Product Details
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia: Season 3

It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia: Season 3
Directed by Fred Savage, Jerry Levine, Matt Shakman

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Product Description

  • Audio: English: Dolby Surround
  • Language: Dubbed: English / Subtitled: English, French & Spanish
  • Theatrical Aspect Ratio: Full Screen: 1.33:1

Disk 1:
  • The Gang Finds a Dumpster Baby
  • The Gang Gets Invincible
  • Dennis and Dee’s Mom is Dead
  • The Gang Gets Held Hostage
  • The Aluminum Monster vs. Fatty McGoo
  • The Gang Solves the North Korea Situation

Disk 2:
  • The Gang Sells Out
  • Frank Sets Sweet Dee On Fire
  • Sweet Dee’s Dating a Retarded Person
  • Mac is a Serial Killer
  • Dennis Looks Like a Registered Sex Offender
  • Commentary with
  • The Gang Gets Whacked part 1

Disk 3:
  • The Gang Gets Whacked part 2
  • Bums: Making a Mess All Over the City
  • The Gang Dances Their Asses Off

  • Sunny Side UP Volume 2
  • Meet The McPoyles Featurette
  • Dancing Man Featurette
  • Gag Reel
  • Sunny FX Promo Spots


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #205 in DVD
  • Brand: TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX HOME ENT
  • Released on: 2008-09-09
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Full Screen, Subtitled, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English, French, Spanish
  • Number of discs: 3
  • Dimensions: 1.00 pounds
  • Running time: 332 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
The folks who populate It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia may be pals, but they sure aren’t Friends. They may be a gang, but they’re not Our Gang--heck, these cretins make Spanky, Alfalfa, and company look like members of the Good Sam Club by contrast. Consider, if you can bear it, the first of the 15 episodes (presented, with bonus features, on three discs) from this, the show’s third season: Mac (Rob McElhenney) and Dee (Caitlin Olson) discover a baby in a dumpster. Do they report it to the police? To Child Services, maybe? Of course not! They take it to a commercial agent, hoping to cash in by putting the kid in TV ads; and when the agent says that Latino babies are all the rage, they take him to a tanning salon so he’ll appear darker and more “ethnic looking.” Meanwhile, Dennis (Glenn Howerton) pretends to be join a tree-hugging group of hippies, merely so he can steal the group leader’s girlfriend, while Charlie (Charlie Day) and Frank (Danny DeVito) spend the day rummaging around at the trash dump. It’s tough to go downhill from there, but that doesn’t stop them from trying. In the course of the following episodes, members of the quacked quintet reveal themselves to be not only rude, devious, unscrupulous, amoral, and dishonest, but also racist, xenophobic, homophobic, and dumb (their endless arguments about nothing are riotously ridiculous). Not that this will surprise anyone who’s seen the show before. Dee, Mac, and Dennis try out for the Philadelphia Eagles while Charlie and Frank drop acid. Dee sleeps with the old, toothless janitor at a competing bar in order to steal their microbrew recipe. They mock a deaf mute. They fart in each other’s faces. When they think Paddy’s Pub, where they work, is going to be sold, three of them quickly land gigs at a nearby restaurant, where they get drunk on the job and steal from the customers. They even get held hostage by the hillbilly McPoyle family, possibly the only people in the known universe who can make our “heroes” look good. And it’s all pretty hilarious, including the bonus features. Those include humorous commentary on two episodes by McElhenney, Day, and Howerton (the show’s executive producers and occasional writers), two featurettes (a season overview and a look at the McPoyles) that are as whack as the show itself, a gag reel, and a “Dancing Guy” sequence so strange as to beggar description. --Sam Graham


Beyond It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia – Season 3 on DVD

It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia – Seasons 1 & 2 on DVD

Arrested Development – Season One on DVD

Arrested Development – Season Two on DVD



Stills from It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia – Season Three (Click for larger image)









Customer Reviews

My Life Is Sunny Thanks To This Show5
I would fall into the group of folks who began watching "Sunny" with the inception of the Dumpster Baby episode and, in turn, quickly got himself caught up with the first two seasons on DVD. Aside from the heaps of praise that "Sunny" has gotten since it first appeared, it's inclusion on the FX Network made it especially intriguing as (in my opinion) they house the best original television on basic cable today.

While the first 2 seasons are picture perfect in their own right, Season 3 delivers the funniest moments to date of this already amazing show. Anyone who is a fan already knows which moments these are (ie; Day Man). My personal favorite is the season finale, specifically the Mac vs. Dennis dance off, which is quite possibly the funniest moment in TV history.

Season 3 also includes the gang trying out for the Eagles, the death in Dennis and Dee's immediate family, battling a local Korean restaurant, Mac joining the mafia and a few drop-ins from the McPoyle family. What makes these scenarios so unique is that they are relatively serious at a glance but are filtered through some of most ridiculous and hilarious circumstances that even the largest hot button issue becomes comedy gold, leaving no one and nothing spared.

With one week until Season 4 begins anew, the public at large has the opportunity to get all caught up or give themselves a refresher of hilarity. I'll be enjoying multiple viewings.

"we are electric dream machine - prepare to experience sexual magic..."5
Mac, Charlie, Dennis, and Dee are back with daddy Frank to wreak their special kind of havoc and no one is safe from their evil shenanigans. For those who have not yet had the pleasure to catch this fantastic show, take equal parts "Arrested Development" and "Seinfeld" and add in a little "South Park" and you have "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia" which is truly one of the funniest shows ever aired on television.

The 1960's-style theme music makes it seem like you are about to watch an innocuous show, only to be bombarded with one of the most over the top, hysterical comedies where nothing is sacred and no one is above their particular style of scorn. Whether it is trying to capitalize on a baby they found in the dumpster by putting her in commercials (then of course putting shoe polish on her to make her more "ethnic"), determining if Dee's latest squeeze is learning impaired, getting sold into prostitution by their dad, scheming for an inheritance, cheating at being the final stop on a pub crawl tour, performing in a rock band despite not knowing how to play an instrument, sleeping on the streets because their apartment is too full of stuff from the dump, or trying out for an invincible spot on the Philadelphia Eagles, they always give it their special brand of incompetence and it always blows up in their faces.

Though many plots are straight out of other sit-coms, the Philly gang manages to "make them their own," bringing a fresh voice to the mostly cookie-cutter offerings that currently air on television. The envelope pushing humor and adult situations are not your standard fare; thankfully FX has the guts to keep it on the air (unlike Fox, which would have canceled it after 4 episodes like they did "Kitchen Confidential"). The DVD extras are not that plentiful - bloopers, commentary, a featurette on the show, a featurette on the McPoyles, and the hysterical "Dancing Guy" who shows up in "Frank Sets Dee on Fire" episode.

© Tracy Vest, September 2008

You thought Seinfeld was funnY???5
By far the funniest show on television. Devito is the best. This show is like Seinfeld only everyone can swear and have really evil plotlines. Do yourself a favor and rent the first two. An Irish pub in Philadelphia owned by a group of weird, competitive misfits-what's not to like?? I guarantee you it's like nothing you have ever seen on television.