Books Computers Electronics Home & Garden Jewelry Movies Music Toys
Video (VHS)
Search for: in
The Simpsons Go Hollywood, Vol. 1
by Twentieth Century Fox
The Simpsons Go Hollywood, Vol. 1 - Click to Enlarge
Avg. Rating: 3.5 of 5 stars (based on 2 reviews)
$0.97 to $3.79 from 3 stores
The episodes gracing The Simpsons Go Hollywood are perhaps two of the most rewind-worthy shows of the … Read more
Information Below:  Store Prices  |  Customer Reviews


Compare Store Prices
View: All
Sort By
Store Name
Sort By
Store Rating
Sort By
Price
Sort By
Shipping
 
Description
 
Buy
* Prices and availability are subject to change without notice. Please check the merchant store for details.
List Your Products -

Product Description
The Simpsons Go Hollywood, Vol. 1
Description
The episodes gracing The Simpsons Go Hollywood are perhaps two of the most rewind-worthy shows of the series. With pokes at and tributes to everything from Hitchcock, Batman, and Ayn Rand to The Flinstones, The Great Escape, and The Music Man, this video will have you trying to guess exactly where you've seen that scene before.

"A Streetcar Named Marge" has the lovely blue-haired missus playing Blanche to Ned Flander's Stanley in the musical Oh Streetcar!. Director Llewelyn Sinclair (Jon Lovitz) is a flamboyant tyrant; Maggie is foisted off to day care, the Ayn Rand School for Tots (where signs such as "Helping is futile" grace the walls); and Homer and Marge have domestic strife ("Why can't you be more supportive?" Marge demands. "Because I don't care," responds Homer). After this episode aired, the producers of the show had to issue a formal apology to the city of New Orleans for trashing it in one of the Oh Streetcar! musical numbers.

In "Marge vs. the Monorail," the town has $3 million, courtesy of Mr. Burns's illegal dumping of waste. The town is quickly taken in by a shyster (voiced by Phil Hartman) who convinces them Springfield needs a monorail. And who better to conduct this misguided train than Homer Simpson ("Are we going to die, son?" Homer asks Bart. "Yeah," he replies, "but at least we're going to take a lot of innocent people"). Leonard Nimoy guest stars on this episode as himself, when he acts as grand marshal for the first monorail run. These two classic Simpsons are hysterical to begin with, and they only improve on repeat viewings. --Jenny Brown

Customer Reviews
0 out of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2 of 5 stars  Misleading Title
Monday, May 14, 2001
Actually this particular simpsons episode (2 of them) were not up to the standard. Eventhough I am a big fan of Simpsons I could not watch this one completely. "Monorail was a tragedy". and Marge's acting along with Ned was stupid.

2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5 of 5 stars  A pair of Simpsons Classics
Thursday, June 15, 2000
This video combines two of my favorite simpsons episodes. A streetcar named Marge features what the Simpsons often does best, poking fun with clever musical numbers. The monorail number on the second episode is a classic, and one that every Simpson fan should have memorized. These episodes are ones that every Simpson fan will love, and ones that will hook newcomers to the show.
Home  |  About Priceflo  |  Tell a Friend  |  List Your Products  |  Merchant Login  |  Site Map  |  Help

© 2003-2005, Priceflo, Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy  |  Terms of Service