Image Unavailable
Colour:
-
-
-
- Sorry, this item is not available in
- Image not available
- To view this video download
Blackadder Remastered - The Ultimate Edition [DVD] [1982]
Purchase options and add-ons
Format | Colour, PAL, Dolby, Original recording remastered |
Contributor | Tim McInnery, Ben Elton, Tony Robinson, Hugh Laurie, Rowan Atkinson, Mandie Fletcher, Stephen Fry, John Lloyd, Richard Curtis See more |
Language | English |
Number of discs | 6 |
Runtime | 13 hours and 55 minutes |
Frequently bought together
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
- Blackadder: The Complete Collection [Blu-ray]Rowan AtkinsonBlu-rayFREE Delivery by غGet it as soon as Tuesday, Jan 7
Product description
Product Description
This deluxe edition includes fantastic digitally remastered episodes plus a whole host of special features, many of which are completely exclusive to DVD. This remastered Blackadder collection brings together all four eras of the classic comedy starring Rowan Atkinson. Each series of the historical sitcom traces the sniveling title character and his equally irksome descendants. Episodes feature a wide range of British stars, including Stephen Fry, Miranda Richardson, Rik Mayall, Jim Broadbent, Brian Blessed, and many others.
The Ultimate Edition includes…
The Blackadder: Behold the bad hair in this first collection of silliness! Here the slimy Edmund (Rowan Atkinson), Duke of Edinburgh (alias The Black Adder), emerges from the bowels of somewhere stinky to annoy historians. The collection includes "The Foretelling," "Born to be King," "The Archbishop," "The Queen of Spain's Beard," "Witchsmeller Pursuivant," and "The Black Seal."
Blackadder II: The degradation of the grand and proud tradition that is the British monarchy continues as the loathsome Blackadder (Rowan Atkinson) snivels his way through the 16th century into the court of Queen Elizabeth I. This collection includes the six episodes comprising both "Parte the Firste," and "Parte the Seconde." Episodes are "Bells," "Head," "Potato," "Money," "Beer," and "Chains."
Blackadder III: This third series presents more dim-witted antics from the annals of the Blackadder family. Previously aristocratic, Edmund Blackadder (Rowan Atkinson) now finds himself in the midst of the Industrial Revolution as a butler and gentlemen's gentleman to the pea-brained Prince Regent (Hugh Laurie). The collection includes six episodes: "Dish and Dishonesty, " "Ink and Incapability," "Nob and Nobility, " "Sense and Senility," "Amy and Amiability," and "Duel and Duality."
Blackadder Goes Forth: Edmund Blackadder finds himself in the trenches on the Western Front in 1917. Episodes include "Captain Cook" (where Blackadder tries to escape active duty), "Corporal Punishment" (which finds ol' Edmund facing an execution), "Major Star" (featuring a concert of sorts), "Private Plane" (in which Blackadder finds himself caught in the crossfire), "General Hospital" (where Blackadder searches for German spies among the wounded), and "Goodbyeee" (when the end of the war is at hand).
