The Good

8 hours and 56 minutes of Full House.

The Bad

Essentially, this show that ran for 8 years is a one-trick pony. Not enough supplemental features.

I love Full House so I was really excited when Full House - The Complete Second Season came my way. Granted, I only really started watching this show on reruns via Nick at Nite a few years ago, but it didn’t take long for me to realize all that I had missed out on by not watching the show when it originally aired in the late 1980s. In fact, the other day I was thinking about how I came to stop following all the shows I was watching like Silver Spoons and Diff’rent Strokes when I was younger. I think maybe I got busy hanging out with my friends and when these shows aired, I just wasn’t at home to watch them. Now, when I go back and revisit them on DVD, a lot of those friends are gone but these shows remain and I find myself wondering how we lost touch in the first place.

MOVIEWEB VIDEO OF THE DAY

There are some major changes in Full House - The Complete Second Season, and they mostly center around the young ladies. First of all, Michelle celebrates her third birthday. D.J. begins the often tough world of Junior High School and Stephanie comes to realize what it’s like not always having her big sister around. As far as the guys are concerned, the formula pretty much stays the same. Danny Tanner (Bob Saget) tries to keep order and raise his girls as best he can. Jesse (John Stamos) still lives his rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle yet he seems to be becoming domesticated a bit, and Joey (David Coulier) remains the guy trying the hardest to be funny.

Essentially, Full House - The Complete Second Season isn’t too much different than the first season, but there’s just something winning about the way this show is put together that I can’t wait to own Season 3!

Features

Video

Audio

Package

Final Word