Would you believe all 5 seasons of the show, individually packed in a plastic case with one extras DVD for each season ?
But would you believe it doesn't include the 2 later movies ?
Well... all is true.
Everything is ok with it, quality is decent for a DVD, especially with a show from the 60's.
First episode is however black and white - some other shows from same period have colorized them ( I dream of Jeannie as example - all first season was colorized ), but all the rest are color.
While the show is not perfect, with multiple gags repeated ever and ever again it's quite funny and a must have.
My only regret is that it doesn't include the 2 movies made after him - Get Smart Again and The Nude Bomb.
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Sold by: Rarewaves UK
Sold by: Rarewaves UK
(8640 ratings)
90% positive over last 12 months
90% positive over last 12 months
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Get Smart - Season 1
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Product description
GET SMART SEASON 1-5
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.78:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- Language : English
- Package Dimensions : 19.3 x 14.9 x 5.2 cm; 610 Grams
- Item Model Number : 7321902225227
- Director : Peter Segal
- Media Format : Box set, PAL, Subtitled
- Run time : 66 hours and 4 minutes
- Actors : Steve Carell, Anne Hathaway, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, Alan Arkin, Terence Stamp
- Subtitles: : English
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 4.0)
- Studio : Whv
- Producers : Jimmy Miller, Charles Roven, Alex Gartner, Dana Goldberg, Bruce Berman
- ASIN : B001DWEYWY
- Writers : Tom Astle, Matt Ember
- Number of discs : 25
- Best Sellers Rank: 6,008 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- 1,492 in TV Shows (Movies & TV)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
71 global ratings
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Top reviews from other countries

Chris V.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Would you believe...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 22 January 2020Verified Purchase
One person found this helpful
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Dash O'Pepper
4.0 out of 5 stars
Would You Believe...Misseditbythatmuch
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 October 2020Verified Purchase
This is a fantastic release, especially since it's impossible to find either the complete box set or individual seasons in the US at anything less than extortion pricing.
The transfers are almost perfect: the film itself is crisp and sharp. And, it's wonderful that each episode has an introduction by Barbara Feldon ("99"), providing a bit of commentary, history and anecdotes about an episode. Unfortunately, where this set falters is the sound.
Barbara Feldon's commentary is great, but you have to turn the volume up to a ridiculous number in order to hear it clearly, and then dial it back down for the episode she's intro'd. Volume also seems to be inconsistent from episode to episode. Some episodes can be played at a normal volume setting, while others have to be raised to a level almost as high as for Feldon's commentaries.
Believe me, I'm happy with this boxed set, and would you believe wouldn't part with it for a million dollars...would you believe five-hundred dollars...would you believe the price I paid for it? But for a show that created so many catch-phrases that are still recognised today by millennials and Gen Z'ers who probably never saw or heard of the original programme, and that lampooned so much of the 1960s and the Cold War era (some episodes seen like they were prescient about the future, since they strike so many chords about today's US political landscape), that there could be such a sound quality issue is disappointing.
If you have a multi-region DVD player in the US, it's more than worth purchasing this UK release: it's a great box set. Just be prepared to keep your finger on the volume control button of your remote.
The transfers are almost perfect: the film itself is crisp and sharp. And, it's wonderful that each episode has an introduction by Barbara Feldon ("99"), providing a bit of commentary, history and anecdotes about an episode. Unfortunately, where this set falters is the sound.
Barbara Feldon's commentary is great, but you have to turn the volume up to a ridiculous number in order to hear it clearly, and then dial it back down for the episode she's intro'd. Volume also seems to be inconsistent from episode to episode. Some episodes can be played at a normal volume setting, while others have to be raised to a level almost as high as for Feldon's commentaries.