غ.co.uk Review
One of the best comedy series ever to emerge from England, Black Adder traces the deeply cynical and self-serving lineage of various Edmund Blackadders from the muck of the Middle Ages to the frontline of World War I. In his pre-Bean triumph, comic actor Rowan Atkinson played all five versions of Edmund, beginning with the villainous and cowardly Duke of Edinburgh, whose scheming mind and awful haircut seem to stand him in good stead to become the next Archbishop of Canterbury--a deadly occupation if ever there was one. Among tales of royal dethronings, Black Death, witch smellers (who root out spell makers with their noses), and ghosts, Edmund is a perennial survivor who never quite gets ahead in multiple episodes. Jump to the Elizabethan era and Atkinson picks up the saga as Lord Edmund, who is perpetually courting favor from mad Queen Bess (Miranda Richardson) and is always walking a tightrope from which he can either gain the world or lose his head. Subjected to bizarre services for her majesty (at one point, Edmund is asked to do for potatoes what Sir Walter Raleigh did for tobacco), Edmund--as with his ancestor--can never quite fulfill his larger ambitions. The next incarnation we encounter is in late-18th-century Regency England. This time, Blackadder is a mere butler to the idiotic Prince Regent (Hugh Laurie in a brilliantly buffoonish performance) and is caught in various misadventures with Samuel Johnson, Shakespearean actors, the Scarlet Pimpernel, and William Pitt the younger. With a brief stop in Victorian London for a Christmas special, the series concludes with several episodes set during the Great War. The new Edmund is a career Army officer, but a scoundrel all the same. Shirking his duties whenever possible and taking advantage of any opportunity for undeserved reward, this final, deeply sour, and very funny Blackadder negotiates survival among a cadre of fools and dimwits. No small mention can be made of Atkinson's supporting cast, easily among the finest comic performers of their generation: besides Laurie and Richardson, Stephen Fry, Tony Robinson, and Tim McInnerny. --Tom Keogh, غ.com
Product details
- Is discontinued by manufacturer : No
- Language : English
- Package Dimensions : 18.9 x 14 x 3.5 cm; 349.27 g
- Audio Description: : English
- Item model number : 5051561028168
- Director : Mandie Fletcher
- Media Format : PAL, Original recording remastered, Colour, Dolby
- Run time : 13 hours and 55 minutes
- Release date : 15 Jun. 2009
- Actors : Rowan Atkinson, Tony Robinson, Stephen Fry, Hugh Laurie, Tim McInnery
- Subtitles: : English
- Studio : 2entertain
- Producers : John Lloyd
- ASIN : B001UHO0TY
- Country of origin : United Kingdom
- Writers : Richard Curtis, Ben Elton
- Number of discs : 6
- غ Rank: 1,095 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)
- 42 in Historical (DVD & Blu-ray)
- 145 in Television (DVD & Blu-ray)
- 185 in Box Sets (DVD & Blu-ray)
- Customer reviews:
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings, help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on غ. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on غReviews with images
Funnier than a very funny thing
Top reviews from United Kingdom
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 15 February 2014I bought this to replace some ageing VHS sets of the four series. One of my better decisions. This box set is compact, well-presented and possessed of some good extras - I particularly enjoy 'Blackadder Rides Again', but honourable mention must be made of Blackadder: The Cavalier Years. The picture quality is surprisingly good considering that by the time this came out some of the archival footage was almost thirty years old.
It's not historically accurate. But then it never pretends to be. It's deliberately set in a seamless alternate reality where Richard of Shrewsbury won at Bosworth Field and follows the adventures of descendants of his clueless younger son, Edmund the Black Adder. Of course, along the way it created some slightly annoying myths - particularly in Blackadder Goes Forth, where generals appear at the front only to spout total nonsense about cutting their hair. But as it is firmly shown as a fictional portrayal, that allows it more latitude in my eyes to play fast and lose with the facts than say, The White Queen, which pretends to be one step below a docudrama (or of course Shakespeare's histories - I have always enjoyed the mischievous 'additional dialogue by William Shakespeare' credit in the first series).
What really sets this apart as a comedy that is likely to endure and age as a fine wine does is that it is magnificently written, superbly cast and brilliantly acted, never taking itself too seriously. The first series is hit and miss from that point of view, even though as it is the medieval one I have the softest of soft spots for it. But the other three are quite magnificent. The casting is deliberately picked to spoof or invert popular notions or historical reality - Prince George as 'the walrus...[who is] as thick as a whale omelette' played by the slender, highly intelligent and in all other ways personable Hugh Laurie. Rowan Atkinson will surely never find a role that surpasses his performances in this, particularly in the second and fourth series where it is simply impossible to find comedic fault with his deft portrayal of a cynical, deceitful, cowardly and cruel character. Tony Robinson as his faithful sidekick also does very well at playing the yokel idiot. They do so well I simply can't see who else would ever have made a success of them.
