Everybody Loves Raymond: Season 4

$10.98

Everybody Loves Raymond revolves around Ray Barone, a successful sportswriter living on Long Island with his wife, Debra, 12-year-old daughter, Ally, and 8-year-old twin sons, Geoffrey and Michael. That’s the good news. The bad news? Ray’s meddling parents, Frank and Marie, live directly across the street and embrace the motto “Su casa es mi casa,” infiltrating their son’s home to an extent unparalleled in television history. Frank’s favorite expression, “Holy Crap,” is shouted at regular intervals, and Marie’s “cooking advice” is less than appreciated by Debra. Brother Robert, a divorced policeman, is constantly moving in and out of his parents’ house, and loves to drop over and resent Ray’s successful career and happy family life. Ray and Debra just wish someone would knock once in a while. Finalizing it’s 9th and final season, the cast and crew of “ELR” has had a very successful run, and it makes it even harder for them all to say good-bye. This show has a place in televi

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How do we love Raymond’s fourth season? Let us count the classic episodes: “The Tenth Anniversary,” in which Debra discovers that Raymond taped over their wedding video with the 1991 Super Bowl; “The Boob Job,” in which Debra surprises Raymond with an apparent uplifting enhancement; “Debra’s Workout,” which leaves her in an amorously aggressive mood; “No Thanks,” in which Debra tries a new, “nice” approach to win Marie (Doris Roberts) over; “Debra Makes Something Good,” in which Debra’s braciole upsets the family balance; and the Emmy-nominated “Bad Moon Rising,” in which Raymond desperately tries to deal with Debra’s volatile mood swings. Yes, it was a career year for Patricia Heaton, who became the first cast member to be honored with an Emmy (each of the core ensemble was nominated). As with the first three seasons, season 4 concludes with a flashback episode, “Robert’s Divorce.” But for the first time, the episode is capped with a cliffhanger, as Robert (Brad Garrett) retrieves his ex-wife’s discarded phone number after running into her at a restaurant.
Series star and co-creator Ray Romano once told Entertainment Weekly that Raymond’s best episodes start with “a small relatable concept and go somewhere bigger and deeper.” Among the season’s most memorable episodes that follow this formula are “The Can Opener,” in which the entire Barone family becomes embroiled in Raymond and Debra’s senseless argument; the Emmy-nominated “The Christmas Picture,” in which Marie threatens to sit out a family photograph once she learns that Debra’s parents are to be included; and the one in which Raymond discovers that Debra enjoys a good cry during her “Alone Time.” (“Do you cry because I’m stupid?” he asks. “No,” she replies, “I eat ice cream because you’re stupid.”). And all parents whose children came of age during the Pokémon craze will identify with Raymond’s desperate attempts to scrounge up a valuable card for his daughter in the episode, “Hackidu.” To quote the old comedy maxim: It’s funny because it’s true. And it’s the universal truths and minutiae about family and married life that are at the heart of Raymond’s enduring success. –Donald Liebenson

Product Description

Everybody Loves Raymond: The Complete Fourth Season (DVD)
Standup comedian Ray Romano stars as Ray Barone, a successful sportswriter who deals with his brother and parents, who happen to live across the street. Patricia Heaton (“The Goodbye Girl”), Peter Boyle (“While You Were Sleeping”), Doris Roberts (“Remington Steele”), and Brad Garrett (“Gleason”) round out the stellar cast. ]]>

Additional information

Movie Actors

Brad Garrett, Peter Boyle, Ray Romano, Doris Roberts, Patricia Heaton

Movie Directors

Will Mackenzie, Steve Zuckerman, David Lee, Brian K. Roberts, Wil Shriner

Movie Writers

Philip Rosenthal, Ray Romano, Jennifer Crittenden, Lew Schneider, Tucker Cawley

Movie Producers

Tom Caltabiano, Tucker Cawley, Jennifer Crittenden, Lisa Helfrich Jackson, David Letterman

Movie Musicians

Rick Marotta

Movie Genres

Comedy