| Kung Fu - The Complete Third Season | 
enlarge | Directors: David Carradine, Alex Beaton, Barry Crane, Gordon Hessler, Harry Harris Actors: David Carradine, Cal Bellini, George Dicenzo, Frank Michael Liu, Richard Narita Studio: Warner Home Video Category: DVD
List Price: $39.98 Buy New: $16.45 You Save: $23.53 (59%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 35 reviews Sales Rank: 13156
Format: Box Set, Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Number Of Items: 4 Running Time: 1221 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.6 x 1
MPN: WARD68147D ISBN: 141980426X UPC: 012569681477 EAN: 9781419804267 ASIN: B0009K7QZS
Theatrical Release Date: October 14, 1972 Release Date: August 23, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: BRAND NEW !!! NEVER OPENED !! FACTORY SEALED !!
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Product Description Studio: Warner Home Video Release Date: 08/23/2005 Run time: 1221 minutes Rating: Nr
Amazon.com While it may not rank with Richard Kimble's fateful meeting with the One-Armed Man in the series finale of The Fugitive, Caine's reunion with his long-lost brother, Danny, brings Kung Fu, to quote the title of the four-episode story arc's conclusion, "Full Circle." The series' rich iconography and episodes featuring returning characters may make this final season heady going for newcomers. But those who have faithfully followed Caine (David Carradine in his iconic role) on his nomadic adventures will be richly rewarded with some of the series' best episodes. The season begins with a stellar two-parter, "Blood of the Dragon," in which Caine seeks the truth about his grandfather's murder, while Imperial assassins are dispatched to kill Caine. The venerable Patricia Neal guest-stars as the grandfather's iron-willed, cold-hearted former lover. Eddie Albert also stars as a doctor who sides with Caine. Other memorable guest stars this season include William Shatner broguing it up, Scotty-style, as a sea captain who arrives with an Imperial pardon for Caine (but at what cost?) in "A Small Beheading." Barbara Hershey portrays an aspiring Shoalin priest in the two-parter, "Besieged." In "The Brothers Caine," a pre-Airplane Leslie Nielsen is a ruthless magnate who puts a $10,000 price on Danny's head, making for an awkward reunion when Danny thinks that Caine is a bounty hunter. David's father, John, returns as blind preacher Serenity Johnson in "Ambush." This season was distinguished by innovative episodes set in China during Caine's "Grasshopper" tutelage. In "The Demon God," the youth, poisoned by a prince, experiences mystical visions of his older, wandering self, who is stung by a scorpion. In "The Thief of Chendo," young Caine's Master imagines an adventure for the aspiring priest. Two Carradine commentaries, and a near-hour long chronicle of Carradine's 30-years-on visit to a Shoalin monastery in China (an incredible journey that ends with Carradine's soulful rendition of "America the Beautiful") help to give Kung Fu a worthy DVD send-off. --Donald Liebenson
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| Customer Reviews: Read 30 more reviews...
Kung Fu, series November 2, 2008 it wonderful to see the final episodes of this iconic show. I first watched it as a small child, and my father at the time did Wing Chun Kung Fu, so i thought that Caine was my father, or my father was Caine. It brings back so many memories. I truly love the series, but these episodes are the icing on the cake, they truly are.
COMPLETE October 31, 2008 After having viewed first and second season over and over again, a feeling of completion has overwhelmed me and my mind has been put to rest after the viewing of the third season. I feel some what awakened (lol) awsome
A Classic June 30, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The first season was good, the second was great, and the third and final season made the show a legend.
If you start at the beginning of this season, and I know you will, you'll be disappointed for a few episodes. They had to get their groove back or something. And then, with no gradual transition whatsoever, the writing will leap into the stratosphere and remind you why you love this show. It is simply awesome, and it isn't dated.
One thing they did at the start of this season was try to raise the level of menace on the martial arts, but it was already there.
At times, the verbal sparring was even better than the kung fu, and you know how great that was.
I've written before that you should use superlatives sparingly, and one memorable essay mentioned car horns in China. I could have instead mentioned Kwai Chang Caine's gold silks. When he puts those on, it's clobberin time!
In my review of the second season, I realized that I'd never seen Caine eat with chopsticks. And just to remain so petty, he does it here, and he eats just fine. Hey, I lived in China for 6 years. I notice these things.
When I ordered these DVDs, I envisioned using them in my class, encouraging my students to point out the inaccuracies because they'd be hyper-motivated to do so. In English, which is what I was teaching. But the timing was a little off, as I quit teaching that class a few weeks before I got these DVDs.
Oh well. Looking over it myself, the inaccuracies are minor. Master Kan should in fact be called Master Chen, for example. But the big details, which are why we love this show and why it's timeless, are absolutely spot on. KUNG FU remains a rare classic that, to the best of my knowledge, American TV hasn't equaled and probably never will.
Fine April 15, 2008 It got here quickly and in great condition. I am happy. Personally I think the second season was not as good as the first, and the third season not as good as the second. But if you like Kung Fu, you'll still be happy.
Try it you'll liiike it...! February 19, 2008 If your a fan, you get more back stories and plot resolution. What more could you want? Also, it's easy to see why David C. left after this season. But still worth the money.
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