Product Description
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Join Emmy(R) and Golden Globe(R) Award winner America
Ferrera in the accled comedy that will have you laughing out
loud and cheering for TV's favorite fish out of water. It's a
year of change for Betty and her friends at MODE. With the future
of the magazine up in the air, a new roommate and the
ever-changing carousel of office relationships spinning faster
than ever, Betty's life is full of surprises. On top of it all,
Betty's move to the big city has her wondering whether she truly
belongs in her new fast-paced world. Dive into the vibrant scene
of high fashion with the most charismatic cast on television.
Experience every episode of Season Three, complete with
never-before-seen bonus features, in this six-disc set. Full of
fun and bursting with heart -- you can't help but fall for UGLY
BETTY!
.com
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With this third-season boxed set (24 episodes, plus
bonus material, on six discs), Ugly Betty continues one of
television's most adroit balancing acts. Is the series, which
chronicles the urban adventures of young Betty Suarez (American
Ferrera), the archetypal fish out of water making her way through
the cutthroat world of high fashion, a comedy? A nighttime soap
opera? A serious drama? Well, yes. There are a lot of other words
to describe it--outrageous, flamboyant, tender, absurd, cartoony,
poignant, arch, bright, kinetic--but most of all, Ugly Betty
remains compulsively watchable because it's entertaining, pure
and simple.
As ever, the show does a nimble job of simultaneously
maintaining multiple plot lines. Some of them last nearly the
entire season, like Betty's leaving the family house in Queens to
live on her own in a Manhattan apartment, the struggles of Meade
Publications, parent company of Mode Magazine (Betty's principal
employer), to deal with ongoing financial issues (exacerbated by
a major embezzlement sub-plot in mid-season), or the endless
power plays involving villainess Wilhelmina Slater (Vanessa
Williams) and various members of the Meade family. Other
developments, and there are many, unfold over just a few
episodes. Some of the best of these are Betty's re-acquaintance
with Kimmie (a perfectly cast Lindsay Lohan), a former high
school nemesis whom Betty helps find a job; Betty's membership in
the Young Editors Training Program (YETI), which brings her into
conflict with Marc (Michael Urie), Wilhelmina's rantly gay
assistant; numerous Suarez family issues, including her
Ignacio's (Tony Plana) heart attack; and, of course, the tangled
love lives of Betty and virtually every other character of note.
Through it all, Betty is awkward, naive, and hopelessly unhip,
but also smart, creative, and sincere; she remains the one beacon
of purity in a world where everyone's out to get everyone else.
Ugly Betty is beautifully crafted--it's well-written, nicely
acted, and deftly edited, and the bonus material (deleted scenes,
episode commentary, bloopers, etc.) is fine (newcomers will be
grateful for the "starter kit," which introduces the major
characters and storylines). One wonders, though, how long it can
sustain itself. If Betty finally blossoms into "normality," the
show's over; but if the emphasis on cutesy quirks continues,
there's sure to be some shark-jumping in the near future. Stay
tuned for further developments. --Sam Graham