DVD 380 mins IMDB 8.3
NR (Not Rated)
South Park: The Complete 4th Season - The Complete Fourth Season
Paramount Pictures (1997)
In Collection
#260

Seen It:
Yes

Episodes
1: The Tooth Fairy's TATS 2000
2: Cartman's Silly Hate Crime 2000
3: Timmy! 2000
4: Quintuplets 2000
5: Cartman Joins NAMBLA
6: Cherokee Hair Tampons
7: Chef Goes Nanners
8: Something You Can Do With Your Finger (a.k.a. Fingerbang)
9: Do the Handicapped Go to Hell? (1)
10: Probably (2)
11: 4th Grade
12: Trapper Keeper
13: Helen Keller! The Musical
14: Pip (a.k.a. Great Expectations)
15: Fat Camp
16: The Wacky Molestation Adventure
17: A Very Crappy Christmas
Animation, Comedy
USA  /  English

Trey Parker Stan Marsh / Eric Cartman / Clyde / Additional Voices
Matt Stone Kyle Broflovski / Kenny McCormick / Additional Voices
Dee Dee Green
Eliza Schneider
Jennifer Howell Tooth Fairy
Isaac Hayes Chef
Richard Belzer Loogie

Director Matt Stone; Eric Stough; Trey Parker
Producer Frank C. Agnone II; Jennifer Howell
Writer Trey Parker; Matt Stone

In the episode "Chef Goes Nanners," Cartman is left standing alone in the snow after Wendy blithely proclaims her improbable attraction for him to has suddenly vanished. Cartman heaves a heavy sigh, and exits Chaplinesque stage right. But any concerns that South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone had gone soft, or that Cartman would undergo a more sympathetic, Louie De Palma-like makeover are abated in nearly every other episode of South Park's pivotal fourth season. From the "downright immature" trashing of Phil Collins (whose "You'll Be in My Heart" from Tarzan had emerged victorious Oscar night over Parker and Stone's "Blame Canada") to an episode in which Cartman becomes the unwitting poster child for NAMBLA, South Park gave its viewers much shock value for its basic cable dollar. This was the season that introduced the show's most unlikely breakout star, the wheelchair-bound Timmy, who, despite being only able to say his own name (or perhaps because of it), carried the pathos in his own holiday special, "Helen Keller! The Musical." This was the season in which Parker and Stone somehow were able to comment with Daily Show immediacy on the Elian Gonzales incident ("Quintuplets 2000") and the presidential election debacle ("Trapper Keeper") within days of the actual events. This was the season in which other "statement shows" skewered the South Carolina confederate flag controversy ("Chef Goes Nanners") and hate-crime legislation ("Cartman's Silly Hate Crime 2000"). This was also the season in which the South Park kids graduated to the fourth grade, we got a harrowing look inside Cartman's brain ("Helen Keller!"), and estranged lovers Saddam Hussein and Satan were reunited (in a two-parter, no less!).

Episodes not appreciated in their time can now be seen with fresh eyes. "Pip," hosted by Malcolm McDowell, and featuring none of the South Park regulars, is a faithful abridgement of Charles Dickens's Great Expectations, monkey robots notwithstanding. As in the season 3 set, Parker and Stone provide brief, "fun-size commentary" that address their censorship skirmishes with Comedy Central and illuminate the inspiration and backstory for each episode. To quote the pro-commercialism holiday episode, "A Very Krappy Christmas," "If we all buy presents, everyone benefits." For South Park fans, this boxed set is an excellent start. --Donald Liebenson

Edition Details
Series South Park
Distributor Comedy Central
Barcode 097368798946
Region Region 1
Release Date 6/29/2004
Packaging Custom Case
Screen Ratio Fullscreen (4:3)
Subtitles English; French; Spanish
Audio Tracks Dolby Digital Stereo [English]
Layers Single Side, Single Layer
Nr of Disks/Tapes 3
Personal Details
Purchase Price $29.98
Links Amazon US
DVD Empire
IMDB
Amazon US

Features
Disc 1: Interactive Menus
Scene Access
Commentary by the Creators of South Park, Trey Parker and Matt Stone