Queer as Folk - The Complete First Season
(Showtime) (2001)

Rated: NR
Starring: Queer As Folk, Hal Sparks.
Edition Details:
• Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
• Color, Closed-captioned, Box set
• Theatrical trailer(s)
• 6-disc Box Set (22 Episodes)
• Scene introductions by Hal Sparks
• Behind the scenes outtakes
• "Meet The Folk" section containing biographies, interviews and
character profilesSeason 2 Sneak Preview
• Music Photo Gallery
• Episodic Index, previews & summaries
• Approximately 3 hrs of special edition episodes & commentaries
• DVD Rom weblink
• Widescreen anamorphic format
• Number of discs: 6
Editorial
Reviews
They're here, they're queer,
and they make Sex and the City look like a demure tea party. Showtime's
quintessentially American Queer As Folk--based on the British
miniseries--pours on copious amounts of hot and steamy sex. This slick (and
slickly entertaining) series shares the same basic concept as its British
counterpart--centering on a group of gay friends living in a primarily
industrial city--but after that, all bets are off. Whereas the British version
focused on the gritty, realistic drama of its characters, the American QAF
is a glossy, fun soap opera that occasionally tackles big issues but never lets
you forget that life at times can be a party, and you shouldn't be one of those
poor suckers starving to death. A good part of the show's charm lies in its
cast--boy-next-door Michael (Hal Sparks), ruthlessly seductive rake Brian (Gale
Harold), out-and-proud Emmett (Peter Paige), wallflower Ted (Scott Lowell), and
nubile teen Justin (Randy Harrison)--who grew from standard gay prototypes to
intriguing characters by the first season's end. And while some subplots didn't
work (such as Emmett's farfetched foray into gay-conversion therapy), others
were quietly affecting, including Brian's coping with his father's death. Some
may object to the show's relentless fixation on sex (and gay men--there are
just two lesbian characters), but this is a series that in its own polished way
is both engrossingly fun and truly groundbreaking. It's liberating to watch an
American TV series in which the straight world is only peripheral. Let's hear
it for the boys! --Mark Englehart