Believe me, I'm happy with this boxed set, and would you believe wouldn't part with it for a million dollars...would you believe five-hundred dollars...would you believe the price I paid for it? But for a show that created so many catch-phrases that are still recognised today by millennials and Gen Z'ers who probably never saw or heard of the original programme, and that lampooned so much of the 1960s and the Cold War era (some episodes seen like they were prescient about the future, since they strike so many chords about today's US political landscape), that there could be such a sound quality issue is disappointing.
If you have a multi-region DVD player in the US, it's more than worth purchasing this UK release: it's a great box set. Just be prepared to keep your finger on the volume control button of your remote.
One person found this helpful
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ATM Records
5.0 out of 5 stars
Complete unedited shows
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 29 July 2019Verified Purchase
These are the complete unedited 24-25 minutes shows, unlike those re-edited down to 22 minutes like recently shown on Forces TV. It is a sin to cut down traditional cult tv shows like "F Troop", "I Dream Of Jeannie", "Starsky And Hutch" and so many more, just to make room for additional commercials and previews. It is great to have the original unedited episodes in a quality you can expect of over 50 years old tv tapes for such a reasonable price.
2 people found this helpful
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Dr. Gerard Charmley
5.0 out of 5 stars
'And Loving it'!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 20 April 2010Verified Purchase
I remember seeing episodes of this show when it was on daytime TV in the early 1990s. On impulse, I decided to get the full DVD set. It can be a mistake buying something one remembers from one's childhood. However, if anything this is funnier than I remember it. Don Adams plays Maxwell Smart, Agent 86 of Control, a secret organisation dedicated to the preservation of order, fighting the agents of KAOS, an evil organisation dedicated to spreading, well... chaos, aided by the lovelt Agent 99 (Barbara Feldon), and Agent K13 (a dog called Fang). However, Smart does not exactly live up to his name, leading to heachaches for his long-suffering boss, the Chief (Edward Platt).
This could have been lame and annoying, if it wsn't for the casting. Don Adams has the looks to be a glamorous super-spy, and the ability to be convincingly silly without being childish (too often). Indeed, he seems to model his appearance on Sean Connery as Bond. The episodes are short enough not to become too absurd, at 30 minutes, and the extras, including audio introductions to each episode read by Barbara Feldon. Remastered, this is a good-looking collection, well-presented and not taking up too much space.
If you like good clean fun which makes you laugh out loud, buy this excellent collection.
This could have been lame and annoying, if it wsn't for the casting. Don Adams has the looks to be a glamorous super-spy, and the ability to be convincingly silly without being childish (too often). Indeed, he seems to model his appearance on Sean Connery as Bond. The episodes are short enough not to become too absurd, at 30 minutes, and the extras, including audio introductions to each episode read by Barbara Feldon. Remastered, this is a good-looking collection, well-presented and not taking up too much space.
If you like good clean fun which makes you laugh out loud, buy this excellent collection.

Greg M
5.0 out of 5 stars
OK, it's cult and not for all, but it can accommodate all the family if it is!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 1 May 2013Verified Purchase
It is well-made and the transfer to DVD is good, image being at good level while the sound is above mediocrity. Overall, an honest product in my opinion, which delivers on its promise.
This is a basic, plain-vanilla set of the series some of us grew up with.
For those that haven't, these are the stories of battle of "good" versus evil. Good always triumphs by the sheer idiocy and dumb luck of its key agent -- our hero, agent Smart. It is a humorous series bereft of the ubiquitous gore and violence producers deem the sine qua non of TV success nowadays and your children can watch without fear of lengthy psychoanalysis later on in life.
Good is upheld by a secret organisation code-named "Control" while evil comes from the dastardly "Chaos" and their despicable, foreign accented villains -- a James Bond villain take off. Our hero, agent 86 and his would-be girl friend, beautiful agent 99, following orders from "the Chief" foil Chaos' any and all attempts at destabilising world order, much like Bond, James Bond, saves the world on the big screen. Both get impossible assignments and get away with -- and thus doing save the world.
