DVD collection featuring seasons 1–4 of American comedy TV series Eastbound and Down (8 discs).
This Eastbound and Down season 1, 2, 3 and 4 collection follows the hilarious ups and downs of mullet-sporting former Major League flame-thrower Kenny Powers (Danny McBride).
Season 1 of the hit HBO comedy sees a down and out Kenny crashing with his brothers family in North Carolina, teaching middle school gym and making passes at his high school squeeze all while attempting a million-to-one big league comeback. When he falls short in America, Kenny takes his comeback quest south of the border in Season 2, deep inside Mexico. With the help of his lackey Stevie Janowski (Steve Little) and new love interest, Vida (Ana de la Reguera), Kenny perfects his fastball and lobster tan with the hampess Charros, owned by filth-rich mogul, Sebastian Cisneros (Michael Pena). In season 3, Kenny returns to the U.S. as the closer for the Myrtle Beach Mermen.
Special guests Will Ferrell, Matthew McConaughey and Craig Robinson make Kennys stay in the Redneck Riviera especially wet n wild. You are bound to find this collection balls-out hilarious!
Eastbound & Down Series Reviews
“The comedy – and, oh, there is much of it – comes less from sight gags or clever one-liners as it does from the sheer absurdity of what transpires and the ever-increasing ability for Powers to sink lower and fail more grandly from episode to episode.” IGN
“Out-of-control, disgusting, irreverent, moronically and maniacally funny new show that couldn't be more timely.” New York Post
“Working something of a miracle, Danny McBride, who plays Kenny and is one of the creative talents behind the show premiering tomorrow on HBO–the most recklessly funny comedy of the year–makes us kind of like Kenny Powers.” Washington Post
“What I'd call extreme comedy, willing to risk alienating a mass audience in favor of a devoted cult.” Entertainment Weekly (season 3)
“What further elevates the half-hour is the deadpan, deer-in-the-headlights fashion in which his co-stars orbit around McBride, who seems instinctively to understand that being a delirious bastard means never having to say you're sorry.” The Hollywood Reporter
“Eastbound & Down holds together so well that it's worth looking past the ugly for the solid performances and the charcoal-black humor beneath.” New Yorker (season 3)
“I don't know bout y'all but I'm hooked.” AV Club