Product Description
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In the seventh season of this Primetime Emmy Award-winning
series, inappropriate behavior is business as usual, but big
surprises are in store! Dwight is now the owner of the building
and he may be letting this power go to his head; Andy is courting
Erin, who is dating Gabe; Jim and Pam are struggling with being
new parents; and a parade of ghosts of girlfriends past haunt
Michael, leading to his final days at Dunder Mifflin. Catch the
antics of all 24 laugh-out-loud Season Seven episodes of "…TV's
funniest half-hour" (Rick Kissell, Variety), developed for
American television by Primetime Emmy Award Winner Greg Daniels.
This memorable season features guest appearances from Amy Ryan
(Gone Baby Gone), a cameo from Ricky Gervais (The Invention of
Lying), and an unforgettable hour-long season finale with Jim
Carrey (Bruce Almighty), Will Arnett (Arrested Development), Ray
Romano (Everybody Love Raymond), James Spader (Boston Legal), and
Catherine Tate (Doctor Who), all vying for Michael Scott's old
post. Plus, see hours of bonus features, including extended
episodes, deleted scenes, bloopers, webisodes and more, in this
must-own four-disc collection.
Bonus Content:
Disc 1 - The Office Season Seven:
* Deleted Scenes
* Nepotism Commentary with B.J. Novak, Craig Robinson, Creed
Bratton, Charlie Grandy, and David Rogers
* My Scenes
* BD-Live
* pocket BLU App
*
Disc 2 - The Office Season Seven:
* Deleted Scenes
* PDA Commentary with Greg Daniels, Ellie Kemper, Angela Kinsey,
Brian Baumgartner, Claire Scanlon, Kelly Cantley and Robert
Padnick
* My Scenes
* BD-Live
* pocket BLU App
*
Disc 3 - The Office Season Seven:
* Deleted Scenes
* Threat Level Midnight: The Movie (A Michael Scott Joint)
* Threat Level Midnight Commentary with B.J. Novak, Craig
Robinson, Creed Bratton, Charlie Grandy, and David Rogers
* My Scenes
* BD-Live
* pocket BLU App
*
Disc 4 - The Office Season Seven:
* Deleted Scenes
* Blooper Reel
* Webisodes: The 3rd Floor
* Goodbye Michael Commentary with Greg Daniels, Ellie Kemper,
Brian Baumgartner, and David Rogers
* Dwight K. Schrute, (Acting) Manager Commentary with Mindy
Kaling, Ellie Kemper, Angela Kinsey, Steve Hely and Justin
Spitzer
* My Scenes
* BD-Live
* pocket BLU App
.com
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Michael Scott's long tenure as manager of Dunder Mifflin's
Scranton branch comes to a bittersweet end in the seventh season
of The Office, leaving viewers to wonder how and if the show will
survive without star Steve Carell. The actor's departure marks a
turning point for the comedy that extends beyond finding a
replacement for its lead. The Office itself had be to show
cracks in its façade in its fifth season, with too frequent dips
into implausible story lines and character behavior that hewed
more cartoonish than the careful mix of sitcom humor and human
observation with which the show made its mark. How The Office
resets itself in Carell's wake will remain the task of its eighth
season, but season seven offers an agreeable place-marker for the
cast and crew, who pay tribute to Scott with several genuinely
funny episodes and a wrap-up that manages to be heartfelt without
tipping into overly sentimental territory. The season also
features a recurring turn by Will Ferrell as Deangelo Vickers,
Michael's temporary replacement and a walking collection of
frayed nerves and personality tics. Ferrell is amusing in his
four-episode story arc, but at times, his livewire routine
clashes mightily with the lower-keyed energy of the established
cast. More effective is the parade of celebrities who queue up to
replace Michael in the season's conclusion, "Search Committee,"
with James Spader (a new Office cast member as of season eight),
Ray Romano, Jim Carrey, Will Arnett, and UK Office creator Ricky
Gervais (as David Brent) adjusting their respective styles to the
level of the series. Other highlights include the unveiling of
Michael's long-gestating film project Threat Level Midnight,
which features an array of past Office performers, and "Viewing
Party," which evokes past after-hours get-togethers in its
barrage of neuroses run wild.
Extras on the four-disc Blu-ray set include four episodes with
commentary tracks, each featured on a single disc; Carell is
again noticeably absent from these tracks, but series creator
Greg Daniels and various cast and crew members, including B.J.
Novak, Ellie Kemper, and Paul Lieberstein, do their best be
informative and entertaining. Deleted scenes from most of the
episodes provide more footage of Ferrell and the other guest
stars, while extended versions of "Training Day" and "Search
Committee" provide some subtle moments of character development.
The complete Threat Level Midnight is a welcome addition, as is
The 3rd Floor, a series of webisodes about the staff shooting a
horror movie in the office after hours. A fairly hilarious
blooper reel rounds out the set. --Paul Gaita