Country of Origin: |
United States |
Production year: |
1990 |
Directors: |
David Silverman, Rich Moore, Wesley Archer, Mark Kirkland |
Rating: |
 |
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UPC [Locale]: |
Disc ID: 237B-B14E-997A-F32C
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Running time: |
2:14 (134 Min.) |
Casetype: |
Unknown |
Format: |
Color, 1.33:1, Full Frame |
DVD-Format: |
Single-Sided, Single-Layered |
Released: |
July 04, 2002 |
Collection type: |
Owned (#10406) |
Status: |
Available |
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Purchase date: |
June 19, 2006 |
Purchase price: |
Hidden |
Review (movie): |
 |
Review (video): |
 |
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Overview |
Bart Gets an F
Bart's poor schoolwork prompts his teacher, Mrs. Krabappel to threaten to hold him back in the fourth grade for an extra year. He falls behind while studying for a history test and prays to God for help. That night, a tremendous snowstorm hits Springfield, cancelling school the following day. Bart wants to go out and play, but Lisa tells him that he should stay home and study. He does, and gets a D-minus on the test — the bare minimum he needed.
Simpson and Delilah
Homer learns of a new anti-baldness drug, which he can only afford by cheating on his company health insurance. He grows a luxurious head of hair and is promoted by Mr. Burns. He gets an office with a gay male assistant, Karl, who develops a crush on him. But jealous Smithers discovers the secret of Homer's success and gets the prescription cancelled. Bald again, no one listens to Homer and he winds up back where he started.
Treehouse of Horror
In this trilogy of horror-themed Halloween stories, Bart and Lisa attempt to scare each other with tales of the macabre. In the first, "Bad Dream House," the Simpsons inhabit a haunted home, which possesses their souls, and causes them to attempt to kill each other. But after spending enough time with the Simpsons, it is the house, which kills itself, vanishing into another dimension. In the second segment, "Hungry are the Damned," the Simpsons accuse the monsters of planning to eat them, but the offended aliens reveal they were only planning a sumptuous meal for the family. In the third secment, a satire of Poe's "The Raven," a grief-stricken Homer is tormented by bad bird Bart.
Two Cars in Every Garage and Three Eyes on Every Fish
When a three-eyed fish is discovered downstream from the Springfield Nuclear Power Plant, the plant is hit with tremendous sanctions by state regulators. Burns realises that if he becomes governor he could control the regulations and brings in a team of consultants to help him take on an incumbent governor Mary Bailey. His climactic campaign event is dinner at the Simpson home where Marge – a Bailey booster – server Burns' own three-eyed fish to him. Burns can't eat it, destroying his image and costing him the election.
Dancin' Homer
The family attends a Springfield Isotopes baseball game, which a boozy Homer livens up. He becomes an official mascot for the team, boosting attendance and the team's play. But when Homer attempts to crack the big time — the big ballpark of Capital City — he strokes out. Yet he finds to his surprised that the experience has benegited him after all - his friends now consider him interesting.
Dead Putting Society
Homer's annoyance at his sweet lovable neighbor Ned Flanders grows completely out of bounds, so that when Bart and Ned's son Todd both show interest in minature gold, Homer bets Flanders that his son can beat Ned's - and the lose has to mow the lawn in his wife's dress. Lisa helps Bart tain, using the principals of Zen, and when the big day comes, the boys are evenly matched. They finally agree to tie, and Flanders offers to forget the bet, but Homer insists that they each mow the lawn in a dress - which Flanders enjoys, to Homer's fury. |
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DVD Covers
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Features |
Scene Access, Play All, Feature Trailers, Featurettes, Commentary, Deleted Scenes, Prod. Notes/Bios, DVD-ROM Content, Music Videos, Emmy Awards Presentation featurette (3 mins), 3 Butterfinger
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