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Closed Caption; Audio commentary for select episodes with executive producer Paul Stupin; Dawson's Creek trivia game; Previews; Includes the theme song "Run Like Mad" by Jann Arden from the international opening theme song
Full Product DetailsSide #1 -- Disc 1
1. Coming Home
1. Failing Down
1. Two Gentlemen of Capeside
1. Future Tense
1. Family Way
1. Great Xpectations
Side #2 -- Disc 2
1. You Had Me at Goodbye
1. The Unusual Suspects
1. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang
1. Self Reliance
1. The Tao of Dawson
1. The Te of Pacey
Side #3 -- Disc 3
1. Hopeless
1. A Winter's Tale
1. Four Stories
1. Mind Games
1. Admissions
1. Eastern Standard Time
Side #4 -- Disc 4
1. Late
1. Promicide
1. Separation Anxiety
1. The Graduate
1. Coda
Devotees of this popular teen drama often point to Season 4 as the series' best, and with good reason. Despite the loss of Creek creator Kevin Williamson, the 2000-01 episodes are uniformly excellent, in part because the writing retains its snap and vigor, but also because the cast members have firm grips on their characters. It also helps that the show's chronology reaches a climax of sorts: It's senior year, so Dawson (James Van Der Beek) and his friends are coming to the realization that as high school ends, their life choices will inevitably separate them. Season 4 is dominated to a great extent by the evolving love affair of Joey (Katie Holmes) and Pacey (Joshua Jackson) and the awkwardness it creates in their relationship with Dawson. Meanwhile, Jen (Michelle Williams) attempts to get her own love life back on track while Jack (Kerr Smith) grapples with the challenges posed by coming out of the closet. "Coming Home" gets this year off to an emotional start as Joey and Pacey, having spent the summer together, return home knowing that they'll have to face Dawson. "Promicide" is another memorable installment from this group, as is "The Graduate." The season wraps up with "Coda," a moving episode in which Dawson, heading off to California and his dream of becoming a filmmaker, says goodbye to the insular world in which he has grown up. His life (and the series itself) will never be the same. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble