
The Gilmore Girls creator, Amy Sherman-Palladino, admits in one of the interviews in the extras: “Gilmore Girls” is an adolescent series, but most of them won’t understand the countless 80’s pop references.
The scriptwriter was the responsible for six of the seven seasons six, thrown now in a complete collection with extras.
In the comedy, the young Lorelai (interpreted by the great Lauren Graham) lives with her daughter, Rory (Alexis Bledel), in a fictitious city called Stars Hollow.
Enclosed for eccentric and unlikely characters, the two pass the time to the turns with subjects about career (the one of the mother, that manages a small hotel, and the one of the daughter, that dreams to study journalism in Harvard and later it opts for Yale), family and loves.
The good and always correct Rory (good student, friend, daughter and girlfriend, always disposed to help some old lady to cross the street) wins force in the comparison with a certain maladjustment of Lorelai, which became pregnant when she was 16 years, didn’t marry, left the parents’ house and it gave up the university to take care alone of the daughter. And try to do whatever she can to avoid that the same happens to her daughter.
The conversations among the two are the center of almost all of the episodes and they give the tone of the series. Long dialogues, in a very superior speed to those from traditional found in other TV shows, and without the “pauses to laugh” of the comic series gives a special touch to the show.
The Gilmore Girls box comes with cool extras. In addition to interviews, there are many cut scenes, making of and a fun Kirk movie, one of the most bizarre residents of Stars Hollow.
Via: IMDB.
Posted by NARUTO on October 17, 2009 in Art & Entertainment, Critic · 0 Comment