Product Description
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All 22 episodes from the eighth season of the US sitcom
about the middle-aged Seattle psychiatrist played by Kelsey
Grammer, beset by problems largely of his own making. In this
season, wedding bells chime a sour note when Daphne (Jane Leeves)
flees her marriage ceremony to run off with Niles (David Hyde
Pierce), and the two lovebirds - as well as a hess Frasier -
ultimately find themselves embroiled in a lawsuit as a result of
the marital mayhem. Frasier also seeks the wisdom and advice of
an old college professor, whom Frasier drafts as his
'professional mentor'. Meanwhile, new-puppy training quickly goes
to the dogs when Roz (Peri Gilpin) brings home a new Dalmatian
and Martin (John Mahoney) takes command as the puppy's official
trainer. Episodes are: 'And the Dish Ran Away With the Spoon
(Part 1)', 'And the Dish Ran Away With the Spoon (Part 2)', 'The
Bad Son', 'The Great Crane Robbery', 'Taking Liberties', 'Legal
Tender Love and Care', 'The New Friend', 'Mary Christmas',
'Frasier's Edge', 'Cranes Unplugged', 'Motor Skills', 'The Show
Must Go Off', 'Sliding Frasiers', 'Hungry Heart', 'Hooping
Cranes', 'Docu.Drama', 'It Takes Two to Tangle', 'Forgotten But
Not Gone', 'Daphne Returns', 'The Wizard and Roz', 'Semi-Decent
Proposal (Part 1)', 'A Passing Fancy (Part 2)', 'A Day in May'
and 'Cranes Go Caribbean'.
.co.uk Review
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Seemingly not content to win all those Emmys for
Outstanding Comedy Series, Frasier made a convincing bid in its
eighth season for Best Drama. Make no mistake, Frasier still
serves up its unique blend of sophisticated wit and farce with
the usual panache. But season 8 finds Frasier (Kelsey Grammer) in
a contemplative mood and mid-life crisis mode. The episode
"Frasier's Edge" resonates throughout the season, as a lifetime
achievement award and a suspect (only to Frasier) congratulatory
note from a mentor sends him into a characteristic tailspin.
"Thank you for honouring my life," a subdued Frasier remarks at
the awards ceremony. "I just wish I knew what to do with the rest
of it." It is just one of several powerful moments on which many
of the season's best episodes fade out. In the season finale,
Frasier finds himself torn between a new, "perfect" woman in his
life, Claire (Patricia Clarkson), and the tempestuous Lana (Jean
Smart reprising her Emmy-winning role, and winning her second
consecutive statuette). In an affectionate phone call with Lilith
(Bebe Neuwirth), he asks, "Do you think I know how to be happy?"
In the cleverly constructed "Sliding Frasiers," which takes its
cue from the film Sliding Doors, parallel Valentine's Day
storylines illustrate how "the tiniest decision can change your
whole destiny." In "Cranes Unplugged," Frasier feels like he and
his son Freddy are growing apart, but on a predictably disastrous
camping trip they manage to share "a golden moment." John
Mahoney, too, gives an Emmy-worthy performance in "A Day in May,"
as Martin attends a parole board hearing for the man who
him. But it's not all sturm and drang. "The Show Must Go Off"
features an Emmy-winning performance by Derek Jacobi as a former
Shakespearean actor Frasier rediscovers at a sci-fi convention
and s a one-man show, only to discover that he is a
talentless ham. In "Motor Skills," Niles (David Hyde Pierce) and
Frasier enroll in an automobile repair class and take on
unaccustomed roles as the class bad boys. This season also
resolves all the obstacles keeping Niles and Daphne (Jane Leeves)
apart, including a lawsuit by jilted groom Donny (Saul Rubinek),
the vindictive schemes of Niles's jilted fiancée, Mel (Jane
Adams), and Niles and Daphne's own illusions about each other.
For longtime viewers with an emotional investment in Frasier and
company, this is a richly satisfying season worthy of this
gold-standard series. --Donald Liebenson