On the other hand, there are one or two faults. Particularly surprising and disappointing is the strange decision to cut the remark Baldrick makes in Blackadder's Christmas Carol about 'nailing up the dog.' There seems no logic to it. If they were afraid it would somehow offend Christians, they should have cut the entire episode - which after all, not only features a dog playing Jesus, but Mr Blackadder firmly rejecting all Christian virtues on the basis that they don't matter and that bad guys have all the actual fun, an argument that reduces the Ghost of Christmas (a majestic turn by Robbie Coltrane) to spluttering incoherence. Otherwise, they should just have left it in. I always wince whenever I come to that cut, because I miss the punchline and the framing lines feel somehow lacking.
I also feel a few opportunities were missed to play a bit with links between the series. In the accompanying book, the history of the family away from the series was sketched out - in the series, it is almost never mentioned (a brief and scarcely audible line at the start of the closing jingle in Head, series 2, being the only one). I found that actually knowing the sketchy lives of Cardinal Blackadder, Blacadda, Bad Reek and the rest did add a lot to my enjoyment of it. Maybe that's just the geeky history side of me coming out, but three short two-minute monologues by Atkinson, playing a suave and sinister scion of the dynasty (Professor G. R. Blackadder or King Edmund III) boasting about his ancestors would have been quite something. Failing that - which would, I appreciate, have been expensive and difficult - even just PDFs of the linking stories, a la the Sharpe series, would have been worth it.
So perhaps not quite the ultimate edition, but a glorious romp through alternate history. And perhaps one day generations yet unborn will review Blackadder, not as an historical document but as one of the true landmarks in British entertainment history, played out by not just one but several of the great heroic actors of the age!
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 September 2024Great quality dvds. Super fast delivery and only cost pennies. I'm over the actual moon wiv this purchase. Wibble.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 12 November 2014I purchased this for £9.91 in total, and it was worth every penny. I used to watch Blackadder when it was first aired on TV as a child and always loved it. I am a fan of intelligent, witty humour with a load of childishness thrown in and wackiness. I like;
Red Dwarf
Bottom
The Young Ones
Spaced
League Of Gentleman
Spitting Image
Alan Partridge
and anything with Reeves and Mortimer
plus others...
Absolute bargain for the complete collection. I enjoyed the first two series the most on DVD, and although I watched them alone, I was often crying with laughter. :D Every single actor is top notch. I work in theatre and these actors are stupendous - N.B every budding actor should watch and learn!
Lots of bonuses and actually more interviews than are stated on the back of the box set- i.e Miranda Richardson is also featured in an interview although that is not stated on the box set index.
I did find Rowan Atkinson's interview to be so boring that I couldn't watch it all the way through- it really appeared as though he was just doing it for the sake of adding the bonus interviews to the box set, and getting paid as opposed to a sense of nostalgia and wanting to be a part of the whole Blackadder thing again.. Hugh Laurie's interview was nice to watch though- although he did have to suddenly rush off because the Blackadder team had caught him in Hollywood and he had limited time.
These are just my opinions though, and I'm only comparing them to other box set bonus interviews that I have seen that were more entertaining. I think maybe the actors were called in too late to reminisce so none of their memories were fresh enough to really give enough credence and sincerity to their time spent working on the show, which is a shame. I would've preferred interviews done nearer the time of Blackadder TV transmissions. The actors get older and even they change....not just aesthetically. It was obvious, before Tim McInnerny even said it in the interview that he has a hang up about his appearance now (how he's aged), which was quite sad. :(
Another quibble with this (that has nothing to do with Blackadder the series itself or the seller) is on one of the bonus DVD's where Miranda Richardson is featured in the 'Costumes Revisited' section. The way she manhandles the intricately made, beautiful costumes she once wore leave a lot to be desired. She is very disrespectful to the masterpieces she touches willy nilly.
