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SEINFELD
      SEASON 4
Starring: 
    Jerry Seinfeld, Jason Alexander, Julia Louis-Dreyfus & Michael Richards 
Created by: 
    Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David 
Out to buy on DVD 13/06/05
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"My mother caught me"
George
The Trip (Part 
    1 & 2) 
    With Elaine in Europe, Jerry asks George to accompany him on a trip to LA 
    and The Tonight Show; while there they will try to locate Kramer. While auditioning, 
    Kramer must deal with the advances of an older female landlord (an actress 
    who hasn't worked since 1934) and get someone in Hollywood to read his script 
    treatment. A body is discovered; the victim, a young woman, was strangled. 
    Kramer meets a woman at an audition and he gives her a copy of his script. 
    Jerry loses the correct phrasing for some new jokes and George tries to get 
    Lupe, the chambermaid, to make his bed just right. 
The Pitch 
    NBC executives ask Jerry to come up with an idea for a TV series. George decides 
    he can be a sitcom writer and comes up with "nothing." Kramer trades a radar 
    detector for a helmet, later Newman gets a speeding ticket. 
The Ticket 
    Kramer suffers side effects from his head injury. NBC gives Jerry and George 
    another meeting and on the way, Jerry throws out a watch his parents gave 
    him. He then meets his Uncle Leo, who picks the watch out of the garbage. 
  
The Wallet 
    Jerry's parents come to town to see a back specialist, they hear about "Crazy" 
    Joe not liking Jerry and ask about the watch they gave him. George "negotiates" 
    the deal with the NBC and gets a box of cigars from Susan's father. 
The Watch 
    
    Jerry has dinner with his parents and Uncle Leo. Women, who's paying and the 
    watch are all discussed. Elaine uses Kramer as "her boyfriend" in trying to 
    fool her shrink. George gets Russell's address and tries to get the pilot 
    reinstated. Jerry tries to buy back the watch. 
The Bubble Boy 
    
    Jerry's girlfriend, Naomi has a laugh that sounds like "Elmer Fudd sitting 
    on a juicer," and when she hears George's message to Jerry, she breaks up 
    with him. So instead, Jerry asks Elaine to accompany him on a trip to a cabin 
    in the mountain with George and Susan. Kramer isn't invited. 
The Cheever Letters 
    
    Jerry and George begin to work on the pilot for the series they pitched to 
    NBC. Jerry says the wrong thing while "messing" around with one of Elaine's 
    co-workers. George & Susan tell her father about the cabin fire, he becomes 
    distraught and letters saved from the fire soon explain why. Kramer goes to 
    the Cuban Embassy in search of cigars and makes a deal. 
The Opera 
    "Crazy" Joe leaves Jerry a message saying he will put the "kibosh" on him. 
    Kramer has tickets for the opera, Pagliacci, and everyone is going including 
    Elaine and her boyfriend "Crazy" Joe. Elaine drops in on Joe's apartment and 
    is she surprised by what she discovers, so she maces him with cherry Binaca 
    and ends their relationship. Susan can't attend, so George tries to scalp 
    her ticket. 
The Virgin 
    After much procrastination, George and Jerry strain to think of an idea for 
    their TV series a few hours before a meeting with NBC executives. Jerry finds 
    out a girl he once met is still a virgin, and later Elaine educates her about 
    men after sex. George wants to end his relationship with Susan so he can exploit 
    his writing profession as a pick-up line. 
The Contest 
    George's mother throws her back out when she falls down after catching him 
    doing "you know." When George says he'll never do it again, Jerry challenges 
    him to a contest of self-denial, when he accepts, Elaine and Kramer want in 
    on the action, or rather the lack of it. 
The Airport 
    When their flight home gets cancelled, Jerry & Elaine gets on another flight, 
    the latter gets cramped into coach and Jerry parties in 1st class with a model. 
    George and Kramer go between JFK and La Guardia to pick them up. When they 
    settle on an airport George meets a convict and Kramer sees a man who owes 
    him $240 from years ago. 
The Pick 
    Elaine is humiliated when she accidentally shows a bit too much on her Christmas 
    card photo, that she has sent out to everyone she knows. Jerry has a date 
    with the model from the plane, she later dumps Jerry because of "The Pick." 
    George tries to reunite with Susan, but realizes it's a mistake, and uses 
    "The Pick". 
The Visa 
    George meets a Chinese female lawyer who thinks he is real funny; so he tells 
    Jerry not to be funny around her, but she becomes attracted to this. Kramer 
    returns early from baseball fantasy camp, where he accidentally punched Mickey 
    Mantle. 
The Movie 
    Jerry tries to make two show dates and afterwards go to the movie theatre 
    to meet everyone. George gets in the wrong line for tickets. George, Elaine 
    & Kramer decide to go to another theatre to see the movie. Kramer waits outside 
    for Jerry but also wants a hot dog. Jerry misses his first show, then goes 
    to movie theatre to tell everyone he won't make the movie, but no one is there. 
    Through a comedy of errors, everyone (but Kramer) misses the movie; they were 
    originally going to see.
 The Outing 
    No thanks to Elaine, Jerry must work hard to prove he is straight when a college 
    reporter mistakenly reports that he and George are gay, "not that there is 
    anything wrong with that." Things really get out of hand when the article 
    is picked up by the New York Post. 
The Shoes 
    Jerry and George struggle to keep their idea for a TV series alive, one of 
    their problems is they don't know how to do the Elaine character. Jerry meets 
    an old girlfriend he never could kiss, later Kramer gets the opportunity. 
  
