KidVidUK/US
 Location:  Home» Lazytown » General » LazyTown - New Superhero  
DVDs
Arthur
Astro Boy
Balamory
Barney
Basil Brush
Batfink
Bear in the Big Blue House
Bob the Builder
Book of Pooh
Bratz
Charlie & Lola
Clifford the Big Red Dog
Dora the Explorer
Elmo's World
Fairly Oddparents
Fimbles
Franklin
George Shrinks
Gerald McBoing Boing
Hi-Five
Jakers!
Lazytown
Little Einsteins
Maya & Miguel
Miffy
Miss Spider's Sunny Patch
Mona the Vampire
Mr. Bean
Noddy
Old Bear Stories
Pingu
Postman Pat
Power Rangers
Rolie Polie Olie
Rugrats
Save-ums
Scooby-Doo
Spongebob Squarepants
Teletubbies
Thomas the Tank Engine
Thunderbirds
Totally Spies
Trollz
Tweenies

LazyTown - New Superhero

LazyTown - New Superhero
Directors: Magnús Scheving, Raymond P. Le Gué
Actors: Heather Asch, Ronald Binion, Sarah Burgess, Raymond Carr, Jodi Eichelberger
Studio: Nickelodeon

List Price: $9.98
Buy New: $4.09
You Save: $5.89 (59%)



New (27) Used (18) from $4.09

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 20 reviews

Format: Animated, Color, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Ntsc
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Region: 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 96 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6

ISBN: 141570998X
UPC: 097368774643
EAN: 9781415709986

Theatrical Release Date: 2004
Release Date: August 16, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New and Factory Sealed Item Fast Shipping

Similar Items:

  • LazyTown - Records Day
  • LazyTown - Sports Candy Festival
  • LazyTown - Surprise Santa
  • LazyTown - Robbie's Greatest Misses
  • LazyTown - Swiped Sweets

Customer Reviews:   Read 15 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Loved It!   September 23, 2008
Lisa M. Pearrow (Texas)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This DVD is great! The first episode is the longest with two shorter ones to follow and they are great entertainment for my son. Both episodes have great tunes that my 2 year old has completely memorized. It is actually entertaining for the whole family!


4 out of 5 stars Lazytown   April 11, 2008
Suzi in Seattle
I'm not sure where my toddlers first learned about Lazytown, but it's a nice swith from the normal pre-school cartoons they normally watch. I wasn't sure they'd really follow the story, but now they totally do push-ups like "Sportacus" and sing and dance like Stephanie. Lazytown has 3 real people on an animated sets with puppets. I honestly didn't think the DVDs would motivate kids to exercise like other people say they will, but apparently they really do and they're entertaining to watch!


4 out of 5 stars Lazytown: Great for Kids   December 2, 2007
O. McCleary
Lazytown, takes a high action crack at Children and healthy lifestyle, and makes a new market in educational children's media! Finally a show that's tackling the issues!
Lazytown, is a children's television show adapted from a successful play from Iceland. Icelandic gymnast and role model Magnús Scheving, conceived Lazytown as an effort to combat obesity, and inactivity in kids. The show has been globally sucessful; in the Uniyed States it has landed primary slots on Nickelodeon channels, and CBS Saturday morning programming. The themes of the show are very positive and attractive to children. The shows target audience age is 4-7.
The plot involves main character Stephanie visiting her uncle in Lazytown. Upon arrived she displeased with laziness and negativity of the town and tries to encourage change. Stephanie is a very attractive character for young girls. She promotes gender stereotypes with her pink hair and matching feminie accessories. She also has many singing breaks, and dance modeled like a pop star music video. Her dance moves resemble aerobics and often start to involve the whole town in exercise fashion. The superhero of Lazytown, is Sportacus (played by Magnús Scheving). He immediately agrees with Stephanie about making a change. Sportacus is naturally the admirable character for boys. He wears a blue jumpsuit, and is excellent in every sport. He uses gymnastics to get from place to place. The antagonist is Robbie Rotten, who employs all the schema of cartoon villany, right down to the evil laugh. Robbie uses temptation to align the townpeople to his side of laziness, selfishness, junkfood, and trouble. The townspeople are of diverse gender and ethnicity. Each have their vices, which make up most of their personality. The ones with most appearances are Stingy (selfish), Ziggy (candy), Trixie (mischeif), Pixel (Video Games). Through misadventures all the townspeople overcome Robbie Rotten's temptation and learn moderation and healthy lifestyle tips from Stephanie and Sportacus. Parents can use the townspeople and their lessons in moderation as an example for their own children. I witness my own cousin turn off video games saying he played too long, and referenced a plot from the show.
The only live action characters in the show are Stephanie, Sportacus, and Robbie Rotten, which give them grave importance in a show with CGI background and puppet supporting characters. The show uses lighiting fast jump cuts, and speed up motion speeds, sublimnally expressing high activity. The shows techno music and bright colors, seemingly raises pulses in kids. Watching this program with my younger cousins, it wasn't long before they were jumping along with the program. The uses of editing to evoke this reaction helps with the overall goal of the program. The catchy pop songs in every show usually have lyrics that push the shows moral.
There isnt any commercialism in the show, which is a breath of fresh-air. The only thing show seems to endorse is "Sport Candy", which is just fruits and vegetables. The continue use of the "Sport Candy" phrases makes me think that they could use it to appear on a brand of fruit and vegetables, however there is no blantant brand marketing. For a show, with a classic good vs. evil theme, there is no violence whatsoever. Robbie Rotten is usually defeated after losing in some physical game or activity. He often gets tired and retreats home. I enjoyed the lack of pain, and humilation in the show. The viewer still understand the Good has conquered evil without anyone getting hurt emotionally or physically. The cicrumstances are usually realistic, with common consequences. However, Sportacus numerous acrobatics don't frequently come with a "Im a professional, don't try this at home" disclaimer.
I enjoyed my viewing of Lazytown, and find the use of plot, characters, and setting a lot more effective in encourage activity, than the surrealism of Boohbah. I think as long as Lazytown, stays true to mission, and doesn't surrender to branding and heavy merchandising, it will do a lot of good. I commend Magnús Scheving for his endeavors. The show is needed, as physical education slowly declines in schools.



