Blu-ray Review: Glee - The Complete Third Season

OK, confession time, kids: despite the fact that I am a good 35 to 40 percent gay and have a strong passion for vintage musicals and singing in general, I never actually took the time to sit back and watch a single episode of Glee until the Third Season showed up on my doorstep one day. In any case, within minutes of opening up Glee: The Complete Third Season on Blu-ray, I quickly realized what a mistake I had made in not seeing the show any sooner.

Yes, it's time for another confession, kids: I am now officially what you might call a "Gleek." In fact, from the very first episode of Glee: The Complete Third Season, I was hooked. So sue me.

Now, of course, I have to go back and check out the previous two seasons — but that's somewhat irrelevant here.

For the uninitiated, Glee follows the ups and downs of a high school glee club. In this season, the club's teacher, Mr. Schuester (Matthew Morrison), struggles to keep his spirits as well as those of his students afloat as he endures the agonies of being engaged to the school's obsessive-compulsive redheaded guidance counselor, Emma Pillsbury (Jayma Mays); butts heads with the ornery-as-ever cheerleading coach Ms. Sylvester (the incomparable Jane Lynch); and witnesses his class divide in two to compete against each other during a regional show choir competition.

The kids (Chris Colfer, Heather Morris, Dianna Agron, Lea Michele, Darren Criss, Kevin McHale, Naya Rivera, Amber Riley, et al), on the other hand, have just as many difficulties. Several find themselves nearing that precarious bridge that links high school life to college life, while nearly everyone has to face the awkwardness of sex (in as PG manner as possible: it's still a family show, folks), the never-ending bullying that ensues from being in glee club, and the even more cumbersome challenges we all have to face simply by trying to fit in with the world. And it's loaded to the gills with some truly show-stopping musical numbers performed by the show's extremely gifted cast.

One of the many highlights in this season includes "Extraordinary Merry Christmas," wherein Artie (Kevin McHale) directs an epic television yuletide show that combines the classic elements of vintage variety series with facets of the epically-awful The Star Wars Holiday Special (complete with a cameo by Peter Mayhew as Chewbacca). Additional focus goes to a production of West Side Story that takes up a portion of the first quarter of the season, an homage to Saturday Night Fever (which is always better than the actual film itself), tributes to both Michael Jackson and Whitney Houston (without any of the tasteless kiddie or drug jokes that would normally go into play there had this been any other show), and the graduation of several key players.

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Article Author: Luigi Bastardo

Luigi Bastardo is the disgruntled alter-ego of Adam Becvar, a thirtysomething lad from Northern California who has watched so many weird movies since the tender age of 3 that a conventional life is out of the question. …

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