The Old Man 
    Jerry, Elaine & George volunteer to help the elderly. Jerry gets assigned 
    to a nasty old man. Elaine is repulsed by the goitre problems of hers and 
    George depresses his charge. 
The Implant 
    Jerry dumps his girlfriend after Elaine says her figure is the result of implants. 
    Kramer claims to have seen Salman Rushdie at the health club. By accident 
    Elaine later discovers the breasts are real. 
The Handicap Spot
    Going out to buy an engagement party present for "The Drake," George parks 
    his father's car in a handicap parking spot, after taking Kramer's advice. 
    An angry mob trashes the vehicle when a disabled woman gets injured, because 
    of the illegal parking. 
The Junior 
    Mint Jerry has a date with a woman whose name he has forgotten, but it "rhymes 
    with a female body part." Could it be "Mulva"? Elaine visits an old boyfriend 
    who's in the hospital for an operation; he was once fat, thin she's interested 
    again. Kramer gets an opportunity to witness the operation and he drags Jerry 
    along, while watching they have an accident with a "Junior Mint." 
The Smelly Car 
    
    The strong body odour of a valet is left in Jerry's car. George can't believe 
    it when he spots Susan holding hands with another woman. Elaine loses her 
    current boyfriend and Jerry is forced to try to sell the car, because the 
    odour has taken a life of its own and permeated everything. George is turned 
    on by Susan's new outlook on life. Susan's friend is swayed to heterosexuality 
    by Kramer, though later turned back off by a whiff of a jacket that Kramer 
    borrowed from Jerry. When the car can't be sold, Jerry winds up leaving it 
    and the keys out on the street. 
The Pilot (Part 
    1 & 2) 
    Jerry and George get the green light to produce Jerry, the pilot for the series 
    based on their "nothing" lives. Russell Dalrimple, the president at NBC behind 
    the pilot, is obsessed with Elaine. George is obsessed with a white spot on 
    his lip and a box of raisins taken by actor playing Kramer. The real Kramer 
    has an internal plumbing problem and on his way to fix it, he gets delayed 
    and is caused to "miss his chance." Jerry has an audition with the new "Elaine," 
    a method actress interested in being Elaine in every way. The real Elaine 
    has a problem with the coffee shop, they appear to be only hiring buxom waitresses 
    and so she tries to get hired and files a report. 

