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Black Books Complete Box Set | 
enlarge | Artist: Black Books Studio: Channel 4 DVD Category: DVD
List Price: £29.99 Buy New: £12.74 You Save: £17.25 (58%)
New (14) Used (2) from £12.74
Rating: 32 reviews Sales Rank: 87
Format: Box Set, Pal Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over Region: 2 Number Of Items: 3 Running Time: 426 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 5.6 x 0.9
EAN: 6867441005292 ASIN: B000F5YYCK
Release Date: August 14, 2006 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new and sealed. Same day dispatch by first class post. International orders are sent by priority airmail.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review
One of the few genuinely outstanding British comedy shows of the past decade, Black Books unites excellent comedic performances, very funny scripts, and plenty of rewatch value. The concept is simple enough. Bernard (expertly played by Dylan Moran) runs a bookshop. The only problems are he can't stand people, hates customers, and would far prefer to be barking out cutting remarks and drinking wine. Still, it's after drinking much of the aforementioned wine that he offers Manny (Bill Bailey, again in terrific form) a job. Manny accepts, and finds his daily life involves taking abuse from Bernard, while remaining strangely and resolutely upbeat. Fran (Tamsin Greig) meanwhile also likes her wine, and finds herself stuck between the two of them, with a few odd encounters of her own thrown in too. So far nothing particularly out of the ordinary, right? Well, mix in some of the creative force behind Father Ted, combine those aforementioned performances, and simmer to the point where episode after episode garners a cocktail of sniggers and belly laughs, and you have something really rather special. Like many of the best shows, the curtain has come down on Black Books after only three series. But the long-lasting legacy are episodes that are set to be enjoyed for a long, long time to come. --Simon Brew
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| Customer Reviews: Read 27 more reviews...
Some hilarity but on whole just falls short, July 24, 2008 noggy1810 (Ireland) Brilliant heartwarming characters, great ideas and a audience willing "Black Books" on but somehow it just fails to make the grade of top top comedy. The acting is superb as is the premise but the jokes are a bit lacking. You will this comedy on but I felt slightly let down in the end as it fails to deliver total brilliance like "Father Ted", "Gavin and Stacey" and "The Royle Family" for example. Still good value for money.
Brilliant July 10, 2008 doodydolphin (Leicester, England) I first started watching this around a friends house after he discovered i'd never heard of it and i loved every second of it. although i never got further than halfway through season 2 due to the time we started watching it but i loved it so much that i bought it the very next day ad haven't stopped laughing yet
So Funny I Woke People Up With My laughing June 26, 2008 T. Williams (Yorkshire) I had never watched Black Books on television but had heard of it. I am a big fan of Bill Bailey and had been tempted before to buy it but had never been quite sure. Both me and my partner have recently had a bit of a binge on DVD's and I decided to give this ago and ordered it. I am so glad I did as I just loved it. All the 3 main characters work so well together and they have got some great guest stars to add to the humour. There is a feel of Father Ted to it, not surpisingly as both the writers of Father Ted were involved. I would definately highly recommend buying this series, very funny from start to finish.
great value for an average show June 10, 2008 Hard 2 Pleze (Bordeaux, France) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
Picture the scene if you will... Stuck in France, no British TV, ordering series and films on Amazon and on a budget... This series is not the best but... it will make you smile and you won't be able to resist the characters. It's not elaborate or expensive, but it's very easy watching. No really offensive stuff, just pleasing, smile-bringing, gentle humour. Part of me wishes it was a tad more vicious - I think that Dylan Moran is capable of far more extreme comedy, but with this he chose to please the masses. It is absolutely, without doubt, worth the tenner it's going to cost you!
Who said books, what's more black books, could not be hilarious? June 7, 2008 Jacques COULARDEAU (OLLIERGUES France) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The English have a genre no one else has anywhere in the world. They call that comedies on television. Short less than half an hour episodes of situational humor positioned in one particular social niche. In this case it is a marginal book store held by a social drop out who hates all other human beings and yet cannot survive without constant contact with some of these strange animals we call human beings. Unable to love, unable to have any sentimental life with any person that would approach a gender definition. Yet he recuperate in his book store that becomes a haven for stray cats, though he hates cats, a flunked and failed accountant who is fired from his job because he is kind of abnormal for the job, both in looks and behavior. And he has a neighborly relation with the next door shop lady who is soon going to get out of business and remain behind like an errant animal. And the three of them are going to live the daily life of this book store. But it is nothing close to a social drama or anything social. It is nothing like a soap opera or even a sitcom. Those are more American, more normal, banal and less out of the way, funny or strange. The fun in American sitcoms or soap operas comes from the wit of the characters. The fun of English comedies comes from the situation and the slight details in the behavior, appearance, reactions of the characters that make them weird. There is always something unforeseen and unforeseeable because so much out of the way that we could not even think of it as being possible. Each episode has one unifying element that may get some follow up in the next episode, but there is no obligation. So the episode is not supposed to end on any suspense but on a punch line that signs the end as inescapable. And that final touch or detail is so amazing that you can only sit there flabbergasted and laughing like a baboon in the jungle shade. Have you ever heard one? Very weird, the laughter of the baboon. If you haven't I would advise you to go fast to some jungle and hear it, record it and then multiply it one thousand time into a two or three hour long baboon laughter. That should make you both happy and sad for some time and give you some pleasant dreams. Just like Black Books if you can put your hands or your dirty grubby fatty fingers on the series. Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, University Paris Dauphine, University Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne & University Versailles Saint Quentin en Yvelines
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