Home | Anime | Movies | Soundtracks | Graphic Novels
Suburgatory: The Complete First Season
Score: 71%
Rating: Not Rated
Publisher: Warner Brothers Home
                  Entertainment

Region: 1
Media: Blu-ray/3
Running Time: 473 Mins.
Genre: Comedy/TV Series
Audio: English SDH
Subtitles: English, French, Spanish

Features:
  • Somewhere Between Heaven and Hell: Life in Suburgatory
  • Unaired Scenes
  • Gag Reel

Suburgatory: The Complete First Season is a sitcom about a single dad and his daughter and their ensuing culture shock when they move from Manhattan to the suburbs of New York. George Altman (Jeremy Sisto) is an architect who panics when he finds condoms in his daughter Tessa's (Jane Levy) room and quickly uproots the family, relocating them to Chatswin, NY on the suggestion of college buddy Noah Werner (Alan Tudyk, Dollhouse and Firefly). It seems everything is larger than life in Chatswin as they are presented with a parade of outlandish characters dressed in brilliant colors and living in complete excess, at least most of the time. First are neighbors Fred (Chris Parnell, Archer, SNL) and Sheila Shay (Ana Gasteyer, SNL), uptight couple living across the street with children Lisa (Allie Grant), school outcast and Ryan (Parker Young), football hero and stud. Then there's Dallas Royce (Cheryl Hines), an over-the-top blonde Southern gal who has a ridiculous obsession with tight-fitting animal print clothing and high heels, her snobby daughter Dalia (Carly Chaikin), and her rich but philandering husband Steve (Jay Mohr). Lisa and Tessa quickly become friends, while Dalia slides easily into the role of Tessa's enemy. As George and Tessa try to navigate this foreign territory, they simply hope to keep their sanity intact.

As the season progresses, Tessa finds herself attracted to Ryan, then interested in the hot boy Dalia sets her mind to, Scott Strauss. But Tessa soon finds that looks aren't everything. Meanwhile, George realizes that "fishing in the local waters" with waitress Jocelyn (Arden Myrin) could complicate things unnecessarily. While he finds himself attracted to Dallas and the feeling seems mutual, he stays away from the perky married woman. By the time Dallas realizes she's better off without Steve, George has discovered Eden (Alicia Silverstone), a vegetarian hippie type who steals his heart. But nothing is without complication in Chatswin and George and Noah are both stunned to discover that George's new girlfriend is Noah's baby's surrogate birth mother! The season wraps up with Tessa deciding once and for all that she's just not happy in Chatswin. Perhaps a meet and greet with her mother who abandoned her so long ago is in order...

While there were definitely some amusing moments in Suburgatory: The Complete First Season, it just didn't grab me the way some comedies do (like The Big Bang Theory, for instance). There were funny scenes and I do like Jeremy Sisto, but Jane Levy just reminded me too much of Emma Stone in Easy A, almost as if she was channeling her, at times. Levy is a competent actress and adorable, to boot, but I just wanted Tessa to be her own character and she just seemed like a shadow of Stone. Alan Tudyk is insane in this series and, although he is always quite the character, he was a bit much to take, even for fans.

Aside from that, I thought Suburgatory was a little oversexualized. Whether it was the flamboyant guidance counselor, Mr. Wolfe (Rex Lee) who decides he is gay mid-season although everyone else already knows it, or all of the kids asking Tessa if she is a lesbian because of the clothes she wears, or even Lisa and her boyfriend, Malik, who insist on swirling their tongues on a regular basis, it was just a bit much. There's a scene towards the end of the season in which Tessa is down in the dumps and Ryan takes her to dinner to cheer her up. All he asks for in return is to touch her boob for a few minutes and she lets him. What kind of message is this sending to teenage girls that they have to subject themselves to being treated as nothing more than a sexual object, just because a guy buys them dinner to cheer them up? Since this is obviously a show made to appeal to both adults and teenagers, I thought it was a terrible message and it really turned me off.

Special features include deleted scenes, a gag reel and a featurette on the creation of the series. Overall, Suburgatory: The Complete First Season is amusing, but it's not something I would necessarily recommend. It actually reminds me a good deal of GCB, which also had a garish cast of characters that were more caricature than real. GCB got cancelled, while Suburgatory got renewed. See if you can catch an episode on Hulu before you make the investment of the season on DVD.



-Psibabe, GameVortex Communications
AKA Ashley Perkins
Related Links:


This site best viewed in Internet Explorer 6 or higher or Firefox.