The difference is that Bond is the quintessential larger than life male who is so efficient, we are glad he is on our side -- the good guys. Bond's women, all to be reckoned with in one way or another seem to be incapable of resisting his natural charm and melt in his arms.
In Get Smart this is (hilariously) reversed: Smart is smaller than life. He has a squeaky nasal voice and he never catches on to discreet advances of the only woman in his life, agent 99. He triumphs through sheer dumb luck, help from friends, the Chief and, of course, the beautiful agent 99. Where Bond is refined, eccentric and intelligent, Smart is ignorant, conventional to nth degree and a stickler for useless rules - much to the Chief's consternation and our delight.
But most of all, Smart is dumb: "he's so dumb he'd blind himself picking his nose" as the saying goes.
We're not sure it's a good thing he's on our side -- but we love him!
True to form and cult, our hero has coined phrases which have remained for posterity:
- of outrageous statements following the response "I find that hard to believe": "would you believe..." As in,
"...there are at least 25 agents out there ready to come in..."
"I find zat chard to biliff Mr Smaart..." retorts the villainous lackey
"Would you believe 5 agents..."
- of a dangerous assignment "...being in mortal danger and loving every minute of it"
There are many details that make this series attractive & lovable: the silly use of passwords; the cone of silence,a contraption used for secret conversations so secret the conversing parties usually can't hear one another; secrets that are so secret no-one is privy to them; Agent 13's position in "tight places"...
Overall a series that has aged well, that keeps a smile on your face all of the time and makes you chuckle some of the time.
Thoroughly recommended!
This is a basic, plain-vanilla set of the series some of us grew up with.
For those that haven't, these are the stories of battle of "good" versus evil. Good always triumphs by the sheer idiocy and dumb luck of its key agent -- our hero, agent Smart. It is a humorous series bereft of the ubiquitous gore and violence producers deem the sine qua non of TV success nowadays and your children can watch without fear of lengthy psychoanalysis later on in life.
Good is upheld by a secret organisation code-named "Control" while evil comes from the dastardly "Chaos" and their despicable, foreign accented villains -- a James Bond villain take off. Our hero, agent 86 and his would-be girl friend, beautiful agent 99, following orders from "the Chief" foil Chaos' any and all attempts at destabilising world order, much like Bond, James Bond, saves the world on the big screen. Both get impossible assignments and get away with -- and thus doing save the world.
The difference is that Bond is the quintessential larger than life male who is so efficient, we are glad he is on our side -- the good guys. Bond's women, all to be reckoned with in one way or another seem to be incapable of resisting his natural charm and melt in his arms.
In Get Smart this is (hilariously) reversed: Smart is smaller than life. He has a squeaky nasal voice and he never catches on to discreet advances of the only woman in his life, agent 99. He triumphs through sheer dumb luck, help from friends, the Chief and, of course, the beautiful agent 99. Where Bond is refined, eccentric and intelligent, Smart is ignorant, conventional to nth degree and a stickler for useless rules - much to the Chief's consternation and our delight.
But most of all, Smart is dumb: "he's so dumb he'd blind himself picking his nose" as the saying goes.
We're not sure it's a good thing he's on our side -- but we love him!
True to form and cult, our hero has coined phrases which have remained for posterity:
- of outrageous statements following the response "I find that hard to believe": "would you believe..." As in,
"...there are at least 25 agents out there ready to come in..."
"I find zat chard to biliff Mr Smaart..." retorts the villainous lackey
"Would you believe 5 agents..."
- of a dangerous assignment "...being in mortal danger and loving every minute of it"
There are many details that make this series attractive & lovable: the silly use of passwords; the cone of silence,a contraption used for secret conversations so secret the conversing parties usually can't hear one another; secrets that are so secret no-one is privy to them; Agent 13's position in "tight places"...
Overall a series that has aged well, that keeps a smile on your face all of the time and makes you chuckle some of the time.
Thoroughly recommended!
One person found this helpful
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