your list. At times various ones on your list are available at a sale price until the quantity at that price is sold, then the price returns to what it otherwise costs. I love this series and now will be able to watch it in order, had forgotten it was from life in the 1960s.
Emotional Orphan
5.0 de 5 estrellas
One of the best shows ever
Revisado en Canadá el 1 de septiembre de 2023
The Wonder Years was one of the best TV shows ever made back when Hollywood was not politically correct and cared about quality rather than theatrical activism
Torrance
4.0 de 5 estrellas
Good product. Fair quality. Some DVDs skip too much.
Reseñado en los Estados Unidos el 16 de abril de 2023
Good product. Fair quality. Some DVDs skip too much. Had to try many times. Some DVDs don't even work after all
J. R. Tees
4.0 de 5 estrellas
Great Except For One Fairly Large Thing.
Reseñado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de julio de 2020
Steven Gilborn who played Mr. Collins (Kevin's Junior High Math Teacher) in three episodes had his name mispronounced several times in the bonus features. He was referred to as "Steven Gilchrist" "Steven Gilman", "Steven Gilmore" among others by several different actors including Fred Savage himself who worked directly with him. Everyone had complimentary things to say about him as a person and about how wonderful of an actor he was, but still you couldn't get the man's name right? Other than that everything else was great. I watched this on a Blu Ray player with up-scaling capabilities and had no issues with picture or sound. I noticed some people giving less than stellar reviews due to picture and sound issues when playing it through HDMI but I didn't experience any of these.
Update August 4, 2020. In later seasons certain episodes appear to be out of order as it relates to certain characters. Meaning some people are “just there” in earlier episodes of the season without any kind of introduction and then are more formally introduced in later episodes. I’m not sure if this is an issue stemming from when the show was in production where maybe some episodes were shot out of a particular order with no regard for story arcs of particular characters, or if it could be something more closely related to the production of this DVD set where maybe the episodes were arranged differently on the DVD’s than how they were actually shot.
Update August 4, 2020. In later seasons certain episodes appear to be out of order as it relates to certain characters. Meaning some people are “just there” in earlier episodes of the season without any kind of introduction and then are more formally introduced in later episodes. I’m not sure if this is an issue stemming from when the show was in production where maybe some episodes were shot out of a particular order with no regard for story arcs of particular characters, or if it could be something more closely related to the production of this DVD set where maybe the episodes were arranged differently on the DVD’s than how they were actually shot.