Product Details
The L Word - Season 3 - Complete [DVD] [2006]

The L Word - Season 3 - Complete [DVD] [2006]
From MGM Home Ent. (Europe) Ltd.

List Price: £39.99
Price: £24.68 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details

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Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

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Average customer review:

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6082 in DVD
  • Released on: 2007-09-24
  • Rating: Suitable for 18 years and over
  • Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
  • Formats: PAL, Colour, Subtitled
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 4
  • Running time: 603 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
The third season of The L Word is all about transitions. The season opens with Alice Pieszecki (Leisha Hailey) coping with her between-seasons break-up with Dana Fairbanks (Erin Daniels), who is herself headed for an even heavier series of transitions. Kit Porter (Pam Grier) both falls in love with a younger man and discovers she is going through menopause. Shane (Katherine Moennig), who spent much of the first two seasons of the show hopping from bed to bed, finds herself more or less committed to Latina deejay Carmen (Sarah Shahi). And the second season's resident villain, Helena Peabody (Rachel Shelley), becomes embroiled in a sexual harassment case that leaves her ultimately looking like the victim.

As with previous seasons, The L Word gets all hot and bothered with various seductions filmed to sometimes jarring music on the soundtrack, but it's the day-to-day foibles and celebrations of Los Angeles's lesbian community that keep the show interesting. Newcomer Moira/Max (Daniela Sea) begins the process of gender reassignment, making for some curious situations with potential employers. Bette (Jennifer Beals) and Tina (Laurel Holloman) begin to drift apart when Tina lands a big movie studio job and starts feeling attracted to men, leading to a custody battle over their baby daughter.

Where The L Word starts getting preachy and obvious is in the opening flashback sequences. When these vignettes refer to current characters of the show, they make sense; when they depict situations meant to underline how queer identity has evolved over the years, they seem politically overloaded. The L Word works intelligently through its characters' concerns without having to resort to such direct appeals for tolerance. Its strength isn't in making lesbian culture appear more mainstream, but in making us care and identify with these women's struggles, regardless of our sexual orientation. --Ryan Boudinot

Synopsis
A television series which centres on the lives and loves of a group of women living and working in Los Angeles.

Synopsis
The lives, love and sex of lesbian women in Los Angeles.

During the struggle for happiness, deception, ambition and lifestyle are fuelling the scenes in this critically acclaimed television series. Packed with genuine emotion and authentic stories, "The L Word" is about a small community of lesbian women in Los Angeles as well as their relatives and friends.

The third season of the hit show, The L Word, follows a group of friends - both gay and straight - through stories of career, family, inner struggle, friendship and romantic relationships.

Episodes Comprise:

Labia Majora; Lost Weekend; Lobsters; Light My Fire; Lifeline; Lonestar; Latecomer; Lead, Follow, or Get Out of the Way; Losing the Light; Last Dance; Left Hand of the Goddess.


Customer Reviews

a long and winding road3
The initial attraction of this great series was the believable storylines that illuminated the different experiences of professional gay women in West Holywood.With depth and insight the programme was sincere, honest and at times very funny. Women struggling with coming out, being happy and being accepted, forming relationships and starting a family. Set against an increasingly hostile right wing political climate series 3 develops the characters we have come to respect for their integrity and sadly streatches credibilty,perhaps for the sake of a broader mainstream appeal or perhaps it just lost its guts!!
Issues of gender reassignment, bisexuality, gay marriage, gay adoption and the rights of next of kin are explored. All of this is very interesting. Where the series doesn't always seem as genuine as before is in the fact that these issues are pinned onto long established characters like labels, causing huge shifts in attitude and behaviour that just aren't that convincing. The need to fit it all into 12 episodes means the required depth to show different points of view or justify uncharacteristic behaviour just isn't there. Its a shame!! Its also something that the producres were able to resolve for series 4 so phew- don't judge it too harshly. So watch this- agonise,despair and laugh as Tina goes back to men, Bette goes unemployed, Shane commits ....a little. Jenny becomes sensible and unpleasant things happen to Alice, Dana and Helena. There are some stand out episodes but largely it gets worse as it goes on. Stay tuned for seasons 4 and 5 girls!!!

Alright but not great2
The storylines seem to be going a bit bizzare, and the characters are becoming a bit unlikeable. Some of the storylines just seem to fizzle out and that theme tune needs to go. I hope the fourth is better...
I think Alice is hilarious though!

changes afoot4
season three of this great series sees big changes for all our cast members. it starts of with jenny coming back to la with a girlfriend in tow, tina and bette adjusting to being mothers. although the gang is rocked with one of them annoucing some rather tragic news they do manage to find some happiness to keep going. helena gets herself into legal trouble, carmen comes out to her latino family, tina goes back to men and jenny publishes her book. does lose its way a bit but still going strong.