Product Description
-------------------
Return to the mysterious Warehouse for the most thrilling season
yet! Pete, Myka, Claudia and Artie are joined by new agent Steve
Jinks (Aaron Ashmore, Smallville) as they pursue dangerous new
missions, and face a powerful new enemy whose vendetta against
the Warehouse knows no bounds. Filled with explosive action,
fantastical artifacts and inventive gadgetry, this three-disc set
is packed with every Season Three episode and riveting bonus
features including a DVD-exclusive chapter of the Warehouse 13
animated web series "Of Monsters and Men."
Bonus Content:
Disc 1:
* Deleted Scenes
* Guest Starring...
* Gag Reel
* The New Guy: Commentary with Executive Producer/Showrunner Jack
Kenny, Series Star Eddie McClintock, Supervising Producer Bob
Goodman, and Co-Producers Benjamin Raab and Deric A. Hughes
* Love : Podcast with Series Star Saul Rubinek
Disc 2:* 3...2...1...: Commentary with Executive
Producer/Showrunner Jack Kenny, Writer Bob Goodman, and Series
Stars Eddie McClintock and Allison Scagliotti
* The 40th Floor: Commentary with Executive Producer/Showrunner
Jack Kenny, Series Stars Eddie McClintock and Allison Scagliotti,
and Co-Writers Benjamin Raab and Deric A. Hughes
Disc 3:* Holiday Episode: Secret Santa
* Deleted Scenes
* Of Monsters and Men: Web Series
* Of Monsters and Men Bonus Chapter
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Is it conceivable that wearing Richard Nixon's wingtips could
enable you to lie without anyone knowing, while Gandhi's sandals
provide their wearer with a profound sense of peace and serenity?
Did you know that using Marilyn Monroe's hairbrush will turn you
into a blonde, or that Russian psychologist Ivan Pavlov's bell
really does attract dogs? These are but a few of the revelations
unearthed in the third season of Warehouse 13 (12 episodes, plus
extra material and a "bonus holiday episode" at the end), SyFy's
series about the intrepid agents of the very Secret Service whose
mission is to "snag, bag, and tag" the bewildering array of
artifacts, relics, and curios that are stored in an enormous
facility located somewhere in South Dakota. Many of these
artifacts--and there are enough of them to fill a space
(variously known as "America's attic," "the world's junk drawer,"
and "the Artifact Roadshow") at least as big as the warehouse
depicted in the final of the first Indiana Jones movie--are
benign and fun. But it's the ones that "misbehave" after falling
into the wrong hands, on purpose or otherwise, that must be
neutralized by agents Pete Lattimer (Eddie McClintock), Myka
Bering (Joanne Kelly), Artie Nielsen (Saul Rubinek), and the rest
of the team, some of whom have some pretty fancy talents of their
own--like new addition Steve Jinks (Aaron Ashmore), who has an
uncanny ability to tell when someone's lying. This time out,
malevolent artifacts include legendary film director Cecil B.
DeMille's riding crop, which can be used to bend people's bodies
to the will of whoever possesses it (a very bad thing when it
falls into the hands of Anthony Michael Hall's bitter, vengeful
Walter Sykes, the season's principal villain); William
Shakespeare's "lost folio," which causes its victims to expire in
the exact manner of some of the Bard's most famous characters;
the so-called "Janus coin," an ancient Roman item that wipes out
people's memories; and an amulet that, when transmitted via
computer, creates a virus that turns people into clay. All of
this is consistently amusing and entertaining--sometimes more so
than the plot lines in which the artifacts appear, some of which
involve the e of the "Regents," who serve as the guardians of
Warehouse 13 and its contents. The show is serialized, so while
it ends with a major cliffhanger, the fact that there's a fourth
season is good news for viewers of this delightful show. --Sam
Graham