5 out of 5 stars I love this show and I'm old enough way beyond the demographic   February 23, 2007
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I absolutely love this show. It's an execellent diversion to the real world. I'm sure kids adore it but I do as well. I recommend this show to parents and kids. It's actually tolerable compared to Max and Ruby and Wonderpets. So parents pick up or rather you'd endure some of the more less tolerable shows.


3 out of 5 stars If I were king of the forest...   June 26, 2006
1 out of 30 found this review helpful

This show is okay for little kids I guess. But it's really stupid when you get a little older. Why would anyone want to do 5,000,000 flips instead of taking one little step? Why does Robby Rotten care if they are active? I f he doesn't want to hear the noise he can just move to a quiet town or move to a house in the middle of nowhere. And Stephanie is so perfect. And she acts so stupid and she's always so happy. Why are little kid shows always in a perfect land where nothing bad ever happens? They should have at least one show in the real world. I know that that wouldn't be a very good show for little kids or maybe basically everyone but that's probobly making little kids think that we live in a wonderfuly perfect world where nothing bad ever happens. And in some shows they have talking animals which can make little kids think that animals really do talk. So in Dora the Explorer parents may think it's a good show for their kids to watch because you learn shapes, spanish, and counting but it can also be bad because it might make little kids think that animals can talk like humans. Who knows? Next time you go to the zoo your kid might try to put a pair of red boots on a monkey then starts talking to it, and refuse to leave. Then the next thing you know you get kicked out and can never go back. Okay so that probobly will never happen but I'm just trying to make a point. Back to Lazy Town. I think that sometimes Robby Rotten gets to scary. I would think that little kids would be afraid of him. Trixie is the most pointless character. She's hardly ever in the show. They probobly just have her in the show because they thought little kids would complain if Stephanie was the only girl in the whole show. Why does Sportacaus's thing that tells him when someone is in trouble only go off every once in a while? If it was in the real world it would never stop going off. And in the episode where Robby Rotten swiches Sportacaus's shoes with ones that he controls wouldn't they notice that the shoes are blinking? And if they really had eyes then they would see that Robby Rotten's discuises are really just him. It's sooooo obvious. You can see his face! Why don't they see that? They sing songs about everything. It's really annoying. And they dance so stupidly. Why does Robby Rotten want to get rid of Sportacaus? Who cares if the kids are active? If it's to loud then get used to it or move! It's not that big of a deal! Who cares!

Send this to a friend:
Powered by Associate-O-Matic

Toys
Barney Toys
Bob the Builder Toys
Bratz Toys
Dora the Explorer Toys
Elmo Toys
Lazytown Toys
Noddy Toys
Pooh Toys
Power Ranger Toys
Scooby-Doo Toys
Spongebob Squarepants Toys
Teletubby Toys
Thomas the Tank Engine
Trollz Toys
Site Links
UK Home Page
About us
FAQ
Contact us (UK site)
T-Shirts
Privacy Policy



This site © 2007 - 2008, All rights reserved.
KIDVIDUK/US is a CARPENTUNES company.