Reviews & Columns
Reviews
DVD
TV on DVD
Blu-ray
4K UHD
International DVDs
In Theaters
Reviews by Studio
Video Games

Features
Collector Series DVDs
Easter Egg Database
Interviews
DVD Talk Radio
Feature Articles

Columns
Anime Talk
DVD Savant
Horror DVDs
The M.O.D. Squad
Art House
HD Talk
Silent DVD

discussion forum
DVD Talk Forum

Resources
DVD Price Search
Customer Service #'s
RCE Info
Links

Columns




Cosby Show: Season 4, The

Urban Works // Unrated // June 5, 2007
List Price: $24.98 [Buy now and save at Amazon]

Review by Scott Weinberg | posted August 11, 2007 | E-mail the Author
The Series

Once a popular series reaches its third or fourth season, it's pretty tough to keep track of which one was which -- but The Cosby Show made it easy: Season 4 is when Lisa Bonet left the cast to head off to college and a spin-off series called A Different World -- which also turned out to be quite the little hit for NBC. But for those who tune in mainly for The Coz, there's no reason to fret: The legendary comedian is still at the top of his game in his series' fourth season.

Actually, Denise went off to college in the third season, but it seems like season four is when the family got used to not having the teenager around -- which means there's a lot more room for the exploits of little Rudy, precocious Vanessa, underachiever Theo, newlyweds Sondra and Elvin, the lovely Claire -- and the main reason anyone even tuned in in the first place: Mr. Bill Cosby as lovable OB/GYN Cliff Huxtable. As many people have been happy to point out in the past, the series was not much more than a framework on which to hang Cosby's patented brand of family-friendly comedy -- but it's a pretty good thing the producers surrounded the funnyman with a strong cast.

For those who haven't watched TV in the afternoon for the last fifteen years, here's a handy breakdown on what you'll generally find on The Cosby Show: Dad Cliff (doctor), Mom Claire (lawyer), and a bunch of generally lovable offspring of various ages and attitudes. The Huxtables' exploits are strictly conventional sitcom fare, but the series boasts a lot of memorable moments (most of them courtesy of The Coz). As the fourth season rolls on, you'll notice that the stories are decidedly simplistic -- some would say comfortably so. (Some like me!) Then again we do get some rather strange guest stars; folks like Wallace Shawn, Roscoe Lee Browne, Angela Bassett, Christopher Plummer and a young Adam Sandler pop up here and there. (Sandler actually pops up a lot!)

Highlights from the fourth season (if it's me you're asking) include the time Rudy got lost at the mall, the time Rudy played violin at school, and Rudy wears the clothes she's not supposed to. (Hey sue me. I think Rudy's funny!) Lowlights include the 2-episode clip show (a necessary evil I suppose -- but an easily skippable one) and anything to do with Sondra's dull husband Elvin. (The guy just irks me.) As far as Mr. Cosby is concerned, season four is packed with some of the comedian's best schtick -- thinly disguised as actual dialog.

So while The Cosby Show does get a little trite here and a little corny there, who's to say there's anything wrong with a typically conventional sitcom that exists solely to highlight one very funny man? (Let's face it: With a different leading man and the same supporting cast, this series would have lasted maybe two seasons. Plus they'd have needed a different title.) The fourth season represents some of the best that The Cosby Show had to offer, all things considered. Bonet is missed (a bit), but Coz is still the king -- and this series really started to fall apart at the seams sometime around season six or seven. (It lived to see eight.)

Gathered here in one handy three-disc set are all 23 of The Cosby Show's fourth season. And if you've been burned on these DVDs before, you don't have to worry. As far as I can tell (and I did check) all of these episodes are delivered in their original network broadcast form. No lame-ass "syndication cuts," so thanks to whomever got on the ball as far as Coz's DVDs are concerned. Obviously this set is a big-time no-brainer for hardcore fans of the series.

Episode List:
1. Call of the Wild
2. Theogate
3. It Ain't Easy Being Green
4. Cliff's Mistake
5. Shakespeare
6. That's Not What I Said
7. Autumn Gifts
8. Looking Back (double episode)
9. Where's Rudy?
10. Bookworm
11. Dance Mania
12. The Locker Room
13. The Show Must Go On
14. Twinkle Twinkle Little Star
15. The Visit
16. The Drum Major
17. Waterworks
18. Once Upon a Time
19. Petanque
20. Trust Me
21. Home for the Weekend
22. The Prom
23. Gone Fishin'

The DVD

Video: The episodes are presented in their original fullscreen format. Colors are a bit soft and mushy, but the show looks better than it would on syndication. That's for sure!

Audio: No-frills DD 2.0, but it does the job.

Extras: The back of the box says the following: "Spanish subtitles / English CC." Yeah.

Final Thoughts

If you were soured on purchasing this fine series after S1 hit DVD in truncated form, your worries are over. The Huxtable gang makes a fine (if unspectacular) fourth appearance on DVD. The longtime fans would probably kill for some documentaries or coz-mentaries, but I guess the (uncut) episodes are all that really matter.

Buy from Amazon.com

C O N T E N T

V I D E O

A U D I O

E X T R A S

R E P L A Y

A D V I C E
Recommended

E - M A I L
this review to a friend
Popular Reviews

Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links