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Arguably one of the best situation comedy shows of all time, 'Seinfeld's' fourth season was when its true genius came to the fore.
The show about nothing continues to generate classic episode after classic episode and made it one of the most consistently funny shows ever to grace television. Very few situation comedies can claim that they never truly had a bad episode but 'Seinfeld' was consistency personified. The fourth season is a classic example of this. Each episode is a comedy classic as the characters and situations of the show about nothing really start to come into their own.
When you think of classic characters in comedy it is more than likely that Jerry, Kramer, Elaine and George will make your top ten or even be your top four. Jerry, the stand up comic who always sees the bad points in people as way of getting away from commitment e.g. she has man hands, she is too tall, her nose is too big, she is a virgin etc, is the first classic character. Played by wonderfully by the shows co-creator and writer Jerry Seinfeld, Jerry is neurotic but charming and a big hit with the ladies, until he finds something wrong with them. George, played by the brilliant Jason Alexander, is just as neurotic but without the confidence in himself that Jerry has. He basically lives his life through his best friend and thinks the world has something against him. Kramer is a force of nature. Michael Richards creates the manic character with great aplomb. He is a complete enigma, manic and living in a world of his own, providing most of the physical comedy for the series. Some may argue that Elaine, the wonderful Julia Louis-Dreyfus, is the only sane one of the group but then you should see hear dance. He is exactly the same as Jerry but in female form, and this is why they probably get on so well. What makes the show so great is that though it may be called 'Seinfeld', the show is about the four characters and not just about Jerry. Each of them gets equal billing and episode time, making them a true ensemble cast.
Season four is filled with so many classic episodes and continuing storylines. Jerry and George's NBC pilot gets off the ground, George starts to date Susan and Elaine starts to see 'Crazy Joe'. There are also so many classic episodes that this review would be far too long if it covered them all. Highlights include 'The Virgin' with 'Frasier's' Jane Leeves, as Jerry starts to date the perfect woman, only to discover she is a virgin. 'The Movie' which is just classic farce as Jerry tries to arrange three things at once with disastrous consequences. 'The Old man' when the group becomes volunteers to the elderly. 'The Handicap Spot' outlines the consequences of parking in a blue bay without permission. 'The Junior Mint' reveals that you shouldn't really eat when watching an operation.
In the middle of the season is one of the best Seinfeld episodes ever and all time comedy classic, 'The Contest'. The show revolves around erm, self-gratification and who can abstain from this for the longest. While they never actually mention what they are going without, you know exactly what it is they are giving up and how difficult it is. This is absolutely hilarious and one of the best comedy scripts ever to grace television. A true classic.
Without a doubt 'Seinfeld' is the best comedy show in Television history. With four classic characters, brilliant guest and supporting performances and consistency unmatched by any show past or current, this series is the true definition of comedy. Season four is another golden year for the series and with classic episode after classic episode, this proves that 'Seinfeld' is the standard in the sitcom genre.
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PICTURE & SOUND
Presented in full frame 4:3 with a Dolby stereo sound track, the transfer is very good, especially when you bear in mind that the show was originally broadcast in 1992.
BONUS FEATURES
The Breakthrough Season (19.11 mins) 
    NBC executives Warren Littlefield and Rick Ludwin, Castlerock executives Rob 
    Reiner and Glen Padnick, executive producers Howard West and George Shapiro, 
    co-creator Larry David, writer Larry Charles, composer Jonathan Wolff and 
    stars Jerry Seinfeld, Michael Richards, Jason Alexander and Julia Louis-Dreyfus 
    talk about the fourth season of 'Seinfeld'. This was the season when the show 
    exploded into a mega hit after switching to Thursday nights, following NBC 
    other hit comedy show 'Cheers'. The cast and crew discuss the impact this 
    had on the show and other insights into how the show changed slightly over 
    the season, as it took more risks and pushed to the show to new levels of 
    comedy and crazy ideas. 
Regis & Kathie Lee Parody (4.40 mins) 
    Taken from an episode of 'Live with Regis & Kathie Lee', Jerry Seinfeld, Michael 
    Richards and Julia Louis-Dreyfus parody a segment from a previously aired 
    show were Regis and Kathie Lee talk about 'Seinfeld'. 
"Not that there's anything wrong with that' (Bloopers) (21.13 mins)
    A montage of gaffs and gaps from the fourth season of the show. Highlights 
    include some brilliant adlibbing from the cast when things go wrong and Kramer 
    with a cigar is just hilarious. 
"Master of his Domain" (Exclusive Stand-up Material) (8.05 mins) 
    Watch a collection of extended and never used stand-up material from Jerry 
    Seinfeld. 
"Sponsored by Vandelay Industries" (NBC Promos) (2.58 mins) 
    A collection of funny TV spots highlighting the show's move to Thursday night, 
    after 'Cheers'. 
1992 Olympic Promos (4.15 mins) 
    A collection of micro sketches that have Jerry, George and Kramer talking 
    about the Olympics and how they would tackle some of the events. 
Photo Gallery (1.53 mins) 
    A montage of promotional and behind-the-scenes images promoting the fourth 
    season 
"Yada, Yada, Yada" Commentaries 
    Listen to episode commentary tracks on 'The Trip (Part 1 & 2)', 'The Cheever 
    Letters', 'The Contest', 'The Airport', 'The Outing', 'The Implant', 'The 
    Junior Mint' and 'The Pilot'. Writers Larry Charles and Peter Mehlman, production 
    designer Tom Azzari, director Tom Cherones and stars Jerry Seinfeld, Michael 
    Richards, Jason Alexander and Julia Louis-Dreyfus have tracks, with each one 
    offering funny insights into the episodes, especially the ones with Michael 
    Richards, Jason Alexander and Julia Louis-Dreyfus. 
In the Vault (Deleted Scenes) 
    Watch deleted or alternative scenes from the episodes 'The Trip', 'The Wallet', 
    'The Cheever Letters', 'The Opera', 'The Virgin', 'The Contest', 'The Airport', 
    'The Pick', 'The Movie', 'The Outing', 'The Old Man' and 'The Junior Mint'. 
  
Inside Look
    Stars Jerry Seinfeld, Michael Richards, Jason Alexander and Julia Louis-Dreyfus 
    are joined guest stars and crew members to offer insights into the episodes 
    'The Trip Part 1', 'The Pitch/The Ticket', 'The Bubble Boy', 'The Cheever 
    Letters', 'The Opera', 'The Contest', 'The Airport', 'The Pick', 'The Visa', 
    'The Outing', 'The Oldman', 'The Implant', 'The Handicap Spot', 'The Junior 
    Mint' and 'The Smelly Car'. 
Notes about Nothing 
    Watch any episode and receive fascinating and funny trivia about the show 
    and the characters involved. 
OVERALL
A classic TV show gets a classic treatment on DVD. An absolutely brilliant collection of bonus features accompanies the release. The commentaries are excellent and very funny. The documentary and 'Inside Look' featurettes take you inside the show. The Bloopers are hilarious and the deleted scenes are very good (making you wonder why they were cut). There are also alternate versions of some shows with branched extras scenes. This makes for an unbelievable package that fans of the show will lap up.
DVD 
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