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Succession: The Complete First Season
$31.48$31.48
Additional DVD options | Amazon Price | New from | Used from |
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"Please retry" | 3-Disc Version | $31.48 | $29.50 | — |
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Genre | Drama |
Format | PAL, Subtitled |
Contributor | Kieran Culkin, Frank Rich, Lucy Prebble, Rob Yang, Nicholas Braun, Jane Tranter, Natalie Gold, Peter Friedman, Matthew Macfadyen, Georgia Pritchett, Jesse Armstrong, Regina Heyman, Tony Roche, Jeremy Strong, Dara Schnapper, Kevin Messick, Alan Ruck, Will Ferrell, Brian Cox, Jonathan Filley, Mark Mylod, Hiam Abbass, Sarah Snook, Ilene S. Landress, Adam McKay See more |
Language | English |
Number of discs | 3 |
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Product description
Succession S1 (DVD/S)
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : Unknown
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- Language : English
- Package Dimensions : 19 x 13.6 x 1.8 cm; 140 Grams
- Media Format : PAL, Subtitled
- Run time : 9 hours and 31 minutes
- Actors : Brian Cox, Jeremy Strong, Hiam Abbass, Sarah Snook, Kieran Culkin
- Subtitles: : English
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 5.1)
- Studio : Warner Bros.
- Producers : Dara Schnapper, Jesse Armstrong, Georgia Pritchett, Adam McKay, Jonathan Filley
- ASIN : B07HSKMMJ6
- Number of discs : 3
- Best Sellers Rank: 37,046 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- 9,281 in TV Shows (Movies & TV)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
367 global ratings
How are ratings calculated?
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Top reviews from other countries

Mr. Robert Brown
5.0 out of 5 stars
Superb
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 24 November 2018Verified Purchase
Once every four or five years along comes a superlative box-set which gets 5 stars - I've only ever rated a series in that top category three times [The Sopranos, Deadwood and Vinyl] . This is the fourth. No frame is wasted, the cast, script and plot are astonishing - Brian Cox has to be BAFTA nominated at the very least. It has pathos, humour and savage realism as a dysfunctional family squabbles over a billion-dollar business. Riveting, intelligent and damn good - an unreserved recommendation.
46 people found this helpful
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Mr Barry Dempsey
5.0 out of 5 stars
Catchy self-contained family drama . .
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 14 January 2019Verified Purchase
Firstly - for the vendor, the item was as described, well packaged and promptly sent, so all good. Succession itself is a fairly tightly scripted yarn with the regular elements of family ups and downs that only work on the small screen if the family is unrealistically rolling in money. No dialogue is wasted on ironing school uniforms or staring at the credit-card statements in disbelief. But it is catchy . . after one episode I just wanted to see one more, then another, then . . . you get the picture. The lush scenes of autumn outdoors and families of company helicopters flying in formation keep the visual interest. The jumble-sale of acting performances from the 'on the money' Brian Cox and Sarah Snook to the plain goofy Alan Ruck and Kieran Culkin keeps the curiosity going. Then it occurs to you which Shakespeare play the whole shebang has been 'inspired by'. Is it just me or is Sarah Snook a 100% throwback to Melanie Mayron in 'Thirtysomething' (I know, ancient history for most readers/viewers)?
16 people found this helpful
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A viewer
5.0 out of 5 stars
Magnificent family saga
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 December 2019Verified Purchase
Succession Season 1 originally passed me by. I’d vaguely heard of it, but it was just another show in a universe of endless content and viewing queues.
But then it started to follow that recognisable path which shows such as The Wire and Breaking Bad started to tread as they ticked along; word of mouth increasingly indicating that it’s the best programme on TV... and it’s one you’re not watching.
So I took the plunge and bought Season 1, put the first disc in my Blu Ray player, and sat back with my “go on then; impress me” face.
And it absolutely did. Succession lives up to its hype and gathering critical reputation. The ensemble of actors are absolutely perfect (Jeremy Strong is an astonishingly compelling protagonist), despite each of them playing characters that are - almost across the board - hateful. The scripts are tight, with some zinger dialogue and there’s an ever-present sense of confidence from a technical perspective. This show is about the powerful and the wealthy, and it shows its budget.
The pilot episode draws you into a world, and 10 hours later you’re left reeling at the season finale, telling anyone who’ll listen that this is the best show on TV... and it’s one they’re not watching!
But then it started to follow that recognisable path which shows such as The Wire and Breaking Bad started to tread as they ticked along; word of mouth increasingly indicating that it’s the best programme on TV... and it’s one you’re not watching.
So I took the plunge and bought Season 1, put the first disc in my Blu Ray player, and sat back with my “go on then; impress me” face.
And it absolutely did. Succession lives up to its hype and gathering critical reputation. The ensemble of actors are absolutely perfect (Jeremy Strong is an astonishingly compelling protagonist), despite each of them playing characters that are - almost across the board - hateful. The scripts are tight, with some zinger dialogue and there’s an ever-present sense of confidence from a technical perspective. This show is about the powerful and the wealthy, and it shows its budget.
The pilot episode draws you into a world, and 10 hours later you’re left reeling at the season finale, telling anyone who’ll listen that this is the best show on TV... and it’s one they’re not watching!
8 people found this helpful
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Mr. D. L. Rees
4.0 out of 5 stars
WHAT A TOXIC LOT!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 6 November 2019Verified Purchase
At 80, powerful media mogul Logan Roy is expected to stand down, his four offspring positively drooling at thoughts of their own advancement. Instead he announces he is staying on. Cue for Kendall, Siobhan, Connor and Roman to start plotting his removal. Despite physical frailty and early signs of dementia, Logan is determined still to be a force to reckon with. Have they taken on more than they can chew...?
Prepare here for ten hour long episodes crammed with dirty tricks, unholy alliances and the F- word. None of the siblings trusts the others (with good cause). Logan's estranged brother refers to them all as a "rats nest of a family". All the way through is proof of just how right he is.
Talented actors here clearly relish the particularly meaty roles that have come their way, Brian Cox with special impact as, against the odds, he tries to outwit them all.
There is nothing new about dysfunctional families (Adam and Eve with cause for regret about son Cain). This lot provide compulsive viewing - the hope that all are destined for comeuppance.
Dark humour abounds in this downbeat exploration of high finance and giant corporations. Occasional revealing insights make one sit up with a jolt. Example? Logan musing how America's whole history demonstrates the country's propensity to convert evil into hard currency.
Much to think about, not necessarily to like.
Prepare here for ten hour long episodes crammed with dirty tricks, unholy alliances and the F- word. None of the siblings trusts the others (with good cause). Logan's estranged brother refers to them all as a "rats nest of a family". All the way through is proof of just how right he is.
Talented actors here clearly relish the particularly meaty roles that have come their way, Brian Cox with special impact as, against the odds, he tries to outwit them all.
There is nothing new about dysfunctional families (Adam and Eve with cause for regret about son Cain). This lot provide compulsive viewing - the hope that all are destined for comeuppance.
Dark humour abounds in this downbeat exploration of high finance and giant corporations. Occasional revealing insights make one sit up with a jolt. Example? Logan musing how America's whole history demonstrates the country's propensity to convert evil into hard currency.
Much to think about, not necessarily to like.
10 people found this helpful
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Lucretia
5.0 out of 5 stars
Compulsive viewing
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 21 June 2019Verified Purchase
Despite the Roy family and their colleagues being the most appalling people you can't help but be mesmerised by them and want to find out what happens. Looking forward to the second series.
13 people found this helpful
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