Tony Robinson could do with showing an ounce or two more of respect also when he finds his old costume and tries it on. He even says that back in the time of filming Blackadder he 'took it for granted'. I'm glad Tim McInnerny doesn't agree with him when he aims his comment to him expecting him to agree. Maybe some of the actors become a little bit full of their own self importance over time and don't appreciate the hard work and dedication that went into making all of their intricate costumes.... and also Tim needs a dose of self confidence and not to be so hard on himself.
Wonderful series, and expertly made. I laughed the most at a scene (won't give too much away ) where Hugh Laurie is being apprehended and slapped about a lot under the guise of Blackadder. Absolutely hilarious.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 13 March 2021This is a re-buy. I can't believe that I gave my 1st copy away, some years back. Blackadder is a classic, up with Fawlty Towers etc. I have been doing a rewatch with friends online and the 1st thing that struck us was how good series1 actually is. It had a bad press back in the day, which I always went by. It goes to show you should trust your own instincts and ignore critics, most of whom, these days, don't like a sitcom to have jokes in it or to be funny even! It has been brilliant seeing the development of the main character and his assorted cohorts throughout the ages. The acting is always superb - Rowan Atkinson has even gone up in my esteem - and the writing is clever. I have laughed until it hurts. It is worth checking the correct running order out for series 1 online because this differs from the order in which it was shown originally. These episodes are individually dated, so it makes more sense to follow the timeline. Apart from that, this collection is perfect. It includes all the specials made. I can't recommend this box set highly enough. And I am not giving it away interfrastically ever again.
5.0 out of 5 stars Funnier than a very funny thingThis is a re-buy. I can't believe that I gave my 1st copy away, some years back. Blackadder is a classic, up with Fawlty Towers etc. I have been doing a rewatch with friends online and the 1st thing that struck us was how good series1 actually is. It had a bad press back in the day, which I always went by. It goes to show you should trust your own instincts and ignore critics, most of whom, these days, don't like a sitcom to have jokes in it or to be funny even! It has been brilliant seeing the development of the main character and his assorted cohorts throughout the ages. The acting is always superb - Rowan Atkinson has even gone up in my esteem - and the writing is clever. I have laughed until it hurts. It is worth checking the correct running order out for series 1 online because this differs from the order in which it was shown originally. These episodes are individually dated, so it makes more sense to follow the timeline. Apart from that, this collection is perfect. It includes all the specials made. I can't recommend this box set highly enough. And I am not giving it away interfrastically ever again.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 13 March 2021
Images in this review - Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 December 2024Nice to own
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 21 April 2024Simply brilliant.
Doesn't get old.
Top reviews from other countries
-
ttReviewed in France on 25 September 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Un incontrounable
le packaging est top, et bien solide. Rapport qualité prix excellent pour une très bonne comédie anglaise en DVD.
-
NoowayReviewed in Sweden on 29 October 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Som förväntat! Mycket bra!!!
En suverän samlingsbox.
-
FilipeReviewed in Spain on 10 July 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars :)
Uma das minhas séries favoritas de sempre!
-
sandrosuellaReviewed in Italy on 24 June 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Eccezionale
Sebbene non sia provvisto di audio e sottotitoli in italiano, se si mastica un minimo la lingua inglese, vale la pena acquistarlo. Divertentissimo, ben girato e ambientato. Davvero notevole.
- Dutch MacFamilyReviewed in the Netherlands on 12 June 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Black Adder: Rebastard 😂
First review from the Lower lands ( The Netherlands 🇳🇱) It is a wonderful comedy serie and seen this on BBC quite some ages ago! Got to love the English dark humour and especially Rowans way of perception 👏👏 Bravo! The box and disks are rich of content and i’m very happy. Order and delivery went very smoothly, thx. Cheerio!