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Action: The Complete Series

Action: The Complete Series

Action: The Complete Series

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Directors: James D. Parriott, Ted Demme, Bryan Gordon, Adam Bernstein, John Fortenberry
Actor: Will Dotter
Studio: Sony Pictures
Category: DVD

List Price: $24.96
Buy New: $8.55
You Save: $16.41 (66%)



New (48) Used (16) from $8.31

Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 38 reviews
Sales Rank: 19098

Format: Color, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Ntsc
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: NC-17
Number Of Items: 2
Running Time: 299
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

MPN: COLD07540D
UPC: 043396075405
EAN: 0043396075405
ASIN: B000CQQI8K

Theatrical Release Date: September 16, 1999
Release Date: February 21, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 02/21/2006 Run time: 299 minutes

Amazon.com
Immoral, politically incorrect, and fiercely funny, Action: The Complete Series is a timeless comedy focusing on a group of Hollywood insiders whose moral compass has spun out of control. Led by uber-producer Peter Dragon (Jay Mohr), the series' first and only season ferociously lampoons the sleaziness of modern-day Hollywood. Dragon--seemingly the separated-at-birth brother of slimy uber-agent Bob Sugar (also played by Mohr) from Jerry Maguire--is a jerk who pretends to be gay when it's convenient and doesn't understand why Salma Hayek (playing herself) would slap him silly for making inappropriate suggestions during an earlier audition. In Dragon's lair, sexual harassment is an inconvenience, the screenwriter is an afterthought, and a movie isn't a film unless it's got mega-explosions. Mohr and Illeana Douglas (portraying an ex-child star turned prostitute turned studio executive) are a joy to watch. When a sycophantic colleague accuses Dragon of promoting a hooker over him, he calmly says, "She's my prostitute. You're my whore." A subtle difference, yes, but one that makes a world of difference in Hollywood. If there's a plus side to this topnotch series being canceled in 1999, it's that the writers didn't have time to let the show disintegrate into hackneyed clichés. There is no warm-hearted parable to justify the nasty means--just a lot of quick-witted dialogue and an excellent ensemble cast that makes viewers enjoy the characters despite (or should that be because of?) their numerous flaws. --Jae-Ha Kim


Customer Reviews:   Read 33 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Too "inside Hollywood" for most of America   November 12, 2008
This was a damn funny, dark at times, series. I suspect it was too specific to the entertainment industry to be a nationwide hit. If you want some insight on the workings of Hollywood this, and the film "Swimming with Sharks" are two great choices.


4 out of 5 stars Now I want to see "Beverly Hills Gun Club"   August 8, 2008
"Action" is yet another one of those great TV series that you've never heard of because it got cancelled almost as soon as it began. The 13 episodes of this series tell the continuing story of Hollywood movie producer Peter Dragon (Jay Mohr) and his attempts to make the seemingly doomed action film "Beverly Hills Gun Club" (the description of which sounds so incredibly bad and trashy that if it really existed I would be the first in line at the cinema to see it) by "selling his soul to the devil one piece at a time".

"Action" is an incredibly funny series. It skewers all of the top names in Hollywood (at the time it was made - 1999), as well as the film industry in general, and doesn't hold back in doing so. Each episode targets a different aspect of showbiz - from actors, to directors, to investors, to writers. No one is spared. The show is completely offensive and is up to its eyeballs in coarse language and sex and drug references, not to mention jokes that are just in plain bad taste - I don't mean gross-out humour, I mean jokes that make you stop and think "I can't believe they just said that", right before bursting out laughing.

The reason why I didn't give this show five stars is because, even though I thoroughly enjoyed this series, the show did start to run out of steam towards the end. The episodes on disc two just aren't as funny as the episodes on disc one, and Illeana Douglas, as child star turned prostitute turned film executive, Wendy Ward (my favourite character in the series, played by one of my favourite actresses) "vanishes" from several episodes on the second disc. Nevertheless, by the time I got to disc two, I was so interested in finding out what the next disaster to befall Peter Dragon would be, that the story kept me going in place of the jokes.



5 out of 5 stars Oh, the lines!   August 8, 2008
"I don't know if I have a price for that" - Wendy Ward, working girl, as Peter Dragon says he's going to throw up on her feet. (At that point in the first episode, I knew they were on to something big!)

"I prefer to think of the sack being half full" - Buddy Hackett in his deadpan innocence.

"You're threatening me? That's a laugh... I'm seventy-nine years old. I've got one kidney, one ball and one lung. I take Viagra just to keep from peeing on my shoes, and you're threatening me? Who are you frightening? " - Uncle Lonnie (Hackett)

"Look, Wendy, I want you to come work for me. Not as a prostitute, no, no, no. I want you to work for me as a motion picture executive, which is just a different kind of prostitute. " - Jay Mohr as Peter Dragon

"You can be a prostitute and humiliate yourself as a job, or you can work as a motion picture executive and humiliate yourself as a career! " - Peter Dragon

"Is that the gun I gave you for Hanukkah?" Illena Douglas as Wendy Ward

The director's commentaries were equally biting. A brilliant piece of comedy that does begin to wander in the final episodes, but absolutely worthwhile nonetheless.



4 out of 5 stars ACTION!   August 7, 2008
Although the series starring Jay Mohr was short-lived, it was packed with non-stop funny. Illeana Douglas was terrific as a bright, witty call girl-turned production executive. Both Jarrad Paul and Jack Plotnick are perfectly cast in supporting roles as is Lee Arenberg who always excels. As this is a racy, raunchy, sexy take on the movie industry, it is definitely for adults only!


5 out of 5 stars Action was too good for television   April 22, 2008
In the first minute of "Action", producer Peter Dragon dresses down a caterer with a series of F-bombs. The caterer's crime? He told Peter Dragon that he was in his parking spot.
Jay Mohr was born to play the part of Peter, a producer whose latest action film has just become a complete flop. Now Peter needs to make a hit film, and fast, so that he can regain all of the perks of being a hot Hollywood producer. Along the way he will hire a prostitute as his assistant director, court financing from questionable foreign sources, and give his all to a newly 'out' leading man. There is no lie big enough for Peter Dragon, and we get to watch him discard any principles that he might have had in order to make his film.

Action is simply one of the most biting satires of Hollywood that I've ever seen. It includes cameos of actors playing themselves, but only a couple degrees exaggerated from real life.

Although the later episodes lag, I'm convinced that Action was removed from the air because it hit some nerves in Hollywood. This stuff had to be drawn from someone's real life experiences. Its too funny to simply have been made up.