|
|
Movie
DVDs
|
Dawson's Creek
Television Series DVDs
|

Buy Now! |
Dawson's Creek - Season 1 Even viewers who
consider themselves beyond their teen-angst years
might find Dawson's Creek compelling
watching. For years Dawson (James Van Der Beek) and
Joey (Katie Holmes) have watched movies and slept in
the same bed, but they find that as they enter high
school their relationship will inevitably change.
That becomes especially clear when Dawson is
immediately attracted to Capeside, Massachusetts's
sexy new arrival, Jen (Michelle Williams).
Meanwhile, their friend Pacey (Joshua Jackson)
pursues an unachievable love object.
|

Buy Now! |
Dawson's Creek - Season 2 The second season of
Dawson's Creek finds Dawson (James Van Der Beek) and
Joey (Katie Holmes) exploring the newest phase of
their lifelong friendship, leaving Jen (Michelle
Williams) and Pacey (Joshua Jackson) on the outside.
The former enters a downward spiral assisted by bad
girl Abby (Monica Keena), but Pacey happens into a
"meet cute" with one of Capeside's new residents,
the impossibly perky Andie (Meredith Monroe), who
turns out to be his perfect foil. The Creek also
struck gold with its second major addition, Andie's
brother Jack (Kerr Smith), who shows Joey that he's
more than just a clumsy waiter. With the siblings'
help, Pacey and Joey show the most personal growth
during the season's 22 episodes. The constant
parent-child crises can be a bit much, but there
were numerous other developments, including a
two-part sexual whodunnit, Dawson embarking on his
second movie (assisted by Rachael Leigh Cook in a
sizzling guest appearance), Dawson's birthday party
from hell, a vicious rumor that spreads through the
high school, and the emotion-wringing finale. |

Buy Now! |
Dawson's Creek - Season 3
"Jen is a cheerleader and Jack's on the football
team. I got sane and everyone else went crazy?"
That's how Andie (Meredith Monroe) sums up the
topsy-turvy beginning to the third season of
Dawson's Creek, in which nothing seems to be as
it should and the series takes a major turn. It's
junior year at Capeside High, and Jack (Kerr Smith),
the town's resident gay teen, is indeed on the
football team, and Jen (Michelle Williams) finds
herself the object of unexpected and unwelcome
popularity among her fellow students, especially the
freshman quarterback (Michael Pitt).
|

Buy Now! |
Dawson's Creek - Season 4 The fourth
season of Dawson's Creek is dominated by two themes.
The first is senior year at Capeside High, as high
achievers Joey (Katie Holmes) and Andie (Meredith
Monroe) have as much pressure to deal with as low
achiever Pacey (Joshua Jackson). The second is the
constant love triangle following Joey and Pacey's
return from their summer of bliss, threatening to
destroy anyone's chance of having a healthy,
functional relationship. Pacey's insecurity doesn't
let him believe he's actually the lucky one, even as
he proves with his actions that he deserves it.
Fortunately for Dawson (James Van Der Beek), he
finds a sympathetic ear in Pacey's older sister,
Gretchen (Sasha Alexander), though he also has to
enter an "indentured servitude" relationship with an
old curmudgeon (Harve Presnell). Joey takes a job
waiting tables at the yacht club, where she has to
deal with the heir apparent to Abby Morgan's evil
shoes, Drue Valentine (Mark Matkevitch), who also
turns out to have a shadowy history with one of the
friends. Meanwhile Andie and Jack (Kerr Smith) coach
a youth soccer team, and Jen (Michelle Williams),
having suddenly lost her boyfriend from season 3,
cements her best-friendship with Jack and drags him
to a gay coalition group where he spars with the
activist leader (David Monahan). Look for cameos by
Andy Griffith as a retired movie actor and by
frequent soundtrack contributor Mary Beth Maziarz as
a club singer. |

Buy Now! |
Dawson's Creek - Season 6 The final season of
Dawson's Creek is when the series became Joey's Bar.
With the titular character (James Van Der Beek)
mostly on the opposite coast working for tyrannical
director Todd (Hal Ozsan) and dating an actress (Biana
Kajlich), the series' other central protagonists
tended to gather only at Joey's (Katie Holmes)
workplace, a Boston college bar called Hell's
Kitchen. But those central characters usually went
their separate ways, becoming the linchpins around
which wound a dizzying array of new characters who
were coincidentally interconnected. Working at the
bar are Emma (Megan Gray)--a punk rocker who ends up
rooming with Pacey (Joshua Jackson) and Jack (Kerr
Smith) and whose band Audrey (Busy Phillipps) joins
as lead vocalist--and Eddie (Oliver Hudson), who's
Joey's main antagonist in a lit class taught by an
antagonistic professor (Roger Howarth). While Joey
is busy at Worthington, Jack and Jen (Michelle
Williams) are at Boston Bay College, where both are
attracted to a pop-culture professor (Sebastian
Spence), but Jen ends up dating a help-line worker
(Jensen Ackles). Pacey goes Gordon Gecko in a new
job as a stock broker mentored by a cutthroat
businessman (Dana Ashbrook). The lack of interaction
among the main characters proved the biggest
drawback to this era of Dawson's Creek, but when
they were put together, sparks could still fly, such
as when Pacey and Joey get locked in a Super K-Mart
overnight, or when an old romance--and rivalry--is
rekindled. Season 6 was also the end of Dawson's
Creek, and the episodes improved as they drew to
their inevitable conclusion, peaking in the
devastating series finale. Creator Kevin Williamson
returned to write a flash-forward in which the main
characters are 25, and a reunion in Capeside leads
to tragedy and some final decisions. |
|
|
|
|
|
|