Glee - The Complete Fourth Season

Glee - The Complete Fourth Season
$69
$64.99 over 5 years ago

Glee is a musical comedy TV Show that depicts Will Schuester’s (Matthew Morrison) efforts to save McKinley High’s Glee Club from cheerleading coach Sue Sylvester (Jane Lynch). Glee’s musical numbers, underdog characters, and rousing soundtracks have all helped make Glee a runaway pop-culture hit. This season features the New Directions glee club at the fictional William McKinley High School in the town of Lima, Ohio. It also focuses on Rachel’s college experience in New York as well as what the rest of the alumni are doing after graduation. Includes 22 Episodes Awards for Series WINNER 4 Golden Globes (including “Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy”) Winner of 46 other awards and 122 award nominations. See list. Glee Season 4 Review For season premiere episode "..The decision to have some students graduate was a smart one, and splitting the action between New York (where Lea Michele's Rachel Berry is attending NYADA, the New York Academy of Dramatic Arts) and Ohio (where the remaining members of New Directions are regrouping) turns out to have been even smarter. Michele does some real acting as Rachel struggles in her new school, overwhelmed by the demands of her borderline-psychotic dance teacher, played hilariously by Kate Hudson. Boyfriend Finn is off in the military and took Rachel's heart with him – but a cute new guy, Brody (Dean Geyer), helps to ease her loneliness. BFF Kurt (Chris Colfer), who didn't get into NYADA, is at loose ends back at McKinley, where we meet two new students – Jake (Jacob Artist), who has ties to a previous New Directions member, and Marley (Melissa Benoist), a sophomore who is adorable enough to have won “The Glee Project,” if girls won “The Glee Project.” Also new is Becca Tobin as Kitty, Sue Sylvester's new henchwoman. (Familiar characters who don't appear in the premiere, including Dianna Agron's Quinn, will still be part of the season, producers say.) The songs in the season opener – including a terrific version of the inevitable “Call Me Maybe” – are universally singable and downloadable. The pacing is brisk, and both the smiles and tears arrive on cue. (If you don't cry at the last scene, you're not a Gleek.)" St. Louis Post-Dispatch