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Most helpful customer reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is the series I love to hate ...,
By A Customer
This review is from: Queer as Folk: The Complete Third Season (DVD)
It's funny how people review the season and not the DVDs. I don't have Showtime, so I've experienced QAF for the past three years only on DVD. The experience is MUCH different this way. I know that I wouldn't have the patience to watch it episode by episode on a weekly basis, I'd lose interest because QAF is annoying to watch and the characters are too extreme. I wish Debbie would shut the f*ck up.What I love about QAF is this: the writers are brilliant and their minds project from the first to the final episode. You only experience this fully by watching the entire season at one time. The gratuitous sex, violence, and drugs are grating, but at the end of each episode I'm left a little bewildered and enticed to want to know what will happen next. By the final episode I am floored. I don't read the reviews that tell me the plot and subplots. This stuff is obvious. But I do want you to know how QAF makes me feel and think. I'm generally conservative, but by the end of each season I want to celebrate being human, and I want the next season right away. QAF is about failure and redemption and the whole of human experience on fast-forward and in technocolor. I laughed when one reviewer said that he skips through certain sequences but takes his time on the sex scenes. The QAF experience is just the opposite, it requires some of life's experience and a certain maturity to understand - to work through the stubborn glamorization of what is excessive and infantile in gay life and to finally see the characters for what they are: humans with hearts of blood and stone. I especially love the references to prior seasons, bringing Blake back at the end of the final episode was outstanding in the context of what was happening to Ted. Wow. Okay, another year until season four. I'll rent it all at once, watch it over a weekend, laugh out loud, shed a tear, clap, fume, and in the end be overjoyed. I know the formula and characters will be the same, but that the twists will more than make up for it. I wouldn't associate with any one of these characters in real life but in the end, they're all my friends. Now that, that is remarkable testament to why QAF is so damned brilliant.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Queer As Fold DVD's,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Queer As Folk S3 (DVD)
I got the collection of the five seasons and when I went to watch the third season, mine wouldn't work. So I waited a few months until I saw this one here. I think that the third season was the greatest because this was the season that Justin grew up after the bashing and realized that the next guy that came along was like all the rest. Only thing is is that Justin did realize is that he was still in love with Brian Kinney. So go out and purchase the five seasons and see what homosexuality is all about.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another great season, great character development,
By Andrew "Ciao" (Boston MASS) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Queer as Folk: The Complete Third Season (DVD)
Everyone has a strong opinion on this show. I for one thoroughly enjoyed season 3. My review, without spoilers:Scott Lowell's performance as Ted addicted to crystal meth is outstanding. Peter Paige also does a spectacular job as Emmitt, Ted's boyfriend, trying to deal with the addition. This saga within the series is one of the best parts of season three. That being said, I could have done without Hunter: was he added to the show simply to have a twink on hand now that Justin is maturing? Also, I would love to see just ONE episode where it isn't necessary for the cast to get their freak on at Babylon, the disco. I cringe when I see the illicit, casual sex and casual drug use on the show. I will respect the writers' decision to include it, as it's part of gay life. But the writers could be more inclusive of the diversity of opinions in the community by adding a character that is opposed to casual sex and recreational drug use. They do exist!
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